Release Date Lock In: Black Rabbit Season 2 Returns with Twice the Stakes đ°ď¸âĄ
Mark the calendar â the sequel brings tougher moral choices, vengeance, and family ties stretched to breaking. With Jason Bateman & Jude Law back, plus Amaka Okafor as Roxie and Troy Kotsur as Joe Mancuso, nothing is off-limits.
Will There Be a âBlack Rabbitâ Season 2?
There are still some avenues that creators Zach Baylin and Kate Susman want to explore 
Warning: This article contains major spoilers for Netflixâs âBlack Rabbit.â
Will there be a second season of âBlack Rabbitâ?
In the Netflix seriesâ eighth and seemingly final episode, not only does one of its leads die, but the other starts an entirely new, calmer life that is not as outwardly conducive to the kind of heart-pounding drama that defines much of âBlack Rabbit.â The same is true for many of the showâs survivors, who are shown embracing happiness and new possibilities in the closing minutes of its finale.
That is because âBlack Rabbitâ was originally written and intended to be just what it presents itself as: a one-and-done show. âThe idea was always for it to be a limited series for a number of reasons,â co-creator Kate Susman told TheWrap. Contrary to what its eighth episode suggests, though, Susman revealed that she and co-creator Zach Baylin have not written off the possibility of returning to the world of âBlack Rabbitâ just yet.
âAs soon as we got on set and realized what we had with the crew and what we had been able to put together with the cast and the producing team, everyone was kind of like, âWhy are we ending this? This is a good thing we got going here,ââ Susman explained. âThere are so many storylines I still want to follow.â
For Baylin and Susman, âBlack Rabbitâ was born out of their own experiences living in New York City and going to the kind of restaurants that inspired the Netflix seriesâ eponymous, late-night drinks-and-dining joint. âThose places could be these magical performances every night, but we also had the awareness that in New York everything is a mirage,â Baylin recalled.
âWhen you go to one of those places at five in the morning when the trash trucks are going by and theyâre taking the garbage out, itâs like the circus has left and itâs not as appetizing as it seemed when you were there hours earlier,â he added. âThe show really came from us thinking about the kind of person and family that might decide to try to put on that show, and how they could be both an embodiment of the glossy and the shiny veneer of it, as well as the sort of underbelly of it.â
In âBlack Rabbit,â the vessels for Baylin and Susman to explore that very New York dichotomy became troubled brothers Jake (Jude Law) and Vince Friedkin (Jason Bateman). While their story seems definitively over by the time everything is said and done in âBlack Rabbitâ Episode 8, there are other characters and places the showâs creators want to further explore.
Troy Kotsur as Joe Mancuso in âBlack Rabbitâ (Netflix)
Susman, in particular, wants a chance to catch back up with deaf, imposing loan shark Joe Mancuso (Troy Kotsur), who is last seen leaving Jakeâs apartment after mercifully sparing his life in the âBlack Rabbitâ finale. âI want to know what happens with Mancuso!â Susman said, adding, âI think there are endless tendrils we could explore.â
Netflix has yet to officially greenlight a second season of âBlack Rabbit,â which may be why Baylin was not willing to share as specific of hopes as Susman when TheWrap spoke to the pair.
Instead, the creator just expressed his general interest in returning to the world that he, Susman and their collaborators worked tirelessly to bring to life in the Netflix series. âHopefully, people will watch and like the show,â Baylin said with a smile. âThen, you know, maybe we get to explore some of those other avenues.â
âBlack Rabbitâ is streaming now on Netflix.