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Heartbreak High (2022 TV series)

Heartbreak High is an Australian comedy drama television series created for Netflix by Hannah Carroll Chapman. The series follows the students and teachers of Hartley High as they navigate racial tensions in Australia, high school romances, and all sorts of teen angst. It is a soft reboot of the 1994 series (itself a spin-off of the 1993 feature film The Heartbreak Kid) first screened on Network Ten. It features an ensemble cast including Ayesha Madon, Thomas Weatherall, Bryn Chapman Parish, Asher Yasbincek, James Majoos, Chloé Hayden, Will McDonald, Gemma Chua-Tran, Sherry-Lee Watson, Josh Heuston, Brodie Townsend, Chika Ikogwe, Scott Major and Rachel House. Sam Rechner, Kartanya Maynard, and Angus Sampson joined the series in its second season. Ioane Sa'ula, Aki Munroe, William McKenna and Ben Turland joined in its third and final season.

Heartbreak High premiered on Netflix on 14 September 2022. The following month, it was renewed for a second season, which premiered on 11 April 2024. Production for the third and final season began in November 2024, with Netflix releasing the final season on March 25, 2026. The first season received universal acclaim from critics, while the second season divided critics and audiences. The performances and costumes in both seasons were met with praise. It has received numerous accolades, including an International Emmy Award and six AACTA Awards (of 15 nominations).

Premise

Season 1

After a detailed diagram of which students have been sexually involved is discovered graffitied on the wall of the school, all of the students whose names were on it are forced to attend a new sexual education course called the Sexual Literacy Tutorial (SLT, pronounced "sluts" by the students). The map's creator, Amerie Wadia (Ayesha Madon), becomes a social outcast after taking the fall for its co-author, Harper McLean (Asher Yasbincek), who has stopped talking to her following a tragedy at a music festival they attended. Later, Amerie learns that Harper was kidnapped after the music festival by Chook's crew. Ca$h (Will McDonald), a mate of Harper who's part of Chook's gang, helps her escape. She couldn't stay at Amerie's house for support because Amerie was having sex with Spider (Bryn Chapman Parish), hence why she hates her. Amerie and Harper make up, and most of the gang gets arrested. Quinni's (Chloé Hayden) relationship with Sasha (Gemma Chua-Tran) would have lasted longer if Sasha wasn't so rude to her.

Season 2

The recurring theme for Season 2 begins with an unknown perpetrator dismantling Amerie (Ayesha Madon)'s reputation one incident at a time, the first being a dead ibis bird left on her school bag. This first incident earns them the name "Bird Psycho" as the main characters—particularly Quinni (Chloé Hayden)—try to uncover their identity. Keeping in theme with Season 1, relationships are formed and broken. Amerie consistently drops hints that she is interested in Malakai (Thomas Weatherall), but Malakai, questioning his sexuality, dates Rowan (Sam Rechner) instead. Notably, Harper (Asher Yasbincek) and Anthony (Brodie Townsend) get together while Harper is still dealing with the trauma of her kidnapping from Season 1. Spider and Missy also start dating in secret. Ca$h (Will McDonald), who is let out of jail, tries to avoid the other eshays, but the leader, Chook (Tom Wilson), tries to contact him throughout the season. Aiming to repair her reputation, Amerie runs for school captain, but the vote eventually goes to Quinni, who is running as her vice captain and unmasking her autistic traits. The season concludes with the burning of the Hartley High gymnasium during the school formal, as Bird Psycho's identity and motivation are revealed, while Malakai makes the decision to leave for Geneva.

Cast

Main

Recurring and notable guest stars

  • Isabella Gutierrez as Chaka Cardenes (reprising her role from the 1994 series)
  • Ben Oxenbould as Justin McLean, Harper's dad (season 1)
  • Justin Smith as Jim the Maintenance Man (season 1)
  • Sandy Sharma as Huma Wadia, Amerie's mother (seasons 1–2)
  • Tom Wilson as Michael ‘Chook’ Cooper, leader of the eshays and Ca$h's friend (seasons 1–2)
  • Kye McMaster as Tilla, Ca$h's friend (season 1)
  • Ari McCarthy as Jayden, Ca$h's friend (season 1)
  • Maggie Dence as Nan, Ca$h's grandmother
  • Kobie Dee as Jai Beckett, Missy's older brother (seasons 1, 3)
  • Robyn Malcolm as Cait White, Spider's mother (season 2)
  • Stephen Hunter as Coach Arkell (season 1)
  • Jeremy Lindsay Taylor as Kurt Peterson (season 1, reprising his role from the 1994 series)
  • Natalie Tran as Rhea Brown, a local author (season 1)
  • Trystan Go as Felix, Zoe's boyfriend (seasons 2–3)
  • Jude Hyland as Jett Callaghan, Rowan's younger brother (season 2)
  • Lara Cox as Anita Scheppers (season 2, reprising her role from the 1994 series)
  • Peter Carroll as Roger (2 episodes)
  • Ivar Kants as Principal McMahon, from St Bruno’s (season 3, Kants previously played Roberto Bordino in the 1994 series)
  • Tai Nguyen as Dr. Jack Tran (season 3, reprising his role from the 1994 series)

Episodes

Season 1 (2022)

Season 2 (2024)

Season 3 (2026)

Production

The series is a soft-reboot of the 1994 series first screened on Network Ten. The series follow the students and teachers of Hartley High as they navigate racial tensions in Australia, high school romances, and all sorts of teen angst.

The series was announced in December 2020. The TV series was mostly filmed in South Sydney High School, in the suburbs of Maroubra and Matraville of New South Wales between November 2021 and February 2022.

A second season was announced on 19 October 2022. Production on the second season began on 28 May 2023 and wrapped on 29 August 2023. It was released on 11 April 2024.

A third and final season was announced on 9 May 2024. Production on the third season began on 4 November 2024 and wrapped on 6 February 2025. It was released on March 25, 2026.

Release

The first season premiered on 14 September 2022. The second season premiered on 11 April 2024. The third season premiered on 25 March 2026.

Reception

Audience viewership

The first season of Heartbreak High debuted at number six on Netflix's Top 10 TV English titles for the tracking week of 19–25 September 2022 with 18.25 million hours viewed. On the following week, it climbed to number five and garnered 14.88 million viewing hours. The series remained in the top 10 for the third week, placing at number eight with 9.48 million viewing hours.

The second season debuted at number seven on Netflix's Top 10 TV English titles for the tracking week of 8–14 April 2024 with 15.8 million hours viewed. On the following week, it climbed to number five and garnered 20 million viewing hours. On its third week, it ranked at number nine, earning 12 million viewing hours.

Critical response

The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes gave the first season an approval rating of 100%, based on reviews from ten critics, with an average rating of 7.3/10. The second season has an approval rating of 57%, based on reviews from six critics, with an average rating of 6.4/10.

The show received praise for its racial, sexuality, gender and neurodivergent representation, realism towards modern teenhood, costumes and visuals. It was also positively compared to other popular modern teen dramas (which viewers found it very similar to), including Euphoria, Never Have I Ever and Sex Education. Alex Henderson of The Conversation said that the show addressed serious topics like substance abuse, discrimination or youth crime, but still uses comical moments and avoids cliché moments whilst showing mistakes made by the characters. Mitchell Adams of The Sydney Morning Herald commented on the representation of autism, saying "scenes where Quinni feels overwhelmed just sitting on a bus, or being at a party while forcing herself to mask how she feels in order to better fit in and not upset people, depict a pain neurodivergent people know all too well". Collider named the series as one of the best new TV shows of 2022.

Accolades

References

External links