Drops of God season two
Drops of God returns to Apple TV+ not by skimming the surface of its success, but by plunging into darker, colder waters, committing fully to depth over accessibility. Where the first season framed inheritance as both an intellectual contest of sorts, Drops of God season two begins quite literally beneath the ocean, with beautifully choreographed scuba footage in a blue abyss – a plunge into deeper, murkier waters.
Set three years after Camille (Fleur Geffrier) and Issei (Tomohisa Yamashita) discovered they were siblings, the second series wisely resists any temptation to soften their relationship. Though more at ease, their dynamic remains delicate – awkward and unsettled, hovering between kinship and co-existence. The space between them is filled with what remains unsaid, and the show continues to treat silence as one of its most powerful narrative tools. This time, the siblings are united by a challenge even their late father could not complete: uncovering the origin of the world’s greatest wine. What initially sounds like a romanticised quest quickly becomes something far more unsettling, as the search stretches across continents and centuries, peeling back layers of forgotten history and long-buried secrets.
Tonally, the episodes are steeped in shadow, with cinematic choices that favour darkness almost to the point of obsession: tense, candlelit dinners heavy with implication; late-night confrontations staged in moonlit living rooms, lights conspicuously off; corridors that appear to stretch on endlessly, their dim, yellow glow offering little comfort. Yet these shadows are punctured by moments of natural beauty – vineyards blazing under the sun, rocky coastlines battered by wind and sea. The contrast is striking and purposeful, lending the season a rich, almost tactile atmosphere that feels even more assured than before.
Crucially, season two feels more deliberate. The direction is sharper, more confident and unmistakably focused. Every choice – tonal, visual, narrative – serves a clear thematic goal. More so than before, Drops of God knows exactly what story it wants to tell: not simply wine as culture or craft, but inheritance passed down through places and across time. It is patient, demanding television – and all the more rewarding for it.
Christina Yang
Drops of God season two is released on Apple TV+ on 21st January 2026.
Watch the trailer for Drops of God season two here:
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