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Hanna Season 2: Review of Amazon Prime’s Intriguing Action Thriller

by John Martin Engineer

Season 2 of the show “Hanna” is set to be warmer than its predecessor. While the first season followed the primary character (played by Esme Creed-Miles) through the wilds of Romania and exploring grimy hideouts, the current season comes packed with a revitalized sense of purpose and an all-new set of locations. The dynamic color palette and the additional dose of the sun are not the only reasons for Season two’s marked improvement. It’s the different components of this tangled undercover work narrative that creates those needed changes.


The program that orchestrated Hanna’s seizure in the first place, mostly a whisper till the season’s climactic blowout, is currently front and foremost. Set in a picturesque rural English castle, a little regiment of adolescent girl super-agents do not seem to be only trained in kneecapping targets and long-range sniping enemies. They’re being fed normal teen behavior, too. On the one hand, the show deals with weaponry training and tactical maneuvers, while on the other hand, we witness a bubbling high school drama sequence in season two. Several familiar characters are drawn into the range of this weird secret academy. 

The initial idea of number-only names is overhauled, and as the trainees take on the spiraling demands of future assignments, they adapt to names like Jules and Sandy. But it might not be too fair to say that the show has wholly shed its intercontinental two-step that featured Hanna. The latest objective of Hanna is to secure a chance at life for her former trainee Clara. To keep all of this buzz afloat, “Hanna” requires a particular level of performance. The upstart would be killing machines and therefore, the seasoned people teaching them that the trade is all in operation on a series of cloaked facades. Every dialogue has some hidden meaning, mainly once the audience isn’t unaware of the dark side deal in everyone’s character.

The season is packed with special effects, but the dramatic irony here is both cheap and effective. Mulroney gets to be creatively slimy. Creed-Mills keeps powering through with the finesse and psychological twirling that her character continually requires. And there are no words that describe well enough the amount of control that Enos displays at all times, especially when Marissa found herself compromised.

That particularity in the balance of tone runs in all the school support staff. Leo plays an excellent do-it-all lieutenant. Terri Miller, an unsung hero in terms of the girls’ biodata, imbibes the ethical wariness the first season rarely presented. Packed with Monet Prince, Daly, Kiehl, and all the other unique students, Hanna season two is set for a whirlwind of commendable performances to complete the murky, grey area around the lead character herself.

Once was a time when the show made you feel like the sound of two blunt objects ramming into each other, the new season creates an artsy balance. As a show, “Hanna” has entirely imbibed all its scope. The girls build on lives that other people threw at them with no compassion whatsoever. Marissa figures out that there is only so much she can do for Hanna as her mother. The alliances on the show are drawn with deceit and ulterior motives. This basket full of delusions should be harsh, but the show has reached a point where it can be used to their advantage if played right. But despite all, the first season’s deficiencies have not vanished altogether. There is a limit to how many major crossfire shootouts every important character can survive without a scratch.

 The show frequently feeds the audience with a plot twist, but it would be better for the story if, in the long run, if the makers did not forcibly artificially hide the twists. The best part of the show is despite a heated moment in the show, communications between Hanna and Marissa with just a slight note is enough. There is absolutely no hesitation between the two characters.

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About John Martin Advanced   Engineer

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Joined APSense since, June 11th, 2020, From California, United States.

Created on Jul 7th 2020 01:35. Viewed 217 times.

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