Netflix’s wildly popular Regency-era romantic drama Bridgerton returns for its third sumptuous season, shifting the spotlight to one of the series’ most endearing characters – the wallflower Penelope Featherington.
However, Penelope harbors a delicious secret – she is the anonymous scandal-sheet writer Lady Whistledown, keeping high society on its toes with her incisive gossip quill.
Under new showrunner Jess Brownell, this season explores Penelope’s long-simmering feelings for her kind-hearted friend Colin Bridgerton.
As the oblivious Colin returns from his European travels, an emboldened Penelope decides it’s finally time to pursue marriage and a husband. Cue the romantic tension and yearning looks between the longtime pals.
Nicola Coughlan and Luke Newton, who play Penelope and Colin respectively, both get worthy star turns after years in the supporting Bridgerton ranks.
Newton barely makes it past the premiere’s opening credits before being treated to the show’s signature disrobing scene, much to the amusement of his on-screen brothers.
Rarely has a Bridgerton heroine looked more radiant than Coughlan, resplendent in the intricate, shimmering gowns designed to transform Penelope into a fantasy fairy-tale vision.
When Coughlan and Newton’s characters share their most sultry interludes, the two leads exude an effortless tenderness and chemistry that leaves no doubt about the profound depth of feeling between them.
Unfortunately, that intoxicating romantic yearning that has been Bridgerton’s bread and butter feels somewhat diluted this season.
With few real obstacles beyond Colin’s obliviousness standing between the would-be lovers, much of the narrative momentum stalls as we await his inevitably dawning realization.
Even after Colin catches feelings, his sluggishness to properly court Penelope may have some viewers rooting for her other polite suitor, the scandalizingly vegetarian Lord Debling.
Bridgerton has always been at its most poignant, exploring the bonds of chosen family alongside romantic entanglements.
This truth reveals itself again in the fractured friendship between Penelope and Colin’s youngest sister Eloise, whose close bond was shattered last season upon discovering her dear friend’s secret identity. The two young women’s intricately portrayed grief, longing looks, and lingering affection pack more romantic heartache than the central would-be couple can muster.
While the show delivers its signature bodice-ripping and gossipy thrills, returning viewers may find themselves sharing middle Bridgerton daughter Francesca’s sentiments – that not every love story requires excessive grandeur and melodrama to captivate.
As the family’s most pragmatic member argues regarding her own marriage pursuits, “Not every attachment must be dramatic and hard fought.”
After multiple seasons of heightened romantic angst, even the most ardent Bridgerton fans may secretly pine for the series to embrace new narrative ambitions beyond rehashing its familiar formulas, no matter how beautifully packaged.
Like any relationship, keeping the spark alive often requires more than just faithfully recycling what initially attracted you in the first place.