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USA Today
5 days ago
- Entertainment
- USA Today
Will Netflix's 'The Hunting Wives' have a Season 2? What to know
The series follows Sophie O'Neil who moves to a small east Texas town, where she get finds herself pulled into seductive socialite Margo Banks. Spoiler alert: This story includes details from episodes of Season 1 of "The Hunting Wives." Netflix's saucy and scandalous new drama "The Hunting Wives," set in Texas, is garnering a ton of attention, landing on the streamer's Top 10 in the first week of its release. The series, adapted from May Cobb's best-selling 2021 novel of the same name, follows Sophie O'Neil (Brittany Snow) who uproots from Boston with her family following a traumatic incident. She moves to a small east Texas town, where she finds herself pulled into seductive socialite Margo Banks' (Malin Åkerman) exclusive circle of affluent girlfriends, known as the Hunting Wives. "Underneath the Southern charm lies a world of temptation and dangerous liaisons," the series synopsis says. "Margo's magnetic charm and the group's intoxicating allure awaken Sophie's dormant passions, leading her down a treacherous path lined with jealousy, deadly suspicion, and murder." Who killed Abby on 'The Hunting Wives'? The murder of a young girl, Abby (Madison Wolfe), sent shockwaves throughout the small community, with Sophie, Margo and the Hunting Wives finding themselves entangled in the mystery. As the season wraps up, it is confirmed that Margo killed Abby after the latter discovered her affair with Brad (George Ferrier), the teenage son of fellow Hunting Wives member Jill (Katie Lowes), and her subsequent abortion. Abby had threatened to expose Margo's affair, putting the political career of her husband, Jed (Dermot Mulroney), in jeopardy. The incident also spirals into a series of confrontations between the Hunting Wives, ending in what would best be described as a blood bath. While we are still recovering from the killer finale, pun intended, here is what we know about the future of "The Hunting Wives" and if the series will be returning for Season 2. Will there be 'The Hunting Wives' Season 2? Lionsgate, the production company behind the series, has not yet announced a second season of the show. The company told USA TODAY on July 24 that no decision or announcement regarding a new season is available at the moment. However, several cast members have expressed interest in returning for Season 2. 'I think the nerves come from, for me, it's really wanting this to go for a second season because I love everybody that I got to work with and it would be a dream come true to go again," Akerman told Decider. "So my nerves are around the fact that I just want and wish for everyone to love it so much that we get another season." Showrunner Rebecca Cutter and author Cobb are also hopeful for a second season, the duo told Variety. 'I think we'd do a little bit of a time jump — not a year, but a time," Cutter told Variety. "By the end of shooting, I realized that the two engines of the show are the whodunit and the Margo/Sophie relationship and tracking how those spines intersect with each other.' Though ideas are still in their preliminary stages, Cutter told the media outlet it would "be smart' to introduce a new murder mystery. 'I don't know whodunit yet or who got done!' Cutter joked. Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle 'The Hunting Wives' cast How to watch 'The Hunting Wives' All eight episodes of "The Hunting Wives" are available to stream on Netflix. Saman Shafiq is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at sshafiq@ and follow her on X and Instagram @saman_shafiq7.


Economic Times
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- Economic Times
Netflix's The Hunting Wives sets the stage for Season 2! Cast, plot, spoiler, ending explained, and all details you need to know
What Is The Hunting Wives About? What Happens in The Hunting wives Season 1 Ending? Live Events Will Netflix Renew The Hunting Wives for Season 2? The Show Has Moved Beyond the Book FAQs (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel Netflix's latest drama hit 'The Hunting Wives' has stirred up enough scandal, secrets, and suspense to keep fans talking and wanting for more, as per a report. Since the show's debut on July 21, the thriller quickly climbed the OTT's streaming charts, which has led many wondering, "Will there be a Season 2?," according to an Entertainment Weekly Hunting Wives, is based on May Cobb 's 2021 best-selling novel of the same name, follows the story about Sophie (played by Brittany Snow ) as she and her family move from Boston to Texas, according to the report. But what starts as a simple move quickly turns dark when she falls under the spell of Margo ( Malin Akerman ), who is the leader of an exclusive socialite group, as per the Entertainment Weekly report. That begins her descent into a world of obsession, secrets, and deadly consequences, according to the READ: Paid too much for 'The Outer Worlds 2'? Microsoft says sorry and starts sending refunds Season 1 ends with a bombshell. It's revealed that Margo, desperate to hide an affair with a teenage boy, who also happens to be the son of one of her friends Jill (Katie Lowes), murdered Abby (Madison Wolfe) to keep the secret from exploding and ruining her husband Jed's (Dermot Mulroney) political career, as reported by Entertainment cover her tracks, Margo frames Jill, manipulates her estranged brother Kyle (Michael Aaron Milligan), and even fakes an alibi with help from her father, as per the report. Meanwhile, Sophie, newly freed from jail after being wrongly accused of Abby's murder, begins piecing together the horrifying truth, according to the Entertainment Weekly final moments of the 8-episode series are particularly intense. After confronting Margo at a campaign event, Sophie is run off the road by Kyle, who threatens her life, as per the report. In a split-second decision, she hits the gas and kills him, then hauls his body into the woods, as per the Entertainment Weekly report. When Margo calls Kyle's phone, Sophie answers by accident but quickly hangs up, as per the READ: OpenAI CEO Sam Altman reveals which job roles will disappear soon — Is yours on the AI hit list? While the Season 1 ends with murder and no investigation, fans can hope for Season 2, however, Netflix hasn't officially renewed The Hunting Wives Season 2 yet, but the creators and cast are hopeful, according to the Entertainment Weekly report. The season ended with multiple loose ends and more than enough drama to carry a second season and possibly Malin Akerman has already expressed her desire to return, telling Decider in an interview, "I am super excited and nervous. I think the nerves come from — for me, it's really wanting this to go for a second season because I love everybody that I got to work with and it would be a dream come true to go again," adding, "So my nerves are around the fact that I just want and wish for everyone to love it so much that we get another season," as quoted by Entertainment the show has already moved beyond the book's original plot, Brittany Snow says that author May Cobb has been supportive of the creative direction, according to the report. Snow said, "I think that the book was really the blueprint for us taking it and making it our own," adding, "And May Cobb, the author, was there a lot on set and with us every step of the way and she was so supportive and so excited by it all. We really got her blessing to take these characters that she wrote in the book and then make them sort of an amalgamation of all these different things that we kind have found along the way shooting," as quoted by Entertainment eight episodes of The Hunting Wives Season 1 are now available to stream on Netflix, as per the yet, Netflix hasn't officially announced a renewal, but the cast and crew are hopeful.


Time Magazine
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- Time Magazine
Breaking Down the Cliffhanger Finale of 'The Hunting Wives'
If you've decided to spend the hot summer days journeying to the heart of Texas by binge-watching all eight episodes of The Hunting Wives, you're not alone. And, if you've made it all the way to the end of the show and have questions about the big finale, you're also not alone. Adapted from May Cobb's novel, Netflix's The Hunting Wives has it all: buried secrets, open-carry guns, bisexual affairs, kidnapped teens, questionable parenting, swinging politicians, and corrupt clergy. The show, which TIME's critic described as 'the wildest, silliest, and soapiest wife show ever made,' is such addictive fun that it's easy to go with the Netflix flow and let the episodes roll. By the time the credits appear on the final episode, though, there may be a few bigger questions to answer. We're here to help. The show starts when Sophie (Brittany Snow), her husband Graham (Evan Jonigkeit), and their young son arrive in the Lone Star State with liberal ideas, a Tesla, and the hope of a new start. Graham is there to start a job working for Jed Banks (Dermot Mulroney), one of the most powerful men in Texas. His socialite wife, Margo (Malin Akerman), quickly takes Sophie under her wing, introducing the wide-eyed waif to her gaggle of girlfriends, including Jill (Katie Lowes), the wife of the megachurch's reverend, and Callie (Jaime Ray Newman), the sheriff's wife. Soon, they have the sober, non-driving, gun-hating, Cambridge girl with a dark past downing tequila shots, doing donuts in the parking lot, shooting a boar, having hot extramarital sex with Margo, and, ominously enough, buying a gun. It's all fun fun fun until a high school girl, Abby (Madison Wolfe) turns up dead in the woods. Turns out that Abby was dating Jill's son, Brad (George Ferrier), and it's revealed that not only did she no longer have her purity ring on, but Sophie's gun is identified as the murder weapon. Despite the clear lack of motive (she didn't even know the girl!), Sophie becomes the prime suspect in the murder. Now shunned by her new friends and her truly terrible husband, Sophie sets out to find the real killer. Along the way, she unearths some of the town's darkest secrets. The Hunting Wives finale brings everything to a head In the last episode, titled 'Sophie's Choice,' the clues and the bodies start piling up, and Sophie, the political PR-turned-girl-detective, realizes that the real killer has been right in front of her the whole time. She just didn't want to see it. The big clue? It all started in the ladies' room. Back to that in a minute. The show did a good job with the build-up, because in Episode 7, the penultimate episode, it felt like the crime had been solved when youth Pastor Pete (Paul Teal) was busted for preying on his flock. He kidnapped one young woman and was behind the disappearance of another missing girl mentioned earlier in the season. He even gave Abby a ride to a party on the night she died and he had her sweater in his car. But though he looked guilty as hell, but he did not kill Abby. The other false lead was Brad's mom, Jill. She openly disliked her son's girlfriend, calling the girl a gold-digger and accusing her of leading her precious boy down a path of fornication and sin. She acted very suspiciously, too, wiping her GPS, changing all her passwords, and furiously cleaning one spot on her car. She was also downright eager to provide Brad with an alibi for the night of the murder, which just so happened to give her an alibi, too. Jill looked even more guilty after Pastor Pete told Sophie that Brad had confided in him that he had gotten his girlfriend pregnant and she had gotten an abortion, despite the difficulty accessing one in Deep Red Pro-Life Texas. Even her own son started to suspect the good pastor's wife when it was revealed that she was one of Abby's last outgoing calls—and she happened to have Abby's phone. Sophie believed Jill found out about the abortion and killed Abby to keep her quiet. However, it's revealed that Jill didn't do it either. Why she wiped her GPS and passwords and what she was doing the night of the murder is unclear, but she didn't kill Abby— and soon wound up dead herself. Her death meant Sophie was cleared of the crime and was finally out of jail. Who really killed Abby? Sophie goes back to her life as best she can, including reconnecting with Margo—and finding out what really happened to Abby. What finally cracks the case for Sophie, though, was an offhand remark Margo made to Sophie in the very first episode of the series. The two women first met when Sophie walked in on Margo in the bathroom, digging through the cabinet looking for a menstrual pad. Sophie offered her a tampon, but Margo explained she couldn't use one of those. That comment came back to haunt her, though, because after a long, lusty round of afternoon delight in the bedroom, Sophie uses Margo's bathroom. She is hunting through the drawers looking for some lotion, when she happens upon a box of tampons. Margo denies having ever said she couldn't use tampons, but Sophie remembers it perfectly. Since Sophie is already on high alert because Margo herself has already betrayed her, and Margo's friends had her jailed, she bolts. The moment she is alone, Sophie researches why someone might not be able to use a tampon, including one spicy little item: 'after having an abortion.' Sophie quickly realizes that her friend-turned-lover has been lying to her. Margo has been having an affair with Brad, Jill's son, and Sophie realizes that it wasn't Abby who had the abortion that Pastor Pete mentioned, but Brad's other girlfriend, Margo. When Margo found out she was pregnant with her teenage boyfriend's baby, she had returned to her own dark past for help. Specifically, Margo née Mandy had gone to her biological father for assistance. As a doctor, he not only terminated Margo's pregnancy (despite Texas state law), but also provided her an alibi, claiming that Margo was with him at her brother's near-death bed on the night of the murder. Sophie gets the doctor to admit he lied and then gets Brad to corroborate the pregnancy story. She then goes to confront Margo about her many crimes. To her credit, Margo quickly admits them all. She explains that when a furious Abby confronted her about the affair, pregnancy, and abortion, Margo grabbed the nearest gun—Sophie's—and killed Abby. She then let Sophie take the fall, because she didn't want to jeopardize her husband's run for governor and wanted the beautiful new life she had built for herself to continue. Unsurprisingly, Sophie is unimpressed with Margo's reasoning. Similarly, when Margo tries to tell her husband the truth about it all, he chucks her out of the house. After all, he had already helped her overcome her past as an escort, given her a life as a rich swinger, and was about to make her the first lady of Texas. While killing an innocent young woman was bad, it seems sleeping with another man was the bridge too far for this relationship. Despite murdering a girl and obstructing justice, Margo is not overly concerned about being jailed. She had gone to talk to her drug-addicted brother Kyle (Michael Aaron Milligan) and he told her to get her head on straight. After all, her sometimes-bestie and sometimes-lover Callie is married to the sheriff and he and the DA have closed the case, blaming Jill for the crime, so Margo has nothing to worry about. Plus, Kyle has decided to take care of Sophie for her. He tries to run Sophie off the road and winds up on the highway in front of her car, threatening her with a gun. That's when Sophie hits the gas, and Kyle dies on the hood of her car. The season ends with Sophie dragging Kyle's body through the woods and to the edge of a cliff, dropping it in the water below. Before his body disappears into the water, though, Sophie accidentally answers his phone. It's Margo. Sophie doesn't say anything and instead just breathes heavily on the line. Margo knows something has gone very wrong and Sophie is undoubtedly really wishing she had stayed in Boston. As Kyle's body goes over the cliff, viewers are left to wonder, is this an actual cliffhanger? Is a second season of this Texas soap opera on its way? It's up to Netflix now.


Metro
21-07-2025
- Entertainment
- Metro
Netflix quietly adds 8 episodes of wild thriller – and fans are devouring it
An 'outrageous' new thriller has quietly been added to Netflix, with fans branding it the 'most insane show' of the year. The Hunting Wives premiered on the platform today, and is based on the bestselling novel of the same name by May Cobb. The eight-part series follows Brittany Snow as Sophie, a woman who moves from Boston to East Texas with her family, where she grows a little too close to a mysterious socialite and her group of wealthy friends. However, things take a turn when a dead body is discovered and the newcomer is warned that she has 'no idea what these people are capable of'. Malin Åkerman, Dermot Mulroney, Chrissy Metz and Katie Lowes also make up the star-studded cast. Wake up to find news on your TV shows in your inbox every morning with Metro's TV Newsletter. Sign up to our newsletter and then select your show in the link we'll send you so we can get TV news tailored to you. Despite only being out a matter of hours, fans and critics have flocked to social media to rave about the latest addition to Netflix's slate. Journalist David Opie tweeted: '#TheHuntingWives is the rare kind of trash that knows exactly what it is and revels in it. 'It's hard to make a show seem this shallow, but still be so entertaining (complimentary). Brittany Snow is great, but Malin Akerman is perfection and their chemistry is GAY gay. I love it.' Lee commented: 'The Hunting Wives is kind of a mess with questionable writing but Brittany Snow and Malin Akerman are constantly serving.' '#TheHuntingWives is the most insane show I have watched all year,' Reporter Max Gao praised. 'I devoured all eight episodes last week and genuinely felt bereft by the end of the season. This show is a soapy good time – outrageous characters, wild plot twists, and *so many* intimate scenes.' Over on Reddit, user Yammersss cheered: '2 episodes in, it's super trashy fun. Malin Akerman's character is a riot, and Brittany Snow is a nice girl who's about to break bad.' The official synopsis reads: 'Sophie trades city life for East Texas and falls into a wealthy socialite's magnetic orbit – where a clique of housewives hide deadly secrets.' Author May, who served as executive producer on the adaptation, recently shed light on the series in a new interview, insisting there is more to it than the 'rich people behaving badly' trope we've been inundated with. 'It really is like escapist fun, but it's also grounded with a small-town murder mystery, which gives it some more gravity,' she told Marshall News Messenger. 'So, it's not just like rich people behaving badly. 'There's some other serious elements brought in. I think that makes it a very gripping and riveting show to watch. There's a cliffhanger at every turn. There's secrets, lies, betrayal. It's got it all.' More Trending Sharing how close the show stayed to her book, she added: 'It is very similar. The book is a good blueprint for what the creators of the show went and did. 'I feel like they took the spirit of the book, and they really made it into this very juicy, binge-worthy, eight-episode series that's just beyond my wildest dreams, to be perfectly honest. 'Even though there's differences, I applaud all the differences, and I'm so excited about it because it all still just really does feel like it celebrates the book and that spirit of rowdy Texas women behaving badly in the pine forest.' The Hunting Wives is available to stream on Netflix now. Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. View More » MORE: TV soap legend Eileen Fulton died aged 91 MORE: TNA Slammiversary sees WWE icon, 48, return to calls for 'one more match' MORE: Ellen DeGeneres admits major problem she'd face if she launched UK talkshow


Tom's Guide
21-07-2025
- Entertainment
- Tom's Guide
Netflix just added a twist-filled mystery thriller series made for binge-watching — and you can stream the entire season now
'The Hunting Wives' has officially dropped on Netflix U.S. today, but unless you've been following closely, you might not have noticed. Originally developed by Starz, the eight-episode thriller was quietly acquired by Netflix earlier this year, and it's landing on the platform without much fanfare or the usual marketing push. Based on the bestselling novel by May Cobb, the series follows a former PR executive who relocates to East Texas in search of a fresh start. There, she's drawn into the orbit of a group of wealthy, thrill-seeking women. While this mystery thriller hasn't generated much early interest, it seems to offer the kind of twisty, bingeable storytelling that could find its footing in the next few days. I recently wrote about the trailer and how it looks like a compelling watch, and I still think it has strong potential to climb Netflix's top 10 based on its intriguing premise alone. Even though it's not labeled as a Netflix original, there are still plenty of enticing ingredients to make viewers do a double take while scrolling though the service, including a strong cast led by Brittany Snow, Malin Akerman, and Dermot Mulroney, plus the fact that thrillers like this usually go down a treat. Whether it slowly builds momentum or gets buried under bigger releases remains to be seen. But for those curious enough to press play, here's everything to know about 'The Hunting Wives' now that it's streaming. 'The Hunting Wives' centers on Sophie O'Neil (Brittany Snow), a former PR executive from the East Coast. She relocates with her husband and son to a small town in East Texas after a traumatic life event. In Texas, Sophie is drawn into an elite and seductive social circle of affluent women known as the Hunting Wives, led by the magnetic Margo Banks (Malin Åkerman), who is married to Sophie's husband's boss, Jed (Dermot Mulroney). Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. What starts with glamorous afternoons of skeet shooting, cocktails, and branded parties spirals into danger and nears catastrophe when the body of a teenage girl is discovered in the woods. Soon, Sophie is drawn into an intricate network of secrets and betrayal she can't escape. Whether you decide to stream 'The Hunting Wives' largely depends on your taste in mystery thrillers. It isn't especially dark or intense, instead leaning into the glossy, soapy drama of shows like 'Desperate Housewives' and 'Big Little Lies.' In simple words: the series is an easy, entertaining watch that doesn't dive too deep but maintains enough sleek, gossipy energy and twists to keep the story moving. Fans familiar with the novel will likely appreciate seeing how the characters and key moments are brought to life on screen. Plus, Brittany Snow and Malin Akerman bring plenty of charm, and their chemistry injects a healthy dose of chaotic humor that's worth the price of admission alone. Reviews for this mystery thriller have started going live, and so far they seem pretty positive. Ashley Hurst from What's on Netflix said: 'The Hunting Wives deserves a lot of praise for being so utterly uncompromising in its goal. It sets out to be a raunchy, juicy, and binge-worthy drama, and it achieves this with ease. There's no holding back.' Meanwhile, Pasta Magazine's Lacy Baugher stated it's 'unabashedly entertaining, a fast-paced televisual equivalent of a beach read that may well end up being just as ephemeral by the time the final credits roll. But the ride is sure going to be fun.' Alison Herman, however, wasn't so pleased with the show's ending and overall pacing. In her Variety review, she said: 'Once there's a corpse to investigate, however, The Hunting Wives grows less distinctive in its social commentary and more caught up in the race to the finish.' She then added: 'Twist after twist keeps the story constantly in motion, at the expense of both texture and basic coherence, until the season ends on an oddly open note — less hanging over a cliff than trailing off into the ether.' Overall, 'The Hunting Wives' probably won't be remembered as the most thoughtful or uplifting series of the summer. It's pure drama centered on a tight-knit group of women who cross dangerous moral lines to protect their reputations. If you're looking for something deeper or a neatly wrapped conclusion, this might not be it, but it's still a compelling guilty pleasure that delivers on soapy thrills. Rebecca Cutter actually shaped the vision and tone of the series, much like her work on 'Hightown,' which also infuses crime drama with a focus on characters grappling with personal struggles and consequences. With eight episodes around 50 minutes each, it makes for a manageable summer binge packed with enough mystery and drama to hold your attention (long enough to overlook any glaring flaws). You can stream 'The Hunting Wives' now on U.S. Netflix. Not feeling it? See what else is new on Netflix this week, or check out our guide on everything added to the streamer in July 2025. Follow Tom's Guide on Google News to get our up-to-date news, how-tos, and reviews in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button.