Streaming on Netflix
4 Episodes
Approx. 54 minutes each
Directed by Kayode Kasum and Daniel Oriahi
Produced by EbonyLife Studios | Executive Producer: Mo Abudu
Rating: 6/10
Blood Sisters returns nearly four years after it became one of Netflix’s most celebrated African originals, carrying massive hype, a loyal fanbase, and a cliffhanger that kept viewers guessing long after the credits rolled in 2022. The goodwill was there. The audience was ready. What the show needed most was focus, and that is precisely what it struggles to hold.
Season 2, directed by Kayode Kasum and Daniel Oriahi, picks up with Sarah Duru and Kemi Sanya in chains, headed to trial for the death of Kola Ademola, the abusive heir whose end set the whole story in motion. The setup is strong. The Ademola family, unbothered by grief and very much occupied with power, has weaponised the courts. Uduak, Kola’s mother, has graduated from vigilante fury to calculated institutional manipulation, and the public is divided between those who see Sarah and Kemi as victims and those who see them as criminals. It is exactly the kind of morally loaded arena that made the first season compelling.
Then the show starts adding rooms to a house it hasn’t finished building. New antagonists arrive. Corporate drama unfolds. Side arcs multiply. The series falls into what can only be called sequel bloat, piling on storylines that dilute rather than deepen the central tension. What was once a breathless internal chase becomes a sprawling melodrama that trades raw intensity for the aesthetics of a prestige production.
The prison sequences are the most telling symptom of this problem. They should be the season’s emotional core, the place where the show sits with what it has put its characters through and refuses to look away. Instead, the narrative keeps pulling the camera out to the Ademola internal crisis, to secondary characters who do not carry the same weight, to subplots that resolve too neatly or not at all.
Sarah and Kemi’s darkest moments are perpetually interrupted. The audience is never fully allowed to settle into the gravity of their survival, and that is a significant creative misstep in a story that staked its reputation on making you feel every consequence.
Kate Henshaw, however, is extraordinary. As Uduak Ademola, she delivers a performance of chilling precision, balancing grief and calculated cruelty in a way that makes the character genuinely terrifying rather than merely villainous. She elevates every scene she occupies, doing work that is frankly better than what the script offers her. In the rare quiet moments when Uduak’s armour slips, even slightly, Henshaw finds the human being underneath without a single word of explanation. It is a masterclass, and it is somewhat damning that the season’s best performance belongs to a character who is not its protagonist.
Ini Dima-Okojie and Nancy Isime remain deeply committed, and their chemistry is still the show’s most reliable asset. When the season stops chasing scale and lets the two of them simply exist in the same room under pressure, Blood Sisters remembers what it is.
Visually, the production is impressive. Kayode Kasum and Daniel Oriahi maintain the glossy, high-contrast aesthetic that distinguished the first season, and the cinematography captures the Lagos elite with a sharp, assured eye. The contrast between the cold brutality of the prison and the gleam of Ademola’s internal crisis is handled well on screen, even when the writing fails to match that deliberateness.
After four years of waiting, the ending arrives feeling contingent rather than conclusive, a story leaving itself open because closing it required more than this season had in reserve. A cliffhanger works when you feel the weight of everything that came before it. This one arrives before that weight has properly settled.
Blood Sisters Season 2 is not a failure. It has too much talent involved for that. But it is a show that forgot what made it matter in the first place: two women, one impossible secret, and nowhere left to run. Everything that has been added around that core has not strengthened it. It has, for the most part, crowded it out.
