Recommended Video
After four long years away, HBO’s glossy teen drama steps back into the spotlight with its characters pushed five years forward into their early twenties. The opener wastes no time throwing everyone into new messes. Zendaya’s Rue finds herself out in wide desert stretches, seeking ways to settle old scores. Sydney Sweeney’s Cassie throws herself into wedding planning with Nate (Jacob Elordi) while pursuing side income through personal videos that lean hard into over-the-top costumes and poses. The rest of the group scatters into their own corners—some dipping into entertainment jobs, others drifting into transactional arrangements.

RELATED: Times Have Truly Changed for Euphoria’s Leading Ladies
A Deeper Look
Sam Levinson, who wrote and directed the pilot, clearly wanted a fresh coat of paint. Rue’s story picks up a big-screen western vibe. The camera work looks expensive, and the cast still brings their usual intensity. On the surface, it all moves along with the kind of grainy energy that made the show a hit in the first place.

But something feels off once the credits roll. The characters may have aged and swapped high-school lockers for bigger problems, yet they circle the same old patterns. Rue wrestles with bigger stakes and brushes against ideas of faith and starting over—a nod to real losses behind the scenes and the search for something steadier. Cassie’s wedding dreams turn her people-pleasing tendencies into something even more strained and public. The show lines up these threads but never quite digs in far enough to make any of it land with weight.
That gap shows up most clearly in the moments meant to shock. Cassie’s content-creation hustle pushes further into territory the series always loved testing. What once cut close to the bone about insecurity and craving attention now comes across as louder, emptier, and more calculated for reaction than rooted in anything that truly reveals her.

Plenty of fans have already said as much online. Many scratch their heads, calling parts of the pilot plain off-putting. The show once caught that chaotic teenage swirl so vividly. Now, it sometimes plays like it’s trying too hard to stay relevant.
In short, this return lands in an odd spot. It brings back the drama, the striking visuals, and the familiar faces that hooked so many viewers. What it struggles to recapture is the vulnerability that once made all the messiness matter. Whether the rest of the season can turn that reach into something that actually resonates is anyone’s guess. For now, the series feels caught between its flashy new ambitions and a stubborn attachment to what worked before—louder than ever, yet somehow less alive at its core.
Photos: HBO (via Instagram)
