The trickiest thing about promoting Sugar isn’t selling the noir atmosphere or Colin Farrell’s silky charm — it’s keeping your mouth shut. The Apple TV series presents itself as a stylish detective story, all trench coats and missing persons, but it’s secretly science fiction, a reveal the show holds back until roughly the halfway point of its first season.
For Farrell, that meant a press tour spent tiptoeing around the truth. “I knew that I could get the show in deep shit if I revealed certain things,” he says, recalling the contortions required to talk about a character whose nature was deliberately hidden from the audience.
Season 2 changes the dynamic. With the twist already out of the bag, the actor describes himself as “unburdened” by the secrecy that shadowed the debut run. That doesn’t mean he’s spilling everything — “There are certain things I wouldn’t mention here about season 2,” he notes — but the new mysteries are smaller in scale, less likely to detonate the entire premise if a stray comment slips out.
The freedom also reshapes the character. With the big reveal behind him, John Sugar can be played as something more grounded and emotionally legible, a quirky private investigator allowed to become, in Farrell’s framing, considerably more human. The first season used its genre rug-pull to recontextualize everything you thought you knew about the detective; the second gets to live inside that knowledge rather than guard it.
That shift matters for a show built so heavily on tone. Sugar traded on the tension between its retro Los Angeles detective fantasy and the strangeness lurking underneath, and Farrell’s performance — soft-spoken, film-obsessed, almost too gentle for the world around him — was always the connective tissue. Letting the audience and the actor share the same secrets opens the door to a different kind of storytelling, one that leans into character rather than concealment.
Season 2 begins streaming on Apple TV on June 19th.
For an actor who spent an entire promotional cycle dodging spoilers, the prospect of talking openly is clearly a relief — even if he’s still keeping a few cards close to the chest. Some habits, it seems, are hard to shake.