Netflix has decided not to return to Mount Olympus, canceling its series Kaos after a single season.
The decision comes about six weeks after the dark comedy, based on Greek and Roman mythology and created by Charlie Covell (The End of the F*ing World), made its debut on the streamer. Kaos appeared in Netflix’s top 10 charts for English-language series in each of its first four weeks, topping out at No. 3 for the week of Sept. 2-8. It earned 14.9 million views (measured by total viewing time divided by running time) over those weeks, a middling number by the streamer’s standards.
In the United States, the show had 3.34 million views as of Sept. 8, according to Nielsen’s streaming ratings (viewing totals for subsequent weeks aren’t yet available).
Kaos puts Greek and Roman mythology in a present-day setting. The series stars Jeff Goldblum as Zeus, who has chained fellow god Prometheus (Stephen Dillane) to a cliff as punishment for interfering with Zeus’ rule. Prometheus then seeks to overthrow Zeus with the help of three humans, Eurydice (Aurora Perrineau), Ariadne (Leila Farzad) and Caeneus (Misia Butler). The cast also includes Janet McTeer, Cliff Curtis, David Thewlis, Rakie Ayola, Killian Scott, Nabhaan Rizwan, Debi Mazar, Mat Fraser, Stanley Townsend, Billie Piper and Suzy Eddie Izzard.
In an Instagram post, Perrineau said of the cancellation that “this one hurts” but praised her castmates and the show’s creative team. “Everyone was brilliant and uniquely themselves. Every performance surprised and excited me,” she wrote. “I can’t believe I got to do this with all of you. We made something weird, dark, hilarious, deranged, and absolutely tragic — something entirely human.”
It was mostly brilliant.
It built on myth in an engaging and modern way. The acting was across the board top tier. The camera and lighting work were as good as you'll ever find in movies, much less a serial show. The writing was cohesive, and realistic in dialogue except when realism in dialogue would have failed, and then the strangeness of the setting showed through like a kraken tentacle breaking the surface of a calm ocean.
The gods were delightfully over the top, the mortals disturbingly human.
I used to be a pretty heavy greek/roman mythology geek, and I've always been disappointed in the efforts film and TV have turned out. Kaos was deeply satisfying, even though it didn't stick to exactly congruent myths. It felt like myth, and that's a very rare thing.
Tbh, even with the cancellation, it would be worth pirating and watching, just as an example of how inspiring mythology can be.
I second this review. Netflix should have promoted it, at all, and maybe people would have known it was there before they shit canned it.
Really was looking forward to an S2 for this.