The Four Seasons Season 3: Will Netflix Renew It or Pull the Plug?
With Season 2 about to drop, fans are already asking if Netflix will give The Four Seasons a third act or cut it short. The relationship rollercoaster—three couples thrown into chaos after one divorce—has become a binge magnet, but is Season 3 on the horizon or headed for a breakup?
Let’s get straight to the bit everyone keeps googling: is The Four Seasons coming back for Series 3 on Netflix, or have they binned it? As of now, it’s neither here nor there—Netflix haven’t flicked the axe, but they aren’t exactly rolling out the red carpet for another season yet, either.
Where Things Stand with Season 3
Quick snapshot: Netflix have made absolutely no official decision about the future of The Four Seasons past Series 2. No press release, not even an awkward social post. Nothing. The fate of the show largely depends on how the second lot of episodes goes down with viewers—basically, if you lot watch it in droves and say nice things, Netflix might get around to ordering round three. If not, well, you know how these things go. Even now, they’re keeping everything close to the chest.
Key Dates and Episode Breakdown
- Season 2 release: It drops 28 May, 2026.
- Episode count: Eight episodes, the same as Series 1. No bonus instalments. No mid-series cliffhangers.
In an age where Netflix love to split their hit shows into 'Parts' (seriously, never-ending hype cycles for Bridgerton, Cobra Kai, Emily in Paris, Stranger Things etc), The Four Seasons is not playing along. You get one drop, all eight, just like you used to. Make of that what you will.
Behind the Scenes (and On Screen)
On the creative front, the show’s got some proper comedy pedigree. Tina Fey, Lang Fisher, and Tracey Wigfield cooked this one up—if those names ring a bell, you know what you’re in for. Fey also stars, joined by Steve Carell, Colman Domingo, Erika Henningsen, Marco Calvani and Will Forte. It's officially an adaptation of Alan Alda's 1981 film—it’s an oldie, but it’s got its fans. And to appease purists, Alda himself pops in for a guest spot (he wrote and directed the original, so that's a nice touch).
More Bits from the Cast
Before the second series surfaced, a few telling interviews came out. Marco Calvani talked to ComingSoon about working with Colman Domingo (frankly, I'd love to have been a fly on that wall). Erika Henningsen let slip a detail about acting while strapped into a prosthetic belly—one of those behind-the-scenes things that sounds both uncomfortable and slightly ridiculous.
How’s It Gone Down So Far?
The show’s debut outing did very decently. It picked up a 7.2 out of 10 over on IMDb, and a 78% Rotten Tomatoes score. Usually, those are the kind of numbers Netflix pay attention to, assuming the viewers show up in decent numbers, too. But at the moment, they're sitting on the fence about Series 3.