Servant: Season 2 – Review/ Summary (with Spoilers)
While, like most M. Night Shymalan productions, you have to wait till the end for things to get good, Servant season 2 will make you interested in a 3rd season.
Amari is the founder and head writer of Wherever-I-Look.com and has been writing reviews since 2010, with a focus on dramas and comedies.
While, like most M. Night Shymalan productions, you have to wait till the end for things to get good, Servant season 2 will make you interested in a 3rd season.
In “Until The Real Thing Comes Along,” the focus is Aretha’s struggles while signed to Columbia Records, the drama her husband and father brought to her life, and more.
While we wait for Jennifer Hudson’s authorized biography, “Respect,” Cynthia Erivo takes on the Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin’s, story.
Tribes of Europa does well in getting you interested in a post-apocalypse Europe, but more so in how the world and cultures shifted than its characters.
In what appears to be the season 1 finale, Rudy learns he’ll need to trust his comrades more to reach his goals – or people might die.
The focus is taken off Kyoko and Izumi’s relationship as Shu Iura gets properly introduced and developed, and we get other random stories.
While everyone loves Georgia’s smiles and southern charm, we’re shown there is a dark side to Georgia that puts survival above all – maybe even her kids.
I’d like to start a petition to make Genera+ion about Chester, Riley, and Greta the series regular, and everyone else seen sporadically.
In the 2nd season finale, Servant gives you fight scenes, blood, death, and a promise that season 3 could and should be way better than season 2.
The time has come! Members of Grace Field, and the other plants, will either escape the demon world or potentially die trying.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.