The shadows stir once again. The Day of the Jackal — one of television’s most sophisticated espionage thrillers — is set to return for a second season, and with it comes a deeper, darker dive into the psyche of one of modern TV’s most fascinating anti-heroes.

Eddie Redmayne reprises his chilling, meticulous role as the Jackal, the elusive assassin whose calm precision hides a storm of unresolved vendettas and personal turmoil. Season 2 wastes no time escalating the stakes: this isn’t just another contract — it’s a war on two fronts, one professional and one deeply personal.
On one hand, the Jackal turns his sights on his former employer, Timothy Winthrop (Charles Dance), whose betrayal has left scars that money can’t mend. This brewing conflict promises a masterclass in cat-and-mouse intrigue, with Dance’s gravitas perfectly matched against Redmayne’s icy intensity.

On the other hand, the Jackal’s fractured personal life takes center stage. His estranged wife, Nuria (Úrsula Corberó), reenters the story, forcing him to reconcile the duality of killer and husband. Their relationship adds a poignant, volatile layer to the season, blurring the line between vulnerability and weakness in a man who cannot afford either.
The returning ensemble cast — Eleanor Matsuura (Zina Jansone), Chukwudi Iwuji (Osita Halcrow), Lia Williams (Isabel Kirby), Sule Rimi (Paul Pullman), and Florisa Kamara (Jasmine Pullman) — ensures continuity, bringing back the tangled web of allies, rivals, and frenemies that make the series so unpredictable. Each character carries unfinished business, ensuring the betrayals and alliances will only deepen.
Absent this season is Lashana Lynch’s Bianca, whose arc concluded in Season 1, leaving a gap that may sharpen the focus on new rivalries and more intimate conflicts.

Narratively, Season 2 promises not just more of the taut suspense and high-stakes action that defined the first, but also a more intimate dissection of identity, morality, and the personal costs of living in perpetual shadow. For a man like the Jackal, every relationship is both weapon and liability — and the series looks poised to exploit this tension to devastating effect.
While fans eagerly await, production is slated to begin in early 2025, with a projected 2026 premiere. Though subject to delays, the extended timeline suggests an ambitious vision — one that will likely expand both scope and depth.

In short, The Day of the Jackal — Season 2 is shaping up to be more than a continuation. It’s a reckoning: with betrayal, with love, and with the very soul of an assassin who has spent his life outrunning both bullets and ghosts.