Season #: 4, 3, 2, 1
User Score
8.1

Universal acclaim- based on 127 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Negative: 13 out of 127
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User Reviews

  1. Apr 7, 2019
    9
    The mystery, suspense, irony, action, and obsessions all make this show worth watching. Not only is this a great action show, it also manages to be absolutely hilarious! Sandra Oh and Jodie Comer give great performances - they are so quirky and make the show stand out!
  2. Apr 8, 2019
    10
    Season 2 of Killing Eve started as great as the first season ended. It's currently my favorite TV show because of the suspense, action and amazing characters played by a great cast!
  3. Jun 3, 2019
    9
    This British spy thriller series engages the viewers interest with an absurdist twist on what it means to work for MI6 and what it means to be a professional assassin. Unlike most cold-hearted, dispassionate and detached assassins, Villanelle (Jodie Comer) is also a serial killer at heart. She is a true psychopath who is merciless, ruthless, and bloodthirsty. She kills on contract forThis British spy thriller series engages the viewers interest with an absurdist twist on what it means to work for MI6 and what it means to be a professional assassin. Unlike most cold-hearted, dispassionate and detached assassins, Villanelle (Jodie Comer) is also a serial killer at heart. She is a true psychopath who is merciless, ruthless, and bloodthirsty. She kills on contract for large payments in order to make a living, but she also commits murder in her private life out of vengeance and mere annoyance with individuals who cross her. She is ruthless. When told by Eve Polastri (Sandra Oh), the MI6 agent who has set out to apprehend her, that she is a psychopath, she replies with dead calm and a bemused sense of irony, “I hate that word.”

    Villanelle is actually a Russian criminal known as Oksana. She is youthful and blond with large, innocent eyes and a flawless, porcelain complexion. She is flamboyant and loves to wear high fashion, even the most outlandish designer creations that are sure to attract attention. She seduces both men and women, tossing them aside afterward. She is emotionally dead. But mostly she is bored, and her boredom may prove to be lethal for anyone who enters her deluded, insane universe.

    Her nemesis is Eve Polastri. The chemistry between these two women is inexplicable and highly improbable. Yet, it’s there. Eve is happily married and dedicated to the search for justice and truth. But she and Villanelle are both outsiders, although for different reasons. Polastri’s ethnic origins are Korean, and she speaks to her mother in Korean. The Polish name is her married name, but she is not Polish, she is not British, and she is not European Caucasian. Like Villanelle, she is an outsider but she is compassionate, responsible, and well-adjusted. Emotionally, she is the polar opposite of this lunatic whom she both hunts and desires. Somehow Villanelle fascinates Eve and begins to draw her in. This bizarre relationship ends in disaster in the last episode of Season 1. Eve stabs Villanelle, who escapes and recovers. The stabbing only serves to intrigue Villanelle, who interprets it as an act of love.

    Season 2 brings the two together again in a temporary alliance to seek another criminal monster. This MI6 association with Villanelle, who originally was supposed to be brought to justice, creates a logical disconnect in the plot, and there are more logical disconnects related to the inscrutable Carolyn (Fiona Shaw), who is Eve’s boss. At the end of Season 2, we have a reversal. This time Villanelle leaves Eve lying wounded on the ground; Villanelle shoots Eve.

    Although Jodie Comer is a central player of interest, it is Sandra Oh who somehow keeps it all glued together. Their characters’ chemistry should not work but it does, as Eve lives her life in a no-man’s zone filled with a haze of erotic fantasy that is juxtaposed with the mundane activity of married life. Eve is obsessed with Villanelle even as she chops vegetables to prepare dinner for her husband. Eve is not as transparent or as obvious as Villanelle. She is complicated, tortured, and confused. Her various states are reflected by her looks—sometimes she emanates an ethereal beauty that almost glows from within; other times she looks plain, middle-aged, and even a little schlumpy. Villanelle is a heartless criminal, but Eve is the mystery in this story. The background is enhanced by a haunting soundtrack from Unloved—dreamy, surreal strains of longing and unformed, if not dangerous, impulses of the subconscious mind.
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  4. May 27, 2019
    8
    Liked this season, though I preferred the first one a little more.

    The show continues it's interesting combination of violence and quirky, dark humor. I admit the first half is better than the second half. The beginning is interesting and exciting as we have the assassin Villanelle (Jodie Comer) injured and on the run, and MI agent Eve (Sandra Oh) dealing with the events of last season.
    Liked this season, though I preferred the first one a little more.

    The show continues it's interesting combination of violence and quirky, dark humor. I admit the first half is better than the second half. The beginning is interesting and exciting as we have the assassin Villanelle (Jodie Comer) injured and on the run, and MI agent Eve (Sandra Oh) dealing with the events of last season. Plus, we spend more time on the frayed relationship with her husband. We also get an elusive new assassin.

    But in the second half, we get an antagonist who isn't as interesting, and the whole search for the evil secret organization The Twelve kind of goes out the window. We learn nothing new about the organization or it's goals. Though, I liked this season, I'm afraid of it doing what many anti-hero shows do and just stretch things out so that it gets more and more forced in regards to the criminal given free range.

    Be forewarned that there is one scene that is DARK even for this show.

    Oh and Comer again deliver fine appearances. Comer brings such life to the humorous, childish, clever, and horrifying Villanelle. Fiona Shaw continues to do a great job as Eve's boss, the clever, calm, and morally inscrutable Carolyn Martens. Owen McDonnell gets to do more as Eve's husband as he becomes more involved with and frustrated with Eve's world.

    I wish the second half was stronger, but there are still a lot of little moments that make the show work.
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  5. May 17, 2019
    9
    This show is made by Villanelle. Could watch her character forever. One of the best series I’ve ever watched. Very enjoyable.
  6. Jul 16, 2019
    8
    Once again, Jodie Comer and Sandra Oh were sublime. the best couple on tv on the last years.
  7. Jun 2, 2019
    8
    I really liked this series because of the masterpiece of acting by Sandra Oh, I think everyone who wants to watch this series again is about to see what's happening to this character that is changing so slowly but in an insane route!
  8. Jun 15, 2021
    10
    Killing Eve is still one of my top 10 favorite shows of all time and this season was even better than season 1. Jodie Comer just really steals the show for me but not to underplay Sandra Oh's performance, they just give two of the most phenomenal performances on TV and their chemistry is just terrific. Fiona Shaw, Edward Bluemel, Henry Lloyd-Hughes, and Julian Barratt gave excellentKilling Eve is still one of my top 10 favorite shows of all time and this season was even better than season 1. Jodie Comer just really steals the show for me but not to underplay Sandra Oh's performance, they just give two of the most phenomenal performances on TV and their chemistry is just terrific. Fiona Shaw, Edward Bluemel, Henry Lloyd-Hughes, and Julian Barratt gave excellent supporting performances. The writing is just outstanding, the character development with Villanelle and Eve is just astounding. The cinematography is just spectacular and beautifully done. I love the music it is so perfectly and beautiful composed and helps to set the mood for every scene perfectly. The costumes are exceptional especially on Jodie Comer, Fiona Shaw, and Sandra Oh. The makeup and hairstyling is stupendous especially on Jodie Comer and Sandra Oh. This second season was perfect, an A+. Expand
  9. Dec 19, 2021
    10
    Femininity uproots the long-standing tropes in the spy genre's traditionally masculine world. And it is in no way political about it just assuredly funny! Everything deepens here with a near perfect pacing and how it uses Villenels uncharacteristic femininity as a threat,a weapon that helps leviate brutal kills and subvert expectations. Fortunately the show addresss the queer tensionFemininity uproots the long-standing tropes in the spy genre's traditionally masculine world. And it is in no way political about it just assuredly funny! Everything deepens here with a near perfect pacing and how it uses Villenels uncharacteristic femininity as a threat,a weapon that helps leviate brutal kills and subvert expectations. Fortunately the show addresss the queer tension between Eve and Villenel without shying into baiting. Both halves of the season are evenly strong and even the new characters don't meander and block long running plots but steady them. Also THAT ending will not be rivalled anytime soon. Expand
Metascore
86

Universal acclaim - based on 22 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 22 out of 22
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 22
  3. Negative: 0 out of 22
  1. Reviewed by: Carol Midgley
    Jan 7, 2020
    80
    It needs a bit of grit, though there is a new MI6 posh boy to bounce off and she did have that great line about "murder on the dancefloor". Anyway it ended with the best use of a bog brush in drama that I have seen. Bravo.
  2. Reviewed by: Ed Cumming
    Jan 3, 2020
    80
    The script is still tight and the jokes are still there, as are Villanelle’s accents, outfits and abrupt killings, but without the will-they/won’t-they energy of the initial plot, it is harder to care.
  3. Reviewed by: Jake Nevins
    Dec 3, 2019
    80
    Killing Eve’s new season is compulsively watchable, the most defiantly rock‘n’roll of television’s crime procedurals. Like its assassin, the show is snarky and bombastic, always drawing blood with a smile. Like its hero, Eve, it’s purposeful and droll, consumed by paranoia and occasionally lacking focus.