Chris Pratt Sets The Terminal List Season 2 for October 21
Chris Pratt set the terminal list season 2 for October 21, giving Prime Video a date for the series’ return. The 8-episode season brings James Reece back into a story that moves beyond the first season’s revenge setup and into a wider espionage run.
Pratt revealed the premiere date at the streamer’s Upfront presentation on Monday. He said, “This is bigger, it’s more intense and ambitious than anything we did in the first season,” while also describing a season that “expands the world in a huge way on a global scale: bigger set pieces, deeper conspiracy, even more psychological tension. Our whole team poured everything, our hearts and souls, 1000s of people, into making this season worthy of the fans who made the first season such a phenomenon.”
Jack Carr's True Believer
The series comes from Jack Carr’s best-selling novels, and Season 2 draws from his second book, True Believer. That source material pushes James Reece, played by Pratt, through a journey of violent redemption after he finishes his list.
The story also widens geographically. Season 2 sends Reece across the Indian Ocean, Southern and Northern Africa, the Middle East, and Europe, a shift that turns the show from a tight thriller into something built for larger set pieces and a broader conspiracy.
Returning Cast, New Faces
Raife Hastings, Katie Buranek, Mohammed Farooq, and Jules Landry return for Season 2, while Freddy Strain joins the cast. The 8-episode run also adds Costa Ronin, Olga Kurylenko, Yul Vazquez, Arnold Vosloo, Shiraz Tzarfati, Martin Sensmeier, Edwin Hodge, and Caitlin Bassett, giving the season a bigger roster than the first installment.
Pratt also serves as an executive producer through Indivisible Productions, alongside David DiGilio, Antoine Fuqua, Kat Samick, Jack Carr, former Army Ranger Max Adams, and Navy SEAL Jared Shaw. The Terminal List is a co-production between Amazon MGM Studios and Civic Center Media in association with MRC, and October 21 now becomes the date that shows whether the series’ expansion can match the scale Pratt promised.