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{{Infobox television season|season_name=|season_number=1|bgcolour=#1C1B29|image=<!-- Add image name here -->|caption=Promotional poster|num_episodes=8|network=[[Netflix]]|first_aired={{Start date|2026|2|13}}|last_aired={{End date|2026|4|3}}|episode_list=|starring={{Plainlist|
{{Infobox television season|season_name=|season_number=1|bgcolour=#1C1B29|image=Damnation High season 1 poster.png|caption=Promotional poster|num_episodes=8|network=[[Netflix]]|first_aired={{Start date|2026|2|13}}|last_aired={{End date|2026|4|3}}|episode_list=|starring={{Plainlist|
* [[Hunter Moore]]
* [[Alex Wolff]]
* [[Kiara Lynn]]
* [[Kiara Lynn]]
* [[Miguel Orion]]
* [[Miguel Orion]]
* [[Siena Rowe]]
* [[Paul Bettany]]
* [[D.B. Anders]]
* [[D.B. Anders]]
* [[Werner Herzog]]
* [[Werner Herzog]]
* [[Juno Taylor]]
}}|showrunner=[[Alex Brow (film)|Alex Brow]]}}The first season of the American dark comedy television series ''[[Damnation High (TV series)|Damnation High]]'' premiered on [[Netflix]] on February 13, 2026. The season follows [[Ash Maddox]], who becomes the target of a mystical force unleashed after a childhood accident in which he inadvertently caused a death. Set within its own standalone universe, the series is produced by [[Mob Productions]], with [[Alex Brow (film)|Alex Brow]] serving as showrunner.
* [[Adil Rahman]]
* [[Kelly Martinez]]
* [[Ellis Wu]]
* [[Marcella Quade]]
}}|showrunner=[[Alex Brow]]}}The first season of the American dark comedy television series ''[[Damnation High (TV series)|Damnation High]]'' premiered on [[Netflix]] on February 13, 2026. The season centers on a group of fictional teenagers extracted from collapsing story universes and forced to survive a chaotic school year at the mysterious Damnation High — a surreal institution governed by the Board of Plot Correction. Blending elements of satire, horror, and genre deconstruction, the season parodies common tropes found in modern streaming dramas, including brooding antiheroes, psychic teens, glitchy timelines, and explosive “final exam” deathmatches.


The season was officially ordered by Netflix in May 2025. Filming began in July of that year and concluded in October. The main cast includes [[Hunter Moore]], [[Kiara Lynn]], [[Miguel Orion]], [[Siena Rowe]], and [[D.B. Anders]], with [[Werner Herzog]] voicing a recurring metaphysical entity.  
Netflix officially ordered the season in May 2025. Filming commenced in July and concluded in October of the same year. The principal cast includes [[Alex Wolff]], [[Kiara Lynn]], [[Miguel Orion]], [[Paul Bettany]], and [[D.B. Anders]], with [[Werner Herzog]] providing the voice for a recurring metaphysical entity.


The season was developed and executive produced by  Brow, alongside Rhea Wexler and Thomas Kinley, with Mob Productions serving as the primary studio. The series quickly gained a cult following for its fourth-wall-breaking humor, violent tone, and satirical edge. The series was renewed for a second season on March 7, 2026.
The season received generally favorable reviews from critics, who praised its plot and darkly comedic tone but criticized its uneven pacing, which many felt hindered the season’s overall impact. Despite these criticisms, the series quickly developed a cult following, particularly for its violent themes and satirical edge. On March 7, 2026, Netflix renewed ''Damnation High'' for a second season. On March 12, the series was cancelled by Netflix.


== Episodes ==
== Episodes ==
Line 101: Line 96:
== Cast and characters ==<!-- Order per credit sequence -->
== Cast and characters ==<!-- Order per credit sequence -->


* [[Hunter Moore]] as Ash Maddox: A volatile, self-serious "antihero" pulled from a cancelled dystopian action series. Ash has a tragic backstory, unnecessary shoulder armor, and a penchant for monologuing before fights. He believes he's the main character, despite the show repeatedly challenging that notion. Moore described Ash as “a send-up of every brooding savior complex with daddy issues and a knife.”<ref name="CastingDeadline" />
* [[Alex Wolff]] as Ash Maddox
* [[Kiara Lynn]] as Cassie Clairvoyant: A telepathic teen from a failed supernatural soap opera. Cassie is haunted by a meta-demon only she can hear (voiced by Werner Herzog), and struggles to figure out which of her many tragic backstories is actually canon. Lynn said she portrayed Cassie as “half goth medium, half anxious screenwriter inside a teen’s body.”<ref name="KiaraInterview" />
* [[Kiara Lynn]] as Cassie Clairvoyant
* [[Miguel Orion]] as Dexter Chrome: A nihilistic hacker-turned-technomancer from a defunct streaming thriller. Dexter treats reality like an open-source game mod and regularly breaks the fourth wall to comment on the writing. Orion described the character as “basically if Mr. Robot took acid and got trapped in Fortnite.”<ref name="OrionProfile" />
* [[Miguel Orion]] as Dexter Chrome
* [[Siena Rowe]] as Tabby Noir: A former vampire hunter sidekick turned social media-obsessed influencer. Tabby knows her series was cancelled due to “audience fatigue,” and is determined to go viral before she’s killed off. Rowe called her “the genre’s final girl who refused to die offscreen and came back with WiFi.”<ref name="TabbyEW" />
* [[Paul Bettany]] as Detective Tabby
* [[D.B. Anders]] as Principal Killjoy: A reprogrammed Squid Game-style overseer who now runs the school under the command of the Board of Plot Correction. Once a game show host for a brutal survival game, he now applies those same principles to student discipline. Anders described Killjoy as “Ron Swanson meets Jigsaw but with tenure.”<ref name="KilljoyInterview" />
* [[D.B. Anders]] as Principal Killjoy
* [[Werner Herzog]] as the voice of “The Narration Demon”: A metaphysical entity that haunts Cassie, commenting on the futility of hope and narrative logic. The character is invisible to everyone except Cassie, and often speaks in cryptic, doom-laced monologues. Herzog recorded his lines independently, calling the role “a delightful exercise in existential despair.”<ref name="HerzogCasting" />
* [[Werner Herzog]] as the voice of “The Narration Demon” / "Jack"
 
Additional recurring actors include:
 
* Juno Taylor as Plot Monitor Ziv – A surveillance officer from the Board who issues meta-detentions for clichés.
* Adil Rahman as Byron “Bytie” Hughes – Dexter’s glitching best friend, who keeps respawning in different genres.
* Kelly Martinez as Madame Rubric – The narrative studies teacher who grades students based on trope subversion.
* Ellis Wu as Shard – A chaotic energy-wielding transfer student from a fantasy show that never aired.
* Marcella Quade as Dean Holloway – The faceless, unseen voice that announces “Narrative Purge” events over the PA.
 
Casting was handled by Sofia Arendt, who noted that every actor was selected not just for performance range, but for how well they could embody and then subvert the trope they represented.<ref name="CastingProcess" />


== Production ==
== Production ==


=== Development ===
=== Development ===
''Damnation High'' was conceived by series creator Alex Brow as a satirical response to the growing trend of genre-saturated streaming shows that blend supernatural elements, teen drama, and dystopian tropes. Brow described the idea as “a narrative trash compactor — where broken characters get a second chance by surviving a gauntlet of clichés.” The project was originally pitched in early 2024 to Mob Productions, who backed the concept as part of their expansion into genre-deconstructive television.
In 2023, [[Alex Brow (film)|Alex Brow]] pitched the concept for the series to [[Netflix]], which expressed strong interest in releasing the project with [[Mob Productions]] attached as the producer. By June of the same year, Netflix officially ordered the series with an initial eight-episode commitment. Brow had originally envisioned a longer season consisting of 22 or 23 episodes; however, Netflix declined this, citing concerns that such a large episode count would be “risky.” Brow initially struggled to settle on a final title for the series, taking extra time to finalize the name. By June 2024, the series was officially confirmed as ''Damnation High'', set in the fictional town of Damnation South. In September of the same year, Mob Productions announced that the season had a budget of $80 million, with Brow commenting that the funds were being allocated in a “smart way” to maximize production quality.
 
Netflix ordered an eight-episode season in May 2025, following a competitive bidding process that included interest from Hulu and Amazon Prime Video. According to executive producer Rhea Wexler, the goal was to "create a genre playground that felt dangerous, ridiculous, and completely unpredictable — but still rooted in character arcs, even if we break the fourth wall doing it."


=== Writing ===
=== Writing ===
The writers' room was led by Alex Brow and featured a rotating team of genre-savvy creatives, including Hannah Kim, Casey Doyle, and Thomas Kinley. Each episode was structured to parody a different common trope or format — such as flashback episodes, power creep, bottle episodes, and multi-part finales — while still advancing an overarching plot about narrative survival and character agency.
Brow hired [[Hannah Kim]], [[Casey Doyle]], and [[Thomas Kinley]] as writers for the season. He personally wrote three episodes, including the pilot, which he described as one of his most challenging tasks since becoming a screenwriter. Brow played a “huge role” in shaping every episode, frequently demanding rewrites, adjustments, and enhancements. Doyle has often praised Brow as a “great leader” for his honest and straightforward feedback, crediting it with significantly improving the quality of the projects.
 
Dialogue and structure often shifted mid-episode to reflect in-universe genre instability, with characters becoming aware of their own archetypes and roles. Early drafts of the script included multiple endings for certain episodes, with the most "compelling" one selected in post-production to reflect the show's own internal logic about narrative worthiness.


=== Casting ===
=== Casting ===
Casting began in June 2025 and intentionally sought relatively unknown but versatile young actors capable of playing exaggerated tropes without leaning into parody too hard. Hunter Moore, Kiara Lynn, and Miguel Orion were cast as leads, portraying characters that respectively embodied the violent anti-hero, the brooding psychic, and the detached digital savant. Voice acting legend Werner Herzog was brought on to voice the hallucinated "narration demon" in a recurring role, a decision Brow called “a deranged masterstroke.”
The casting process was overseen by [[Sofia Arendt]], who publicly emphasized that securing the right actors was crucial to maintaining high-quality performances, not just strong writing. [[Alex Wolff]] was approached for the lead role of Ash Maddox and accepted the part with a salary of $75,000 per episode, totaling $600,000 for the season. Joining Wolff are [[Kiara Lynn]] as Cassie Clairvoyant, [[Miguel Orion]] as Dexter Chrome, [[Paul Bettany]] as Detective Tabby, [[D.B. Anders]] as Principal Killjoy, and [[Werner Herzog]] providing the voice of “The Narration Demon” / “Jack.”
 
According to casting director Sofia Arendt, the brief given to actors was to “play your role like it’s your last season before cancellation — because it might be.”


=== Filming ===
=== Filming ===
Principal photography took place from July to October 2025 in Vancouver, British Columbia. The production made use of practical soundstage sets designed to shift tone between episodes — including a self-rearranging hallway, an exploding cafeteria, and a gymnasium that transformed into an arena for the “Narrative Purge.” Outdoor scenes were filmed in overcast conditions to maintain a visually surreal, Netflix-adjacent palette.
Filming for ''Damnation High'' began in July 2025, with initial location shoots capturing exterior establishing shots in a small town designed to represent the fictional Damnation South. Principal photography officially commenced later that month at [[Pinewood Studios]], where much of the season was shot under the working title ''Red Sky''. The production was led by director [[Freddie Goodwin]], with [[Maya Thompson]] and [[Jackson Greene]] contributing as second-unit directors. Cinematographers Alison Kelly and Ante Cheng handled the visual tone, employing a mix of practical effects and atmospheric lighting to emphasize the series’ dark, supernatural themes. In September, filming moved to various on-location sets across the [[Pacific Northwest]] to capture key scenes in natural and urban settings. Principal photography wrapped in October 2025. The production also developed practical props and effects to serve as references for post-production, ensuring seamless integration of supernatural elements throughout the season.
 
Stunt work was emphasized, with over 30 custom rig sequences used throughout the season. The actors underwent physical training to handle the frequent fight choreography and narrative "twists" such as spontaneous gravity shifts, fourth-wall breaks, and timeline glitches.


=== Visual effects ===
=== Design ===
The visual effects for season 1 were produced by Mob VFX and ChronoStitch Digital. Effects included multiverse fracturing, floating text overlays, glitching environments, exploding narrative devices (like plot crystals and canon bombs), and sequences where characters literally rewrote their own dialogue mid-scene. One notable set piece involved a time loop malfunction visualized as the same hallway collapsing on itself in real time, requiring a hybrid of practical collapsing sets and layered compositing.
John Paino was the production designer for the series, while Chris Seagers served as the costume designer.


=== Music ===
=== Music ===

Latest revision as of 05:01, 3 July 2025

Damnation High
Season 1
Promotional poster
ShowrunnerAlex Brow
Starring
No. of episodes8
Release
Original networkNetflix
Original releaseFebruary 13 (2026-02-13) –
April 3, 2026 (2026-04-03)

The first season of the American dark comedy television series Damnation High premiered on Netflix on February 13, 2026. The season follows Ash Maddox, who becomes the target of a mystical force unleashed after a childhood accident in which he inadvertently caused a death. Set within its own standalone universe, the series is produced by Mob Productions, with Alex Brow serving as showrunner.

Netflix officially ordered the season in May 2025. Filming commenced in July and concluded in October of the same year. The principal cast includes Alex Wolff, Kiara Lynn, Miguel Orion, Paul Bettany, and D.B. Anders, with Werner Herzog providing the voice for a recurring metaphysical entity.

The season received generally favorable reviews from critics, who praised its plot and darkly comedic tone but criticized its uneven pacing, which many felt hindered the season’s overall impact. Despite these criticisms, the series quickly developed a cult following, particularly for its violent themes and satirical edge. On March 7, 2026, Netflix renewed Damnation High for a second season. On March 12, the series was cancelled by Netflix.

Episodes[edit | edit source]

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air date
11"Welcome to Hell, Period 1"Alex BrowAlex BrowFebruary 13, 2026 (2026-02-13)
Ash Maddox arrives at Damnation High convinced he's entirely alone. On his first day, he spots his old primary school friend, Miles Crawler, but hesitates to approach, unsure if Miles even remembers him. During first period, Ash meets Wells Smith, an easygoing student who quickly befriends him and explains that the school operates as a full-time boarding institution until the holidays. To Ash’s surprise, Wells also turns out to be his roommate and takes him to their shared dorm in the West Wing Dorms. At lunch, Ash finally reconnects with Miles and is relieved to find that Miles not only remembers him but still considers him a friend. However, things take a dark turn during a math class when Ash hears a demonic voice echoing from the hallway. Investigating alone, he discovers the corpse of a student whose throat has been ripped out, a strange “M” carved into his forehead. Ash calls for help and is questioned by local police, who clear him but warn him cryptically to “stay away,” leaving him unsettled. Detective Tabby, leading the case, reviews the CCTV footage and uncovers evidence of a supernatural attacker—yet Ash is still listed as a suspect.
22"Episode 2 is Always the Flashback"Rhea WexlerHannah KimFebruary 20, 2026 (2026-02-20)
Ash begins showing clear signs of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), and Wells helps him calm down, reassuring him that he is not responsible for the student’s death. The next day, Ash crosses paths with Cassie Clairvoyant, who expresses a desire to spend time with him, feeling an unusual comfort around him. Meanwhile, Wells is confronted by Principal Killjoy, who demands Wells report everything Ash knows about the death Ash uncovered. Wells firmly refuses and leaves, later warning Ash to stay cautious. Elsewhere, Miles is attacked by the mysterious entity from the CCTV footage—revealed only as “Satan”—but narrowly escapes. He contacts the police, prompting Detective Tabby to question him. During the interview, Tabby presses Miles for information on Ash but finds nothing linking him to the murder. A flashback reveals that Ash was indirectly responsible for the death of Tabby’s six-year-old son, Jack. Back in the present, Miles pleads with Tabby to release Ash, insisting on his innocence, but his pleas fall on deaf ears. Later, Cassie confesses to Ash that she likes him and wants to know him better. In a chilling reveal, the mysterious attacker is unveiled as Jack himself—the deceased son of Detective Tabby.
33"Power Creep"Thomas KinleyCasey DoyleFebruary 27, 2026 (2026-02-27)
During an English class, Ash and Cassie agree to start dating, sharing a rare moment of warmth amid the chaos. Suddenly, Dexter Chrome, marked by a mysterious symbol etched on his face, accuses Ash of knowing the killer’s identity and even aiding them. Using his laptop, Dexter "leaks" a series of forged documents to the class before fleeing the room in panic. Killjoy arrives shortly after and orders Ash to the front office, where he is threatened with expulsion—but the warning is dropped once the documents are proven fake. Meanwhile, Tabby uncovers new evidence pointing to the figure behind the murders and realizes the attacker is specifically targeting Ash for unknown reasons. During break, Ash and Cassie discover yet another student dead, bearing the same mysterious “M” carved into their forehead, and promptly report it to Killjoy and the police. Despite the mounting evidence, Tabby remains convinced Ash is responsible. Suddenly, Dexter returns and launches a surprise attack on Ash but is quickly subdued by Miles, who reveals he learned kung-fu in primary school. Watching from the shadows, “Jack” lets out a chilling giggle.
44"The Bottle Episode (of Doom)"Jamie KwanAlex BrowMarch 6, 2026 (2026-03-06)
Ash and Cassie confront Dexter in a holding cell at the local police station, pressing him about his motives. Dexter admits he was “forced” to act against Ash and reveals that the one behind it wants Ash dead for “killing the youngster.” Back at their dorm, Cassie probes Ash and uncovers a buried trauma: when Ash was just four years old, a tragic mistake of his led to a child’s death—an event he still carries heavy guilt over. Meanwhile, Miles and Wells grow closer, forging a genuine friendship. When the four reunite, they find themselves mysteriously locked in their room, confronted by cryptic messages stating, “The truth lets you free.” Wells deduces they must each confess their deepest fears and secret desires. Cassie, Wells, and Miles share openly, but Ash struggles until Cassie persuades him to admit his greatest fear—dying alone, forgotten. Their honesty breaks the lock, freeing them, but as they prepare to leave, the figure known as “Jack” appears and reveals himself as the child Ash accidentally killed years ago. Jack’s presence forces Ash into self-blame before he vanishes without a trace. Cassie steadies Ash, and the group exits together. In the shadows, Jack turns toward Detective Tabby’s office, casting an ominous glance.
55"Everyone Dies in Episode 5"Rhea WexlerHannah KimMarch 13, 2026 (2026-03-13)
66"Meta Crisis, Part I"Thomas KinleyCasey DoyleMarch 20, 2026 (2026-03-20)
77"Meta Crisis, Part II: Canon is Dead"Alex BrowAlex BrowMarch 27, 2026 (2026-03-27)
88"Graduation Massacre"Jamie KwanRhea WexlerApril 3, 2026 (2026-04-03)

Cast and characters[edit | edit source]

Production[edit | edit source]

Development[edit | edit source]

In 2023, Alex Brow pitched the concept for the series to Netflix, which expressed strong interest in releasing the project with Mob Productions attached as the producer. By June of the same year, Netflix officially ordered the series with an initial eight-episode commitment. Brow had originally envisioned a longer season consisting of 22 or 23 episodes; however, Netflix declined this, citing concerns that such a large episode count would be “risky.” Brow initially struggled to settle on a final title for the series, taking extra time to finalize the name. By June 2024, the series was officially confirmed as Damnation High, set in the fictional town of Damnation South. In September of the same year, Mob Productions announced that the season had a budget of $80 million, with Brow commenting that the funds were being allocated in a “smart way” to maximize production quality.

Writing[edit | edit source]

Brow hired Hannah Kim, Casey Doyle, and Thomas Kinley as writers for the season. He personally wrote three episodes, including the pilot, which he described as one of his most challenging tasks since becoming a screenwriter. Brow played a “huge role” in shaping every episode, frequently demanding rewrites, adjustments, and enhancements. Doyle has often praised Brow as a “great leader” for his honest and straightforward feedback, crediting it with significantly improving the quality of the projects.

Casting[edit | edit source]

The casting process was overseen by Sofia Arendt, who publicly emphasized that securing the right actors was crucial to maintaining high-quality performances, not just strong writing. Alex Wolff was approached for the lead role of Ash Maddox and accepted the part with a salary of $75,000 per episode, totaling $600,000 for the season. Joining Wolff are Kiara Lynn as Cassie Clairvoyant, Miguel Orion as Dexter Chrome, Paul Bettany as Detective Tabby, D.B. Anders as Principal Killjoy, and Werner Herzog providing the voice of “The Narration Demon” / “Jack.”

Filming[edit | edit source]

Filming for Damnation High began in July 2025, with initial location shoots capturing exterior establishing shots in a small town designed to represent the fictional Damnation South. Principal photography officially commenced later that month at Pinewood Studios, where much of the season was shot under the working title Red Sky. The production was led by director Freddie Goodwin, with Maya Thompson and Jackson Greene contributing as second-unit directors. Cinematographers Alison Kelly and Ante Cheng handled the visual tone, employing a mix of practical effects and atmospheric lighting to emphasize the series’ dark, supernatural themes. In September, filming moved to various on-location sets across the Pacific Northwest to capture key scenes in natural and urban settings. Principal photography wrapped in October 2025. The production also developed practical props and effects to serve as references for post-production, ensuring seamless integration of supernatural elements throughout the season.

Design[edit | edit source]

John Paino was the production designer for the series, while Chris Seagers served as the costume designer.

Music[edit | edit source]

The series score was composed by Sia Holt and Jordan DeMar, blending industrial synths, orchestral stabs, and retro glitchwave elements. The soundtrack included recurring leitmotifs for each lead character, intentionally distorted over the season to represent their unraveling narratives. An original theme song titled “Canon Fodder” was written and performed by the experimental band *Null Hero*. Selected licensed tracks from artists such as Crystal Castles, Run The Jewels, and Grimes also appear in various episodes.

Marketing[edit | edit source]

Netflix released the first teaser trailer for Damnation High on December 29, 2025, with the tagline: "Only the best stories survive." The full trailer dropped January 24, 2026, generating buzz for its fourth-wall humor, chaotic tone, and violent visuals. Viral marketing included an interactive “Narrative Aptitude Test” website that placed users into trope categories such as “Loner Prodigy,” “Edgy Comic Relief,” or “Forgotten Plot Device.”

The show's irreverent tone and meta-jabs at Netflix originals became a focal point of promotional interviews. Early screeners were sent to critics alongside fake detention slips from the school, citing “Character Depth Deficiency” and “Genre Repetition.”

Release[edit | edit source]

The entire first season was released globally on Netflix on February 13, 2026. The release timing was aimed to coincide with Valentine’s Day weekend, playing into the show’s anti-romantic, anti-cliché narrative stance. The show was made available with dubbed and subtitled versions in over 30 languages. Viewer metrics from Netflix indicated strong initial viewership among 16–34 year olds, particularly in the U.S., U.K., Canada, and Australia. The season concluded on April 3, 2026.

Future[edit | edit source]

While no second season has been officially confirmed, Alex Brow has stated that multiple characters who “survived the season — and the edit room” have already been outlined for future arcs. He also teased that the next semester may involve "a full genre collapse" and the introduction of reality show tropes, implying a shift in format and tone if renewed.

References[edit | edit source]