Drops of god 2 interviews
Courtesy/Apple TV

Season 2 of Drops of God is built around a mystery bottle, but for Latino viewers who live between worlds, its real hook is less about what's in the glass and more about what happens when language, identity, and family history refuse to stay in one place.

The new season, which premiered January 21, 2026 on Apple TV and runs for eight episodes with weekly releases through March 11, picks up with Camille Léger and Issei Tomine facing a challenge their late father could not solve, tracing the origin of what is framed as the world's greatest wine.

In an interview with The Latin Times, Fleur Geffrier and Tomohisa Yamashita said the second season itself was a surprise, which matters because it mirrors the way many bicultural lives unfold, with plans interrupted by unexpected returns.

"First of all, we didn't expect at all that there was going to be a second season," Geffrier said. "We thought we'd just do a mini series one season and it would be over because the manga is finished."

That detail is is the emotional thesis of Season 2. You think the story is done, then life informs you it is not.

A show that understands

Latinos in the U.S. often describe a familiar split: one version of the self lives in English, another in Spanish, and neither is fully a performance. They're survival modes.

Fleur Geffrier and Tomohisa Yamashita, French and Japonese respectively themselves, also understand personally that phenomenon, the way a second language can create distance that makes emotion easier to access. Geffrier described acting in English as oddly freeing, precisely because it is not her first language.

"For first season, the first time I really acted in English and I realized that it was somehow easier because it's not your natural language," she said. "So you don't just observe yourself, you focus on what you're saying, the words and the situation."

She added that working in your native language can invite self-judgment, a kind of internal monitoring, while English creates a buffer.

That buffer is deeply recognized by both.

Some feelings are easier to say in English because they land softer. Some truths come out only in Spanish because they land harder. Season 2 leans into this emotional physics, not as a cute multilingual flex but as character architecture.

Yamashita said he felt a similar effect. For him, English makes emotion more direct.

"When I speak in English, it actually helps to describe my emotion more directly," he said, noting that Japanese language structure differs from English, and that English pushes him toward a more straightforward expression of feeling.

A different new season

Season 1 of Drops of God was a duel, a high-pressure inheritance competition between Camille, estranged from her father Alexandre Léger, and Issei, his protégé. Season 2 changes the shape of the story, shifting from competition to investigation, from performance to reckoning.

That thematic move lands with Latino audiences because it echoes a common second-generation experience: you can "win" the life you were told to pursue, education, job, status, fluency, and still feel the pull of unresolved origin questions. Where did we come from. What was lost. What was never said out loud.

The show also makes an unusually bold choice with Issei. Yamashita described how he physically transformed for Season 1, restricting calories to heighten sensory perception.

"In season one, I tried to not take a lot of calories because if you're not going to take a lot of calorie, your palate and the sense will open up," he said. "And I lost like eight kilos weight. It was intense."

In this current season, the challenge is more internal, as his character "discovered his shocking secret about his past," Yamashita said,

Camille's false sense of arrival, and the Latino "I made it, now what" moment

Geffrier described Camille entering Season 2 with a sense of stability, then getting shaken out of it.

"She found herself first second at the beginning of the second season," Geffrier said, "but then things will change. She thinks she's settled and everything is okay, and life sometimes is different."

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