Tom Hardy’s Gritty Crime Drama Finally Sets Season 2 Premiere Date
Cameras are rolling on Tom Hardy’s MobLand Season 2, silencing delay rumors and signaling a faster-than-expected return.
Good news for anyone who thought Tom Hardy's latest crime playground might take a long nap between seasons: it isn't. MobLand is already back in action, and cameras are rolling. Here's what actually got announced, what it does and does not mean for a release date, and a few behind-the-scenes breadcrumbs worth clocking.
Season 2 is officially filming
The show's X account dropped a clapperboard photo marked 'Scene 1/38A Take 3' with the caption 'Momentary blissness. #MobLand Season 2 is now in production.' Slightly odd word choice, sure, but the message is clear: they're shooting. Paramount+ and Paramount+ UK & Ireland amplified the update on Nov 13, 2025, confirming production has started.

This lines up with what the cast teased earlier
Back in September, Joanne Froggatt (she plays Jan) told CBR that the plan was to start filming toward the end of October. She was also pretty effusive about the gig, saying she loved the script, loved the character, and felt lucky to be part of the cast. The vibe was: excited to get back, and soon.
'I always wanted to play a gangster's wife or a gangster, and then she came my way.'
So if you were bracing for a long gap, the schedule seems tighter than that.
Who is steering the thing
MobLand comes from creator Ronan Bennett, building on his work from The Day of the Jackal. Paramount+ developed the series, with Guy Ritchie producing. If that combo gives you a pretty specific picture of tone and texture, you are not wrong.
The main players
- Tom Hardy as Harry Da Souza
- Pierce Brosnan as Conrad Harrigan
- Helen Mirren as Maeve Harrigan
- Paddy Considine
Where the timeline sits now
Season 1 premiered on March 30, 2025. Paramount+ renewed the show a few weeks after the Season 1 finale. As of Nov 13, 2025, Season 2 is in production. There is no release date yet. So yes, the train is moving, but no one is telling you exactly when it pulls into the station.
One last nerdy detail: that clapperboard note ('Scene 1/38A Take 3') is the kind of early-days snapshot production folks love to post. Translation: they are at the very beginning, which is great for momentum but still means patience on the premiere front.