Live Wire
04:44ZWFWITNESSExplosions are heard in Berezanka, Mykolaiv Region, as Russian Geran-2 drones attack the town.04:41ZJAHANTASNIIsraeli military strikes multiple areas of Gaza Strip, ceasefire violations continue04:40ZDDGEOPOLITStrike reported at gas station on Dnepropetrovsk-Pavlograd highway04:40ZEURONEWSFire hits two oil storage facilities in Azov, Rostov region, after Ukrainian drone attack04:38ZALALAMARABUrgent ⭕️ Russian Defense: Air defense systems intercept and destroy 376 Ukrainian drones during the night ov…04:36ZSCROLLINTamil Nadu Chief Minister Vijay's film 'Jana Nayagan' gets 'A' certificate after seven-month wait04:36ZRYBARINENGAt least 30 drones shot down over Leningrad region during night, pro-Russian military blogger reports04:35ZTWOMAJORS30 drones shot down over Leningrad region during night, Russian officials say
Markets
S&P 500751.71 0.85%Nasdaq26,207 1.30%Nasdaq 10029,727 1.62%Dow524.19 0.27%Nikkei93.52 1.06%China 5033.41 0.09%Europe88.41 0.26%DAX41.54 0.56%BTC$64,025 2.88%ETH$1,774 2.08%BNB$575.78 1.20%XRP$1.11 1.60%SOL$78.94 1.72%TRX$0.3313 0.37%HYPE$68.26 0.93%DOGE$0.0739 2.08%RAIN$0.0144 0.97%LEO$9.57 1.00%QQQ$723.28 1.66%VOO$690.69 0.79%VTI$371.45 0.87%IWM$297.24 1.28%ARKK$81.53 1.71%HYG$79.75 0.11%Gold$378.18 1.00%Silver$54.14 2.48%WTI Crude$109.01 2.85%Brent$42.17 3.21%Nat Gas$10.83 6.64%Copper$37.75 1.83%EUR/USD1.1435 0.00%GBP/USD1.3396 0.00%USD/JPY162.41 0.00%USD/CNY6.7960 0.00%
CLOSEDNYSEopens in 8h 44m
The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 191
Friday, 10 July 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 04:45 UTC
  • UTC04:45
  • EDT00:45
  • GMT05:45
  • CET06:45
  • JST13:45
  • HKT12:45
← The MonexusCulture

Guy Ritchie returns to the country estate: Netflix's 'The Gentlemen' season two teaser leans into the chaos

Netflix has dropped a first-look teaser for season two of Guy Ritchie's 'The Gentlemen,' with Theo James, Kaya Scodelario and the rest of the 2024 cast confirmed to return. The series remains one of the platform's more distinctive British exports.

A red-haired woman in a green and plaid period dress smiles while resting her hand on her abdomen inside a rustic log cabin with a lit oil lamp. @VARIETY · Telegram

Netflix opened the week with a brief, swaggering reminder that one of its most distinctive British exports is on its way back. A first-look teaser for season two of Guy Ritchie's "The Gentlemen," the streaming series adapted from Ritchie's 2019 feature of the same name, surfaced via entertainment trade channels on 9 July 2026, with the principal cast from the first run confirmed to return.

The teaser itself is a sliver — a few lines of clipped dialogue traded between leads, the estate gates thrown open again, the drug-dealing aristocracy intact. What matters at this stage is less the plot than the signal: Netflix is doubling down on a format — eight-episode, UK-shot, Ritchie-hands-on — that has become a useful bridge for the platform between prestige limited series and broader-audience returning drama. The first season, released in March 2024, established the template. The second will test whether the formula travels.

What the teaser confirms, and what it does not

The footage, surfaced through industry aggregator First Showing on 9 July 2026 at 16:48 UTC, opens on an exchange that doubles as a mission statement for the season. "I have a clear idea what I want these days," one character offers, before being asked "What's that?" — a setup that the teaser does not resolve on screen. The line reads as both a character beat and a wink to the audience: the second-season job, like the first, is to know exactly what it is.

Confirmed to return are Theo James and Kaya Scodelario, who played Eddie and Susie Halstead in the first run, alongside the broader ensemble that made the 2024 instalment feel less like a TV spin-off than an extended Ritchie repertory piece. Ritchie is back as creator and director of multiple episodes, with Matthew Read again producing. The teaser gives no release window beyond a rolling "coming soon" tag — a deliberate scarcity tactic from a platform that has spent two years treating "The Gentlemen" as a premium asset.

What the teaser does not do is show new characters, hint at a fresh antagonist, or telegraph a tonal shift. That restraint is itself the message. Netflix's promotion of the show has, since launch, treated the Ritchie brand — cockney bravado, locked-room criminal farce, careful production design — as the draw, rather than any single face.

The Ritchie playbook, applied to a streamer

The series began life as a creative workaround. The 2019 Miramax film "The Gentlemen," starring Matthew McConaughey, Charlie Hunnam and Henry Golding, performed respectably at the box office but left Ritchie with an estate full of characters he was unwilling to abandon. Rather than mount an expensive theatrical sequel, he and Read retooled the premise — same fictional drug economy, new aristocratic hosts, new twist — for Netflix, where eight-episode budgets allow for the kind of braided plotting that the film format punishes.

The trade-off is one the platform has clearly decided to make. "The Gentlemen" season one drew solid, if not breakout, viewership for Netflix in 2024, and earned enough critical goodwill — including the sort of approval that keeps a series in the algorithm's promotional rotation — to justify a second order before any concrete renewal announcement. Renewing a returning series with a known creator, known cast, and known audience is, in the current streaming environment, the path of least resistance.

The teaser also confirms that the show will continue to be filmed largely in the UK, with its production base remaining a draw for British crew and a small but consistent line item in the UK's independent-production economy. In an environment where US studios have thinned their UK shooting schedules, a Netflix-commissioned Ritchie series on British soil is a quiet counter-data point.

A crowded calendar for the returning drama

The harder question is where season two lands on the calendar. Netflix has not announced a date, and the streaming release calendar for the back half of 2026 is dense with returning titles across genres. For "The Gentlemen" to register as an event rather than a refresh, Netflix will need to give it a release window that is either conspicuously uncluttered or carefully counter-programmed.

There is also the question of whether Ritchie can sustain a returning-series voice. His feature work has tended toward self-contained criminal worlds; the first season worked because it was, in effect, a single long film cut into eight parts. A second season risks running out of the estate's gas if the new plot engine is not visibly distinct. The teaser, by giving away nothing, leaves that judgment to be made on release.

For now, what Netflix has done is the simplest thing in streaming: shown up, on time, with the people the audience already knows. The rest is a problem for later in the year.

What to watch for

Three concrete signals will tell us whether season two is built to last beyond a second run. First, a confirmed release window, which has not yet been set. Second, the introduction of at least one new ensemble anchor whose presence signals that the show is being designed for a third season, not just a second. Third, the critical reception of the first batch of episodes when they land — a useful proxy for whether the Ritchie voice has travelled from film to long-form television more than once.

The teaser is the appetiser. The meal, for now, is unscheduled.

This publication covered the 2024 first-season run as part of a broader look at Netflix's UK original-scripted strategy; the second-season teaser has been treated here as a continuation of that bet, not a reset.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gentlemen_(TV_series)
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gentlemen_(2019_film)
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy_Ritchie
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theo_James
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire