Poker Face Season 2 Got 100% on Rotten Tomatoes, but Is It Really Better Than Season 1?

Charlie and her lie-detecting superpower are finally back.
Poker Face was created and launched by Rian Johnson, the director of the Knives Out duology that will become a trilogy this fall. He also directed the first episode of the second season.
The showrunner for the second season is Tony Tost, who previously worked on Longmire and The Terror. The second episode of the new season was directed by star Natasha Lyonne.
What Is Poker Face Season 2 About?
Charlie, who is able to sense other people's lies, continues to travel across the vast expanses of America solving intricate cases, only now the amateur detective is hiding not from the owner of a Las Vegas casino, but from powerful mobsters led by the ruthless Beatrix Hasp.
No matter what wilderness a woman finds herself in, criminals are always at her heels, so she cannot stay in one place for long.
Poker Face Continues to Follow the Howcatchem Formula
Although the directors of the series change from episode to episode, the general style remains the same.
Like the first season, the second belongs to the detective subgenre of howcatchem: the audience knows who committed the crime, but the detective must find the villain and prove guilt.
Poker Face repeats the precepts of Columbo, but since the premiere of Johnson's brainchild, another project with a similar dramatic structure has appeared on the screens – Elsbeth. Perhaps we are witnessing a renaissance of the whodunit, although in general there is no need to worry about the detective genre.
Season 2 Is Even More Dynamic Than Season 1
Poker Face is true to itself, does not betray the fans of the first season and at the same time does not mark time.
The new episodes are noticeably more dynamic. The authors do not adhere to the strict structure of the procedural. Usually Charlie solves a case in an episode, but each episode is a mix of genres, the detective is not always the main character.
In the whirlwind of witty stories, it is easy to overlook the creators' clever remarks on envy, love, friendship, betrayal, competition in the art world, midlife crises, and self-identification.
Poker Face Is Still the Best Comfort Detective Series of Recent Years
Rian Johnson's series remains a great way to relax and forget about everyday worries. The second season makes small changes to the familiar recipe, but all the main ingredients remain the same.
Poker Face creates a space of comfort where, despite the regular occurrence of strange murders, a solution is always found and the villains get what they deserve. The show has the potential for an infinite number of seasons, but let's hope the creators' sense of taste and proportion doesn't betray them.