THE SANDMAN’s Two-Season Run Was “Always the Plan,” Says Showrunner, But Fans Still Have Questions
Netflix’s The Sandman is preparing to bow out this summer with its second and final season, and according to showrunner Allan Heinberg, that was the plan all along. Even if the timing of the announcement made some fans raise an eyebrow.
When Netflix first renewed the hit adaptation in 2022, the streamer hyped a growing “Sandman world” and teased more stories drawn from Neil Gaiman’s iconic graphic novels. What the announcement didn’t do was offer any specifics, like how many seasons viewers could expect.
That lack of clarity has left some fans feeling blindsided by the revelation that the upcoming second season is the end of the road.
Then came January 2025. Just as headlines began swirling around Gaiman, who denied allegations of sexual abuse, Netflix confirmed that The Sandman would conclude with Season 2. Some assumed the controversy may have prompted a creative pivot or early cancellation.
But Heinberg insists that’s not the case, he told Variety:
“The Sandman series has always been focused exclusively on Dream’s story, and back in 2022, when we looked at the remaining Dream material from the comics, we knew we only had enough story for one more season.”
Now, with the show’s return just weeks away, Heinberg is doubling down. In a new interview with Entertainment Weekly, he said: “It was a decision we made three years ago.”
He acknowledged the awkward optics of Netflix’s timing, announcing the end of the series just as Gaiman-related controversy was growing, but emphasized that the creative plan hadn’t changed.
“I can’t say that it affected our process, which is scheduled years in advance. It’s been in the periphery of my experience and the background of my experience, but it hasn’t been part of the world of the making of the show, if that makes sense. Every production is its own little island.”
Still, the rollout has felt to some fans like the kind of tidy PR positioning studios fall back on when external complications arise. The situation echoes the path taken by Good Omens, another Gaiman-driven project.
That show opted for a single 90-minute special instead of a full third season, and Gaiman stepped back from production altogether.
Whether or not viewers buy the "two-season plan" pitch, The Sandman’s endgame is now locked in. Season 2 will release in two parts, with the first on July 3, and the finale on July 24.
As Morpheus prepares for his final on-screen chapter, audiences will be watching to see how the story ends, and how the show will close out under a cloud of controversy and curiosity.