Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Marvel and Netflix move 'always forward' with second season of 'Luke Cage'

Add as a preferred source on Google

It was basically a foregone conclusion, but Marvel Entertainment and Netflix made it official this week: Luke Cage will be back for a second season.

One of the most-watched original series on Netflix, and the recipient of extremely positive reviews from critics and general audiences, Luke Cage debuted September 30 on Netflix and was the third solo series to come out of Marvel’s partnership with the streaming video service. Although the announcement video that confirmed the series’ return didn’t reveal the exact date when star Mike Colter will return as the titular, steel-skinned superhero, it did offer a nice reminder that Pop’s Barber Shop — a central location in the Harlem-based show — is indeed staying open for business.

Recommended Videos

Always forward. #LukeCage pic.twitter.com/4pnu52KFKr

— Luke Cage (@LukeCage) December 4, 2016

Along with Colter in the lead role, Luke Cage also starred Simone Missick (The Road to Sundance) as Misty Knight, who will return for the upcoming crossover miniseries The Defenders. That series will bring together many of the main characters and supporting cast from DaredevilJessica JonesLuke Cage, and the upcoming Iron Fist series.

The first season of Luke Cage also featured Emmy-nominated House of Cards actor Mahershala Ali as the first season’s villain, Frank Whaley (Pulp Fiction) as police detective Rafael Scarfe, Theo Rossi (Sons of Anarchy) as Shades, and Alfre Woodard (Cross Creek) as Mariah Dillard. Rosario Dawson, who appeared in both Daredevil and Jessica Jones, reprised her role as Claire Temple.

Cheo Hodari Coker (Notorious, NCIS: Los Angeles) served as the showrunner on the first season of the series and also penned the scripts for the first two episodes, but it’s unknown whether he’ll return for the second season.

The next series to debut in the shared universe of Marvel’s Netflix shows will be Iron Fist, which will be available March 17, 2017.

Rick Marshall
Former Contributing Editor, Entertainment
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
Netflix announces a new adult animated workplace comedy from the minds behind Common Side Effects and Scavengers Reign
The show is set to arrive in 2027
netflix-dealies-animated-series

If you were gutted by the cancellation of Scavengers Reign, Netflix has something that might ease the pain. The streaming giant has officially announced Dealies, a new adult animated workplace comedy set inside the most gloriously unhinged big box store in America.

The show is created by Joe Bennett and Ted Travelstead, and is expected to arrive on Netflix in 2027.

Read more
Google Photos will turn your pictures into a digital wardrobe that you can mix-and-match
Google Photos Wardrobe feature

Google Photos has spent years organizing our memories. Now it wants to organize our closets, too.

Google is rolling out a new feature called Wardrobe that transforms the photos already sitting in your library into a digital closet. Instead of scrolling through hundreds of selfies and outfit photos before heading out, Wardrobe automatically identifies clothing items from your pictures and groups them into a virtual collection you can browse, mix, and match.

Read more
Google Play Books is getting an AI reading companion that remembers where you left off
Page, Text, Electronics

If you’ve ever picked up a book after a long break and spent the first few pages wondering who half the characters are, Google thinks it has a solution.

Google Play Books is rolling out a new feature called Book Insights, an AI-powered reading companion designed to help readers stay engaged without leaving the page. The tool introduces a “Catch me up” button that generates a quick recap of what you’ve already read, making it easier to jump back into a story after days — or even weeks — away.

Read more