![]() Holden (Steven Strait) and Naomi (Dominique Tipper) are back searching for the aforementioned agent of space chaos, Marco Inaros (Keon Alexander), for reasons beyond a possible end to an escalating war. It would be an overstatement, though, to say Season 6 doesn’t feel like a season of “The Expanse.” In one key way, the show picks right back up where it left off, with the surviving members of the Rocinante crew back working as a single unit again. There are four more novels’ worth of material left to consider, and they’re operating without a central cast member, written out at last season’s close. Shorter in length - six episodes as opposed to the 10, or even 13, of years past - the show’s then left to negotiate a tricky landing. For more than a year, it’s been the official line that this is the show’s last season on Prime Video. That constant ability to live on either side of the granular-to-galactic spectrum makes Season 6 of “The Expanse” a curious object. “The Expanse” Shane Mahood / © 2021 Amazon Content Services LLC When the enigmatic force of the protomolecule gave way to a bloodthirsty win-at-all-costs revolutionary, “The Expanse” kept the ability to paint its drama on a massive, cosmic canvas. In the last few seasons, as the show has traded one all-encompassing threat for another, it’s never lost sight of the fact that all of these pieces of physical and psychological connective tissue are extremely vulnerable. ![]() The ‘Citadel’ Effect: TV Enters a New Age of Franchises… or Flops
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