Beef season 2 review: Charles Melton is hilarious in another bloody, sizzling serving ...Middle East

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Rather, the screenwriter is bravely taking his first self-created series down the anthology path, shedding his original leads Steven Yeun and Ali Wong for an all-new story orbiting a country club for the super-rich.

Beef season 2 could, accordingly, have gone by 'Beefs' instead, doubling the number of participants in its bitter feud as two couples become fatefully entangled by a chance encounter.

Oscar Isaac (Dune) and Carey Mulligan (The Ballad of Wallis Island) play middle-class couple Josh and Lindsay, who work senior positions at the aforementioned leisure club, which comes with an eye-watering $300,000 admission fee.

When the younger pair witness the seemingly model older couple in the midst of a worryingly aggressive row – one they deem severe enough to record – it presents an opportunity for some light blackmail that proves too tempting to resist.

Beef season 2 succeeds in cutting a distinct figure to its predecessor, but there are plenty of thematic connections that allow both stories to sit neatly together on Netflix's virtual shelf.

Both comment on how the modern economic model has left people from less privileged backgrounds feeling hopeless, with no amount of hard work seeming to get them any closer to clawing out of poverty, debt or dead-end jobs.

Between this and the shared feelings of loneliness in their struggling relationships, the two couples are much more alike than they care to realise (just as Amy and Danny were, too).

Alas, in these cautionary tales, the irrationality of human behaviour always gets in the way.

As viewers with the full picture, we're challenged not to judge the characters as harshly as they do each other; Sung Jin's smart writing ensures that, as with season 1, there is no clear-cut villain in the quartet, but merely flawed people fighting to survive.

The clear exception is Melton, who showcases impressive comic talent as the rather dim-witted Austin; a fascinating character whose soft puppy dog demeanour hides deceptively sharp teeth.

Three years later, that horrific scene involving Jordan's panic room door remains vividly burned into my brain, but season 2 lacks a gleefully twisted counterpart despite raising the stakes considerably in the final two episodes.

Of course, by its very nature as a sequel, Beef season 2 was always going to lack the element of surprise that this series benefitted from when it burst onto our screens, but it would have been nice to see some bigger swings taken this time around.

Beef season 2 premieres on Netflix on Thursday 16th April 2026.

Check out more of our Drama coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what's on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

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