Peaky Blinders - Season 2 May 2026
Where Tommy plans five moves ahead, Alfie operates on pure, terrifying instinct. Their famous negotiation—"I hear you’re a man who likes to talk business in the bath"—is a masterclass in power dynamics. Alfie doesn't want to win the territory war; he wants to burn the concept of winning to the ground. He betrays Tommy, then allies with him, then betrays him again, not out of malice, but because he finds the game more interesting than the prize.
And then, the miracle happens. Or rather, the deus ex machina . A faceless agent of the Crown—Winston Churchill himself, unseen but omnipotent—calls off the execution. Campbell is shot dead on the spot. Tommy is not saved by his wits or his violence. He is saved because the state decided he is more valuable alive . Peaky Blinders - Season 2
Enter May Carleton (Charlotte Riley), a wealthy, grieving widow with a stable of racehorses and a direct line to power. May offers Tommy a legitimate future: class, safety, and a woman who accepts his violence without flinching. She is the rational choice. Where Tommy plans five moves ahead, Alfie operates
Polly Gray (Helen McCrory, imperious and shattered) gets the season’s most harrowing arc. Captured, tortured, and forced to await execution by firing squad, Polly is stripped of her tarot cards and her composure. Her scene with Campbell—where she uses her sexuality as a weapon to learn her execution date—is a study in survival. McCrory plays it not as seduction, but as a vivisection. Polly’s resilience in Season 2 redefines the show: she is not the matriarch; she is the spine. The climactic set piece at Epsom Downs is a structural marvel. For three episodes, the show has laid out a Rube Goldberg machine of competing plans: Tommy must kill the communist, Sabini wants Tommy dead, Campbell wants Tommy in prison, and Alfie wants the chaos to continue. On Derby day, all these lines intersect. He betrays Tommy, then allies with him, then