Yellowjackets Season 2 suffers from “middle chapter” syndrome: it has to break things before it can rebuild them. It is gorier, sadder, and more spiritually confused than its predecessor. But when it works—during the card draw, the stillbirth, the final hunt—it achieves a kind of mythic horror that few shows dare to attempt. The wilderness chose Natalie. The writers chose chaos. Long may they reign. 8/10 Best Episode: Episode 6, “Qui” (The stillbirth and Javier’s death) Worst Episode: Episode 4, “Old Wounds” (Pacing lull and police procedural detour) Watch if you liked: The Leftovers , Hereditary , Sharp Objects
Lottie transitions from a troubled teen off her schizophrenia medication to a shamanistic leader. The show walks a delicate tightrope: Is Lottie a prophet of the Wilderness, or is starvation-induced psychosis creating a feedback loop of belief? Season 2 leans into ambiguity, but notably gives more weight to the supernatural. When the bear offers itself to Lottie in Season 1, it was shocking. When the birds kamikaze into the cabin in Season 2, it feels like the Wilderness is actively scripting events. The season’s centerpiece is the death and consumption of Javier (the youngest survivor). Unlike Jackie’s accidental freezing, Javier’s death is a collective choice. The group hunts him, not because they are monsters, but because they have created a system (drawing cards, the Wilderness choosing) that absolves individual guilt. This is the show’s thesis: Ritual is the anesthesia of conscience. yellowjackets season 2
Introduction: The Burden of Anticipation When Yellowjackets premiered in 2021, it was a sleeper phenomenon. Dubbed “ Lord of the Flies meets Lost meets Alive ,” Season 1 masterfully balanced a 1996 wilderness survival thriller with a 2021 high-stakes noir about trauma’s long half-life. Season 2, premiering in March 2023, faced a monumental task: deepen the mystery without solving it too quickly, escalate the horror without becoming parody, and justify the show’s signature tonal whiplash—from cannibalistic rituals to dark suburban satire. The wilderness chose Natalie
Misty (Samantha Hanratty), ever the pragmatist, becomes the group’s executioner. Travis (Kevin Alves), having lost his brother, descends into a catatonic rage. And Shauna (Sophie Nélisse)—pregnant, grieving Jackie, and feral—delivers the most chilling performance. Her beating of Lottie nearly to death after the hunt is not justice; it is the id fully unleashed. The stillbirth of Shauna’s baby in Episode 6 (“Qui”) is the season’s emotional Everest. In lesser hands, it would be misery porn. But the writers use it as the final collapse of civilization. The teens do not bury the child; they offer it to the Wilderness. The subsequent feast—whether literal or metaphorical—is left artfully ambiguous. What is clear is that after this episode, the girls are no longer survivors. They are a cult. The 2021 Timeline: Trauma as Performance Art The Reunion of the Antler Queens The adult timeline brings together the core four: Shauna (Melanie Lynskey), Taissa (Tawny Cypress), Misty (Christina Ricci), and the long-anticipated return of Van (Liv Hewson) and Lottie (Simone Kessell). 8/10 Best Episode: Episode 6, “Qui” (The stillbirth