Season two of Cross has officially landed on Prime Video, and if you’re already hooked on James Patterson’s world of crime thrillers, this is where the story gets even darker, sharper, and more addictive. Aldis Hodge is back as Detective Alex Cross, the forensic psychologist who can crawl inside the minds of killers and pull out the truths no one else sees. The first season drew more than 40 million viewers in its first 20 days, so expectations for this new chapter are sky-high—and Prime Video is betting big on it.
Watching Cross is straightforward: it’s streaming exclusively on Prime Video, which means you’ll need an Amazon Prime membership. The standard plan runs $14.99 a month or $139 annually, but Amazon has carved out cheaper options for students, young adults, and those on government assistance. College students, for example, can snag a six-month free trial and then pay just $7.49 a month. If you’re not ready to commit, there’s also a 30-day free trial for eligible new members—perfect if you want to binge both seasons without locking yourself in long-term.
Season two unfolds across eight episodes, dropping weekly until the finale on March 18. That release schedule keeps the tension simmering, forcing fans to sit with cliffhangers instead of devouring the whole thing in one weekend. The plot this time centers on a billionaire businessman, Lance Durand (played by Matthew Lillard), who calls in the FBI after receiving a death threat. Cross teams up with Agent Kayla Craig (Alona Tal) to protect Durand, but the killer’s gruesome clues suggest this is more than a simple protection detail. Meanwhile, Cross’s partner and best friend, John Sampson (Isaiah Mustafa), finds himself pulled into an unexpected personal connection, adding emotional weight to the procedural grit.
The cast is stacked with familiar faces and intriguing newcomers. Alongside Hodge, returning stars include Mustafa, Tal, Samantha Walkes, Juanita Jennings, and Melody Hurd. New additions like Jeanine Mason and Wes Chatham expand the universe, while showrunner Ben Watkins continues to steer the series, with Patterson himself listed among the executive producers. That mix of creative voices ensures the adaptation stays true to the novels while carving out its own identity on screen.
If you missed season one, it’s already streaming in full. That debut season followed Cross as he hunted a sadistic serial killer while battling ghosts from his past that threatened his family and career. It was a brutal, emotional ride that set the tone for what this series is capable of. Season two builds on that foundation, pushing the stakes higher and the psychological tension deeper.
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