Mystery Road: Origin Season 2 reveals just how volatile the balance between justice, memory and survival can be, especially when the very ground you stand on wants to bury its own truth.
Jay Swan (Mark Coles Smith) returns in the new season of Mystery Road: Origin, and this time, Loch Iris is hiding secrets that could shatter everything he holds dear.
Six months on from the first season, Jay and Mary (Tuuli Narkle) arrive in the timber-fringed town trying to put down roots and build a life together.
But Loch Iris is not the quiet refuge they hoped for: the town’s forests, a mysterious lake, and hidden histories begin to weave a dangerous web.
From the very first episode, Jay finds himself nearly run off the road by a stolen car, a nun’s suspicious death appears shrouded in secrecy, and a child vanishes under ominous circumstances.
As he digs deeper, old institutional wounds – especially those tied to the church-run home St Joseph’s – loom over every clue.
What sets this season apart is the way it makes the past bleed into the present. Loch Iris is less a backdrop than a living entity: the soil, institutions, suppressed trauma and communal loyalties form its skeleton.
As Mary’s own quest to unearth her birth records becomes entwined with the town’s buried truths, Jay’s mission becomes deeply personal.
TV critics have praised the show’s elegant atmospheric style and the strong performances – Mark Coles Smith remains quietly commanding, and newcomer Robyn Malcolm (as Sergeant Simmo) introduces friction and complexity to Swan’s journey.
Yet, some reviewers note that this season leans more heavily into familiar crime-drama tropes than earlier entries.
Mystery Road: Origin Season 2 reveals just how volatile the balance between justice, memory and survival can be – especially when the very ground you stand on wants to bury its own truth.
All episodes will be available to stream on ABC iview from the same day.

