After causing a sensation with its (somewhat overrated) first season, “Bridgerton” returns, faced with the task of polishing a new diamond and mounting another grand romance. Deprived the company of the Duke (with Regé-Jean Page having opted to move on), the series remains frothy and watchable, if perhaps a bit less Lady Whistledown-worthy in this latest iteration.
Bridgerton Film Review
“I find your opinion of yourself entirely too high,” Kate sneers at the viscount, although as anyone who has survived sixth grade knows, trading insults is often really just an awkward form of flirtation. Indeed, in the artfully structured world of “Bridgerton,” playing croquet becomes a mating ritual.
Arguably, though, the series became a media sensation as much because of the gravitational force that Netflix can bring to its launches as its merits. It also returns amid a boom time for such dramas, with HBO’s “The Gilded Age” just completing its first season and PBS having salvaged “Sanditon,” an adaptation of an unfinished Austen novel that caused its own lesser stir back in 2020 and, like “Bridgerton,” has lost its dashing leading man.
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