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“Season 1 on Steroids!” — Emmett J Scanlan Teases 2 Massive Reasons Tom Hardy’s London Set of MobLand Is Going Completely Bananas.

Filming is officially underway for Season 2 of MobLand, the gritty crime saga fronted by Tom Hardy. After a debut season that immersed audiences in the brutal chess game of multi-million-dollar syndicates battling for dominance, the upcoming chapter promises something far more explosive. According to Scanlan, it’s not just bigger. It’s “completely bananas.”

The first reason? Scale.

Season 1 built its tension carefully—street by street, betrayal by betrayal—anchoring its violence in psychological warfare. But insiders suggest Season 2 expands the battlefield dramatically. London itself becomes a character on steroids: docklands, financial districts, hidden backroom clubs, and suburban strongholds all reportedly woven into a sprawling web of territorial warfare. The syndicate conflicts are no longer contained to whispered meetings and isolated hits. They’re escalating into citywide power grabs with ripple effects that threaten to destabilize every alliance forged in the first season.

Scanlan teased that the production has significantly increased its logistical footprint. Larger night shoots. More elaborate action sequences. Higher stakes confrontations. If Season 1 felt like a simmering turf war, Season 2 may resemble a full-blown corporate crime apocalypse.

The second reason? Character evolution—particularly Hardy’s.

Tom Hardy has built a career on portraying men who operate in moral gray zones, from controlled menace to explosive unpredictability. In MobLand, his character isn’t just muscle; he’s strategist, survivor, and occasionally reluctant kingmaker. Scanlan hinted that the new season dives deeper into the psychological toll of leadership in a world where trust is currency—and betrayal is inevitable.

Hardy’s performance in the first season was marked by restraint: long silences, calculating glances, carefully measured threats. But Season 2 reportedly pushes him into unfamiliar territory. Pressure mounts from rivals who’ve studied his every move. Internal fractures test his authority. And past decisions return with consequences that cannot be negotiated away.

Scanlan’s enthusiasm suggests the ensemble dynamic also intensifies. Alliances shift. Loyalty becomes conditional. Characters who once stood safely in the background are now stepping into the chaos. The “steroid” metaphor isn’t just about explosions—it’s about emotional volatility. Relationships strain under paranoia. Friendships become liabilities. Every scene reportedly carries a sense that the wrong word could trigger irreversible fallout.

London, as a backdrop, amplifies that tension. The city’s polished financial power contrasts sharply with the underground economy fueling the drama. This duality—respectable facades hiding ruthless ambition—remains central to the show’s DNA. But if Scanlan is to be believed, Season 2 strips away even more illusion. The war is no longer subtle. It’s loud, public, and impossible to ignore.

The phrase “completely bananas” might sound playful, but within the MobLand universe, it translates to something darker: unpredictability. The kind where no character feels untouchable. The kind where strategy collapses under emotion. The kind where survival may depend not on strength, but on who blinks first.

If Season 1 introduced viewers to the rules of this criminal empire, Season 2 appears ready to break them. And with Tom Hardy at the center of the storm, guided by a cast that clearly believes lightning can strike twice—only harder—MobLand’s return to London may prove that in the world of syndicate warfare, escalation is inevitable.

And this time, there may be no coming back from it.