Neil Gaiman's The Sandman: the secret final episode, story and will there be a season 2?

The Sandman
(Image credit: Netflix)
The Sandman: key info

- Out now on Netflix

- The release date is August 5

- Tom Sturridge, Charles Dance, Gwendoline Christie, Boyd Holbrook, Stephen Fry and more star in the show. 

- Based on Neil Gaiman’s series of comic books, which ran for seven years and 75 issues. 

- A secret final episode was unveiled

It's been more than 30 years since work first began to adapt Neil Gaiman's epic comic book series, The Sandman, but it will arrive at the start of August. 

Told over 11 episodes, the show will follow Morpheus, the king of dreams as he escapes from capture and tries to rebuild his kingdom and will land on Netflix.

Given the vast amount of source material for the series, you'd expect plans for further seasons are already in place, but let's not count our chickens just yet… 

Release date: August 5

Cast: Tom Sturridge, Charles Dance, Gwendoline Christie, Boyd Holbrook, Jenna Coleman all feature in the series as part of its vast ensemble cast. Scroll down for more detail on who they're each playing, as well as the many other confirmed cast members.

Story: The Sandman's first run, which will take in 11 episodes, will cover the series' first two collections, Preludes & Nocturnes and The Doll's House. 

At the start, we find ourselves in 1916 and in the midst of an occult ritual. As you can see from the show's first trailer, which you'll find further down this page, a secret society, led by a magician named Roderick Burgess, is trying to obtain immortality by imprisoning Death himself. 

Sadly, Burgess mistakenly binds Death's brother Dream instead. Fearing retribution, Burgess keeps Dream imprisoned for over 100 years. Eventually, Dream escapes, and, finding himself in the modern world, sets about avenging those who captured him and rebuilding the kingdom of dreams…

The Sandman release date

August 5. 

After so long in development hell, it must be surreal for Neil Gaiman to finally see his creation coming to screens, but more on that below...

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A secret final episode

Morpheus stands on a barren landscape, with his magical helm on his head, during a sunset in Netflix's The Sandman TV series

(Image credit: Netflix)

On August 19, two weeks after the first 10 episodes of The Sandman debuted on Netflix, a surprise arrived on the streaming platform. 

A live-action/animation hybrid, the episode is adaptation of The Sandman issues A Dream of a Thousand Cats” and Calliope, with a voice cast that includes Sandra Oh, James McAvoy, David Tennant, Michael Sheen, comedian Joe Lycett and Gaiman himself. You can see a trailer for the special episode below:

Failed Adaptations of The Sandman

Believe it or not, the first attempt to get The Sandman from page to screen came all the way back in 1991, before Gaiman had even completed the series. 

Gaiman was resistant to the offer, which came from Warner Brothers, but eventually in 1996 he accepted and director Roger Avary, fresh from collaborating with Quentin Tarantino on Jackie Brown, was attached to take charge. 

Avary, who would later go on to The Rules of Attraction, worked from a script from writers Ted Elliot and Terry Rossio, the pair who'd later earn Disney billions with Pirates of the Caribbean.

Weirdly, Gaiman was happy enough with this version of the script, but producer Jon Peters, a man so notorious in Hollywood that an entire book has been written about his misadventure (also, if you've seen Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza, Bradley Cooper's madcap portrayal of Peters is gaining serious Oscar talk), had other ideas. He fired Avary, and Elliot and Rossio's script went in a drawer. 

Peters then turned to write William Farmer, who would later help adapt the ill-fated Jonah Hex. His 1998 script reimagined Morpheus as a slasher movie villain and put him in a race against the turn of the Millennium. Gaiman hated it. 

He hated it so much in fact he would later tell fans at the San Diego Comic Con that it was "not only the worst Sandman script I've ever seen, but quite easily the worst script I've ever read."

Peters clearly didn't care for it much either and the project went away, where it languished in development hell for over 15 years. Gaiman would occasionally be asked about it in interviews and took to telling journalists that he'd "rather see no Sandman movie made than a bad Sandman movie."

Reports of development work flickered, there was an attempt by Logan's James Mangold to pitch the idea of a series to HBO, but it didn't get anywhere. It wasn't until 2014 that the next substantial move in The Sandman saga came.

Then super-producer David S. Goyer, Joseph Gordon-Levitt and His Dark Materials writer Jack Thorne announced they were taking charge of a new attempt to take the character to movie screens.

Thorne delivered a draft, which was rewritten by Arrival writer Eric Heisserer. Things seemed like they were progressing, right up until March of 2016, when Gordon-Levitt announced he was leaving the project due to creative differences.

Heisserer left later that year, telling reporters he believed the show should really be an HBO series. Something that had already been tried and failed. With Gordon-Levitt gone, Goyer busying himself with the DC Universe, it looked like the king of Dreams would return to slumber.

That was until 2019. In June of that year, Netflix announced it was developing The Sandman as a television series. Wonder Woman screenwriter Allan Heinberg had been booked to serve as showrunner and Gaiman was on board as producer.

Like Morpheus himself, after more than 25 years of imprisonment in development hell, The Sandman was finally free.

The Sandman cast

The key cast for The Sandman looks like this:

  • Tom Sturridge as Morpheus / Dream
  • Gwendoline Christie as Lucifer
  • Vivienne Acheampong as Lucienne
  • Boyd Holbrook as The Corinthian
  • Charles Dance as Roderick Burgess
  • Asim Chaudhry as Abel
  • Sanjeev Bhaskar as Cain
  • Kirby Howell-Baptiste as Death
  • Mason Alexander Park as Desire
  • Donna Preston as Despair
  • Jenna Coleman as Johanna Constantine
  • Joely Richardson as Ethel Cripps
  • Niamh Walsh as Ethel Cripps (younger)
  • David Thewlis as John Dee / Doctor Destiny
  • Kyo Ra as Rose Walker
  • Stephen Fry as Gilbert
  • Razane Jammal as Lyta Hall
  • Sandra James-Young as Unity Kinkaid
  • Patton Oswalt as the voice of Matthew the Raven
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Tom Sturridge leads the way as Morpheus. As you'll see below, in the comics, Morpheus is rake-thin and hollow-cheeked with jet black hair and a wardrobe in the same color. Sturridge, with his dark features, and commanding performances in the Hollow Crown trilogy and Far From The Madding Crowd, looks like perfect casting to play the ethereal king of dreams.

Gwendoline Christie, best known as Brienne of Tarth in Game Of Thrones, plays Lucifer. Weirdly, though Tom Ellis' Lucifer actually finds his origins in Gaiman's comics, the spin-off and subsequent TV adaptation are a world away from The Sandman. In this take, Christie's Lucifer is the ruler of Hell who quickly finds themselves butting heads with Morpheus. 

Jenna Coleman will take on two roles, playing Johanna Constantine, the ancestor of John Constantine, an occult detective, Coleman will portray the character both in the 18th century and in the present day. 

Charles Dance will play Roderick Burgess, the magician and charlatan who summons and imprisons Dream in the first place, while Logan star Boyd Holbrook is The Corinthian. Much-loved in the comics, The Corinthian is a nightmare created by Dream, who quickly gets a mind of his own, with very bloody consequences. 

Game Of Thrones

Gwendoline Christie in Game Of Thrones (Image credit: HBO)

The Sandman creators: who’s making it?

While Neil Gaiman is very active in the making of the series, it is not his show. Unlike Good Omens, where he acts as both creator and showrunner, here Gaiman is a producer. 

He has worked to develop the project alongside David S. Goyer, writer of the Blade trilogy, Batman Begins and so much of the DC Universe. Goyer is a producer on this alongside his work as showrunner on Foundation. The Sandman's showrunner is Allan Heinberg, writer of Wonder Woman and hit comedy The Catch. 

British director Jamie Childs, who has been a long time pick for His Dark Materials, has taken charge of four episodes. Andrés Baiz, a veteran of Narcos: Mexico, has three, and Louise Hooper, last seen stewarding The Witcher, has two. 

Originally, the show was set to shoot across the world, but Gaiman confirmed to a fan that Covid-19 put paid to that and the series was filmed entirely in the UK. 

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The Sandman trailer

A full trailer debuted at Comic Con on July 23, as part of a panel where Gaiman and Sturridge opened up about the show. 

That followed the show's first trailer, which arrived as part of Netflix's Geeked Week in 2022 and it's below for you.

Season 2?

Will there be a second season of The Sandman?

Tom Sturridge's Dream and Kirby Howell-Baptiste's Death look at a building off screen in Netflix's The Sandman TV show

(Image credit: Netflix)

So far, the signs look good. The show has, thus far, racked up viewing hours of more than 360 million, including a full week of over 127 million. That's a bigger launchpad than Anatomy Of A ScandalThe Lincoln Lawyer and Heartstopper, all of which have been renewed. But, The Sandman is expensive to make, with every episode costing $15 million to make. 

Gaiman has acknowledged as much, telling his large Twitter following that despite the viewing figures, things could still go either way. 

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But, according to report on Den Of Geek, the writing process for the second season has begun, so there must be plenty of hope within the show's creative team that a second run will be ordered. 

Other Neil Gaiman Adaptations in the works...

What Else Does Neil Gaiman Have Heading To Screens? 

He's a busy man, that's for sure. 

In 2022, Gaiman is overseeing the second season of Good Omens, which is filming as we speak with Michael Sheen and David Tennant returning to reprise their roles. It’ll air on Amazon Prime once again. 

Also for Amazon Prime, Gaiman's 2005 novel Anansi Boys is being adapted. The cast for that series, which follows the two sons of the African spider-god Anansi, will see Small Axe breakout star Malachi Kirby and The Good Fight's Delroy Lindo lead the way, while Lenny Henry has worked on the adaptation alongside Gaiman. 

As well as this, work continues on the film adaptations of Gaiman's novels The Ocean At The End Of The Lane and The Graveyard Book. Sadly though, after three seasons, it looks like it's the end of the road for American Gods, with no word on a new network for the show after Starz pulled the plug in 2021. 

Tom Goodwyn
Freelance Entertainment Writer

Tom Goodwyn was formerly TechRadar's Senior Entertainment Editor. He's now a freelancer writing about TV shows, documentaries and movies across streaming services, theaters and beyond. Based in East London, he loves nothing more than spending all day in a movie theater, well, he did before he had two small children…