Netflix’s Regency period drama has gone through some highs and lows during its run, but which is the best season of Bridgerton?
Bridgerton fans are eagerly awaiting the second half of season four to arrive on Netflix.
The upcoming new episodes will finally reveal what happens between Benedict Bridgerton (played by Luke Thompson) and Sophie Baek (Yerin Ha) after he asks her to be his mistress.
While viewers wait with bated breath, some have been rewatching the Netflix show. Here’s our ranking of all the seasons of Bridgerton from the worst to the best – and be warned, there will be spoilers.
Which is the best season of Bridgerton?
5. Bridgerton season 3
Despite pulling viewers in and bringing plenty of drama with the unmasking of Penelope Featherington as Lady Whistledown (played by Nicola Coughlan), season three’s friends-to-lovers romance didn’t quite land between the central leads.
There was also considerable time spent with the rest of the ton, which detracted from the main couple, making the season less impactful than it otherwise could have been.
If anything, Cressida Cowper’s (Jess Madsen) increasingly extravagant puff sleeves and Mama Featherington’s (Polly Walker) sex advice to a miffed Philippa Featherington (Harriet Cains) were highlights of season three.
In fact, they were even more memorable than Colin Bridgerton (Luke Newton) and Penelope’s steamy carriage scene soundtracked to Lord Worldwide himself, Pittbull’s Give Me Everything.
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4. Brigderton season 2
Season two might had one of Bridgerton’s favourite couples – Anthony Bridgerton (Jonathan Bailey) and Kate Sharma (Ashley Simone) – however, the unnecessary love triangle involving an unwitting Edwina Sharma (Charithra Chandran) put a considerable damper on the otherwise lovely slowburn enemies-to-lovers romance.
Bridgerton really did Edwina dirty and depicted her as a naive girl who failed to clock her husband-to-be making eyes at her older sister. The wedding episode was a painful, protracted watch and added drama for the sake of it.
Season two was adapted from Julia Quinn’s The Viscount Who Loved Me, which had a far more solid plot without a love triangle and a savvy Edwina, who was far more self-aware than her onscreen iteration.
3. Bridgerton season 4
While it’s early days, season four of Bridgeton is shaping up to be one of the strongest, if not the best, seasons of the show to date.
The sizzling chemistry between leads Thompson and Ha makes them captivating and the show’s focus on the primary couple strengthens the season.
There’s also the upstairs-downstairs drama with the Maid Wars, which brings much-needed grit to Bridgerton and elevates it above just a frothy, sexy period fantasy.
This author is out until part two drops; however, depending on how season four concludes.
2. Bridgerton season 1
Season one is where it all started. The world was catapulted into Shondaland’s glossy, glamorous take on Quinn’s Regency romance novels in all its glory. From its diverse casting and dashing leads to its instrumental covers of pop bangers and steamy scenes, the world would never be the same again. Bridgerton single-handedly revolutionised the staid period drama genre for the better.
Simon Basset (Regé-Jean Page) and Daphne Bridgerton’s (Phoebe Dynevor) romance, involving the fake-courting-to-falling-in-love trope, certainly hit hard.
Then there was the grit. Simon’s heartbreaking childhood, including overcoming his stammer, and his relationship with his cruel father. Daphne’s lack of sexual education, which reflected the time period, strengthened the narrative and made it stand out.
1. Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story
Falling between seasons two and three, Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story serves as a prequel to the show rather than a full season.
Nonetheless, the limited series is very much part of the Bridgerton universe and brought a lot of context to the world presented, specifically the multicultural nature of the ton.
Penned by Shonda Rhimes herself and not an adaptation of one of Quinn’s novels, the series more than delivered when it came to telling a nuanced story of romance that drew on real-life elements.
The initially rocky romance between King George III (Corey Mylchreest) and Queen Charlotte (India Amarteifio), due to his mental health issues, was fascinating and rarely depicted in period dramas.
Then there was the new queen’s race and the speculative fiction element of the story, with a young Lady Danbury (Arsema Thomas) warning Charlotte that she needed to ensure the Great Experiment was an undeniable success.
Not only were the three main stars Amarteifio, Thomas and Mylchreest fabulous as younger iterations of Bridgerton characters that fans have come to know and love, but there were also some brilliant scenes from the present timeline involving Violet Bridgerton (Ruth Gemmell), Lady Danbury (Adjoa Andoh) and Queen Charlotte (Golda Rosheuvel).
It appears that Shonda’s magic has ensured Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story wears the crown when it comes to Bridgerton.
Bridgerton season 4, part 2 will be released on Netflix on February 26
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