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No. | Title | Artist(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "How the Summer Passed" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 5:35 |
2. | "Prison and Fire Babies" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 4:38 |
3. | "The Farm and the Warden" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 4:56 |
4. | "The Midnight Club" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 3:21 |
5. | "Prison Games and the Red Paladin" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 6:02 |
6. | "The Pact" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 3:52 |
7. | "Goodbye, Ronnie" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 3:37 |
8. | "Under Quarantine / Archie Returns" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 6:16 |
9. | "Unmasking the Gargoyle King" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 3:37 |
10. | "The Red Dahlia" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 5:35 |
11. | "Secrets and Games" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 6:14 |
12. | "Final Trials" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 6:58 |
13. | "Betty Goes After the Gargoyle King" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 5:22 |
14. | "Confronting Psychopaths" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 5:27 |
15. | "Naked and Afraid" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 2:22 |
No. | Title | Artist(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Amazing Grace" | Ashleigh Murray | 3:23 |
2. | "All That Jazz" | Camila Mendes, Madelaine Petsch and Vanessa Morgan | 3:21 |
3. | "Saturday Night's Alright (For Fighting)" | Camila Mendes and Casey Cott | 2:27 |
4. | "Cherry Bomb" | Madelaine Petsch, Camila Mendes and Vanessa Morgan | 1:58 |
5. | "Carry the Torch" | KJ Apa | 1:51 |
No. | Title | Artist(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Dad Is Gone" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 5:55 |
2. | "Bringing Fred Home" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 4:21 |
3. | "Fast Times at Riverdale High" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 5:27 |
4. | "Dog Day Afternoon" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 5:30 |
5. | "Hereditary, Riverdale Style" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 5:12 |
6. | "New Conspiracy Theory" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 4:56 |
7. | "The Ice Storm" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 4:32 |
8. | "In Treatment" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 6:25 |
9. | "Quill and Scroll" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 6:07 |
10. | "The Ides of March" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 4:56 |
11. | "This Is Nice" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 4:56 |
12. | "Into the Lion Den" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 4:38 |
13. | "The Death of Jughead Jones" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 4:37 |
14. | "Jughead Funeral / Betty Threat" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 5:21 |
15. | "Tangerine and Honey" | Blake Neely and Sherri Chung | 3:41 |
No. | Title | Artist(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Carry the Torch" | Camila Mendes | 1:46 |
2. | "Good Riddance" | K. J. Apa | 2:36 |
3. | "After Dark" | Vanessa Morgan & Drew Ray Tanner | 2:47 |
4. | "Shallow" | Camila Mendes & Chris Mason | 3:18 |
5. | "Stupid Love" | Madelaine Petsch | 3:16 |
6. | "Walking in Space" | Lili Reinhart, Madelaine Petsch, Nathalie Boltt & Erin Westbrook | 3:38 |
7. | "Nothin' but a Good Time" | Camila Mendes, Erin Westbrook, Lili Reinhart, Madelaine Petsch & Mädchen Amick | 2:43 |
8. | "Everything's Alright" | Casey Cott & Madelaine Petsch | 3:32 |
No. | Title | Performer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "It's All Coming Back to Me" | Ashleigh Murray, Hayley Law and Asha Bromfield | 3:34 |
2. | "It's Gonna Rain" | Ajay Musodi, Ashleigh Murray, Diandra Lee, Eduardo Vasquez, James Ross, Kyra Leroux and Quincy Pipella | 1:54 |
3. | "Physical" | Asha Bromfield and Hayley Law | 3:14 |
4. | "Little Shop of Horrors" | Vanessa Morgan, Erinn Westbrook and Camille Hyde | 2:24 |
5. | "Josie and the Pussycats" | Ashleigh Murray, Hayley Law and Asha Bromfield | 0:40 |
6. | "Get Up" | Ashleigh Murray, Hayley Law and Asha Bromfield | 2:49 |
7. | "Stars" | Ashleigh Murray | 3:18 |
No. | Title | Performer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Just Another Day" | Lili Reinhart, Mädchen Amick, Jacquie Lee and Tyson Ritter | 3:28 |
2. | "I Miss the Mountains" | Lili Reinhart and Mädchen Amick | 3:44 |
3. | "Everything Else" | Lili Reinhart, Mädchen Amick and Jacquie Lee | 1:52 |
4. | "Perfect for You" | Cole Sprouse and Erinn Westbrook | 2:05 |
5. | "Superboy and the Invisible Girl" | Camila Mendes | 1:53 |
6. | "It's Gonna Be Good" | Lili Reinhart, Mädchen Amick, Jacquie Lee and Tyson Ritter | 1:29 |
7. | "She's Not Here" | Lili Reinhart | 1:19 |
8. | "I'm Alive" | Jacquie Lee and Tyson Ritter | 3:14 |
9. | "I Am the One" | Lili Reinhart, Jacquie Lee and Tyson Ritter | 3:19 |
10. | "Didn't I See This Movie" | Madelaine Petsch | 1:00 |
11. | "I've Been" | Lili Reinhart and Casey Cott | 2:44 |
12. | "Make Up Your Mind / Catch Me I'm Falling" | Lili Reinhart, Camila Mendes, Vanessa Morgan and Casey Cott | 3:00 |
13. | "Hey #3 / Perfect for You (Reprise)" | Cole Sprouse and Erinn Westbrook | 2:23 |
14. | "A Promise" | Lili Reinhart | 2:12 |
15. | "Maybe (Next to Normal)" | Lili Reinhart and Mädchen Amick | 3:02 |
16. | "Light" | KJ Apa, Lili Reinhart, Camila Mendes, Mädchen Amick, Casey Cott, Vanessa Morgan, Madelaine Petsch, Drew Ray Tanner, Erinn Westbrook, Ryan Robbins and Kyra Leroux | 4:23 |
No. | Title | Artist(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Not a Common Man" | Casey Cott | 2:13 |
2. | "Bread and Roses" | Vanessa Morgan, Erinn Westbrook, KJ Apa and Drew Ray Tanner | 1:45 |
3. | "You Are What You Wear" | Vanessa Morgan, Erinn Westbrook, Camila Mendes, Lili Reinhart, Madelaine Petsch, Caroline Day and Sophia Tatum | 1:52 |
4. | "Killing Spree" | Casey Cott | 2:15 |
5. | "A Girl Before" | Lili Reinhart | 3:24 |
No. | Title | Artist(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Monday, Senior Year" | KJ Apa, Lili Reinhart, Camila Mendes, Cole Sprouse, Madelaine Petsch, Vanessa Morgan, Drew Ray Tanner, Abby Ross, Casey Cott, Shannon Purser, Karl Walcott and Nicholas Barasch | 3:24 |
2. | "Archie's All American" | KJ Apa and Nicholas Barasch | 1:36 |
3. | "I Got Two" | KJ Apa | 1:36 |
4. | "Friday Valentine" | Lili Reinhart, Camila Mendes, Madelaine Petsch and Vanessa Morgan | 2:26 |
5. | "This Is Love" | Casey Cott and Karl Walcott | 1:47 |
6. | "Prom Night" | Nicholas Barasch, Camila Mendes, Lili Reinhart, Abby Ross, Drew Ray Tanner, Shannon Purser, Karl Walcott and Daniel Yang | 2:00 |
7. | "I Got Two (Reprise)" | KJ Apa | 0:38 |
8. | "Do You Know What It's like" | Casey Cott, Karl Walcott, Madelaine Petsch and Vanessa Morgan | 2:34 |
9. | "The Universe Inside" | Lili Reinhart and Camila Mendes | 3:00 |
10. | "Finale (Our Song)" | Casey Cott, KJ Apa, Lili Reinhart, Camila Mendes, Madelaine Petsch, Vanessa Morgan, Karl Walcott, Abby Ross, Drew Ray Tanner, Nicholas Barasch, Shannon Purser and Daniel Yang | 3:19 |
Season | DVD and Blu-ray release dates | ||
---|---|---|---|
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 4 | |
1 | August 15, 2017 [125] | August 14, 2017 [126] | October 4, 2017 [127] |
2 | August 7, 2018 [128] | August 20, 2018 [129] | October 17, 2018 [130] |
3 | August 13, 2019 [131] | TBA | October 16, 2019 [132] |
4 | September 22, 2020 [133] [134] | TBA | October 7, 2020 [135] |
5 | January 18, 2022 [136] [137] | TBA | February 2, 2022 [138] |
6 | November 29, 2022 [139] | TBA | November 30, 2022 [140] |
7 | November 28, 2023 [141] | TBA | TBA |
Complete Series | November 28, 2023 [142] | TBA | TBA |
The first, second and seventh season in addition to the complete series were released on DVD by Warner Home Entertainment while Warner Archive Collection handled manufacture-on-demand DVD and or Blu-ray formats for several seasons.
Netflix acquired the exclusive international broadcast rights to Riverdale, making the series available as an original series to its platform less than a day after its original US broadcast. [143] [144]
In July 2016, members of the cast and the executive producers attended San Diego Comic-Con to promote the upcoming series, where they premiered the first episode "Chapter One: The River's Edge". [145] The first trailer for the series was released in late December 2016. [146] The CW also sponsored multiple Tastemade videos, where they cooked several foods that are popular in the Archie universe. [147] [148] [149]
Along with heavily promoting the television series in their regular comics since January 2017, Archie Comics releases a comic book adaptation of Riverdale, featuring auxiliary story arcs set within the television series' own continuity. The comic book adaptation is headed by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa himself, along with other writers from the show. Alongside a one-shot pilot issue, illustrated by Alitha Martinez, released in March 2017, [150] the first issue of the ongoing Riverdale comic book series was released starting April 2017. [151]
In addition to the adaptation, Archie Comics are releasing a series of compilation graphic novels branded under the title Road to Riverdale. This series features early issues from the New Riverdale reboot line, introducing the audience of the TV series to the regular ongoing comic series that inspired it. Archie Comics plans to re-print the volumes of Road to Riverdale in subsequent months as digest magazines. The first volume was released in March 2017. [151]
Several tie-in novels were also released in conjunction with the show, the first being The Day Before a prequel novel set a day before the events of the first episode. Get Out of Town is set between seasons 2 and 3, and was followed by The Maple Murders, Death of a Cheerleader and The Poison Pen. The first four novels were written by Micol Ostow, with the fifth book penned by Caleb Roehrig.
Season | Rotten Tomatoes | Metacritic |
---|---|---|
1 | 88% (219 reviews) [152] | 68 (36 reviews) [153] |
2 | 88% (274 reviews) [154] | — |
3 | 84% (255 reviews) [155] | — |
4 | 84% (63 reviews) [156] | — |
5 | 78% (9 reviews) [157] | — |
6 | 67% (6 reviews) [158] | — |
The first season of Riverdale received a generally positive response from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, it has a fresh rating of 88% based on 62 reviews, with a weighted average of 7.22/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Riverdale offers an amusingly self-aware reimagining of its classic source material that proves eerie, odd, daring, and above all addictive." [152] On Metacritic, the season has a score of 68 out of 100 based on 36 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [153] Dave Nemetz of TVLine gave the series a "B+" saying that it turned out "to be an artfully crafted, instantly engaging teen soap with loads of potential." [159]
Over the course of its run, Riverdale received widespread attention from critics and on social media for its increasingly campy and outlandish storylines, as well as for subverting teen drama conventions and the expectations of the source material. [160] [161] [162] [163] Rebecca Atler of Vulture deemed the series "one of the weirdest teen soaps ever made," adding that it "took tropes from gothic horror, fantasy, telenovelas, soap operas, comic books, gay art-house films, dark high-school comedies, musicals, and mafia movies and smushed them together into a pop-culture polycule—while the ensemble held it all together, putting it on like some sort of weekly vaudeville act." [163] Sam Bramesco of The Guardian called it "a sprawling soap opera with a liberated relationship to reality, the finest specimen of its genre in its era" and an "unending parade of camp [that] never once committed the cardinal sin of being boring." [160] Emma Stefansky of The Ringer opined that while some fans and journalists criticized subsequent seasons for "relying less and less on coherent plotting to craft its mazelike narrative," such storylines "only enhanced an already heightened experience." [161]
Critics have attributed the escalation to more absurd storytelling to the series' standard-length seasons of approximately 20 episodes, no longer the norm, especially for teen dramas, in the wake of the streaming boom. [160] [161] [163] [164] [165] Kristen Baldwin of Entertainment Weekly opined that "the world where a network allows a lavish, sexy, teen genre drama to run off the rails for seven gloriously outlandish seasons no longer exists," and also noted that Riverdale amid the CW's programming shift toward unscripted, sports, and acquired content under its new ownership by Nexstar Media Group. [165] Stefansky praised the CW for allowing a show such as Riverdale to run for seven seasons while a majority of shows are canceled prematurely in the current television landscape, [161] while Monteil opined that "it feels like a miracle that a show as strange and eager for reinvention as Riverdale has existed for so long" in a reboot- and IP-driven market. [162] Ahead of the series finale, Mary Kate Carr of The A.V. Club stated that Riverdale is the "dying gasp" of the teen drama of its era, as "streaming services have saturated the market so much that it's hard to imagine a new teen soap cultivating enough hype or strong enough fandom to command an entire hall at Comic-Con." [164]
Many critics highlighted the show's deviation from its initial premise as a teen drama. In ranking the show's wildest storylines, Abby Monteil of Rolling Stone noted that the series' initial high school-based plot "soon mutated beyond its teen-drama trappings, transforming from a Twin Peaks-esque reimagining of the comics' squeaky-clean source material into a campy, Frankensteinian mash-up of genres, pop-culture references, and pie-in-the-sky melodrama that's frankly unlike anything that came before it." [162] Stefansky noted that the series "never played by conventional teen television's rules; it poked fun at certain clichés while embracing others and mixed the strange with the familiar" and took "more inspiration from Stephen King and Twin Peaks than from John Hughes or Gossip Girl ." [161] Bramesco compared the series to Ryan Murphy's "similarly excessive, queer-inflected" American Horror Story , stating that while Murphy aims for prestige, Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa "staunchly refuses to take his work seriously, venturing deeper into his insular funhouse with the express purpose of getting lost." [160]
The series has received widespread derision on social media. According to The Hollywood Reporter , this trend started with "fans posting clips or video compilations of moments from the show on social media, which drew a lot of harsh comments and reactions from people." [166] Bramesco opined that the show's signature dialog "made the program a perennial laughingstock on social media, its juiciest soundbites posted without context for the gawking masses." [160] Stefansky observed that while "fans embraced the show's cringey tendencies[...] those who weren't watching could still feel the bewildered delight of reading word-salad headlines about what was going on." [161] Monteil referred to the series as "a popular internet punching bag, with sneering detractors taking to social media to mock the latest out-of-context viral clip," while also noting that plenty of the criticism aimed at the storylines is valid. [162] Perhaps the most well known and viral example of the show's online derision comes from the scene where Archie tells a member of the Serpents gang who claims to have dropped out of school in the fourth grade to be a drug runner to support his family that he hasn't "experienced the triumphs and defeats, the epic highs and lows of high school football". Lili Reinhart responded to the criticism, expressing that it had been difficult for the cast to be "the butt of the joke" online, adding, "We all want to be actors; we're passionate about what we do. So when the absurdity of our show became a talking point, it was difficult." [166] Cole Sprouse noted that such criticism was contained to the United States and that viewers in Europe were more receptive to the show's absurdity. [163] Camila Mendes stated that since the series is based on comic books, the storylines are no more absurd than those in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and both she and Reinhart concurred that Aguirre-Sacasa's intention had always been to make the show absurd, campy, and outlandish. [166]
The series changed the character Jughead Jones' sexual and romantic orientation from aromantic and asexual to heterosexual. This deviation from the source material was met with criticism who described it as a-spec erasure. [167] [168]
Riverdale has also been noted as being one of the most popular shows worldwide on the popular streaming platform Netflix. [169] The large number of fans watching the series on the platform also gave the show a large bump in the ratings for its season two premiere. [170] This was later referenced on multiple occasions by The CW's president, Mark Pedowitz, who noted that they would watch Netflix numbers more closely for new series after seeing how Riverdale did on the platform. [171] Season four was posted onto the website in the US on May 15, 2020, and remained in the top ten titles on the entire platform for the following month. [172] In the UK, it was also the most popular program on the streaming service in May. [173]
Riverdale notably enjoyed widespread success in Australia during its original run. [174] During its original broadcast, Riverdale was broadcast in the country as a Netflix Original Series hours after its US broadcast and during the late 2010s, was one of the most popular shows in the country regularly entering the national top 10 of the most viewed TV shows. [169] [175] During the last week of October 2018 Riverdale was the number 1 show in Australia. [169]
Season | Timeslot (ET) | Episodes | First aired | Last aired | TV season | Viewership rank | Avg. viewers (millions) | 18–49 rank | Avg. 18–49 rating | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Viewers (millions) | Date | Viewers (millions) | ||||||||
1 | Thursday 9:00 p.m. | 13 | January 26, 2017 | 1.38 [176] | May 11, 2017 | 0.96 [177] | 2016–17 | 154 | 1.69 [20] | 142 | 0.7 [20] |
2 | Wednesday 8:00 p.m. | 22 | October 11, 2017 | 2.34 [178] | May 16, 2018 | 1.28 [179] | 2017–18 | 173 | 2.12 [21] | 126 | 0.8 [21] |
3 | 22 | October 10, 2018 | 1.50 [180] | May 15, 2019 | 0.86 [181] | 2018–19 | 166 | 1.74 [22] | 120 | 0.7 [22] | |
4 | 19 | October 9, 2019 | 1.14 [182] | May 6, 2020 | 0.65 [183] | 2019–20 | 122 | 1.35 [23] | 120 | 0.5 [23] | |
5 | 19 | January 20, 2021 | 0.63 [184] | October 6, 2021 | 0.36 [185] | 2020–21 | 145 | 1.01 [24] | 119 | 0.4 [24] | |
6 | Tuesday 9:00 p.m. (Part 1) Sunday 8:00 p.m. (Part 2) | 22 | November 16, 2021 | 0.33 [186] | July 31, 2022 | 0.17 [187] | 2021–22 | 138 | 0.46 [25] | 130 | 0.1 [25] |
7 | Wednesday 9:00 p.m. | 20 | March 29, 2023 | 0.26 [188] | August 23, 2023 | 0.21 [189] | 2022–23 | 129 | 0.39 [26] | 120 | 0.1 [26] |
Year | Award | Category | Nominee(s) | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 | Leo Awards | Best Production Design in a Dramatic Series | Tyler Harron (for "The River's Edge") | Nominated | [190] |
Saturn Awards | Best Action-Thriller Television Series | Riverdale | Won | [191] | |
Best Performance by a Younger Actor in a Television Series | KJ Apa | Nominated | |||
Breakthrough Performance | KJ Apa | Won | [192] | ||
Teen Choice Awards | Choice Breakout TV Show | Riverdale | Won | [193] | |
Choice Breakout TV Star | KJ Apa | Nominated | |||
Lili Reinhart | Won | ||||
Choice Drama TV Actor | Cole Sprouse | Won | |||
Choice Drama TV Show | Riverdale | Won | |||
Choice Hissy Fit | Madelaine Petsch | Won | |||
Choice Scene Stealer | Camila Mendes | Won | |||
Choice TV Ship | Lili Reinhart and Cole Sprouse | Won | |||
2018 | Dorian Awards | Campy TV Show of the Year | Riverdale | Nominated | [194] |
Leo Awards | Best Cinematography in a Dramatic Series | Brendan Uegama (for "House of the Devil") | Won | [195] | |
Best Costume Design in a Dramatic Series | Rebekka Sorensen-Kjelstrup (for "Death Proof") | Nominated | |||
Best Dramatic Series | Riverdale | Nominated | |||
Best Guest Performance by a Female in a Dramatic Series | Tiera Skovbye (for "The Outsiders") | Nominated | |||
Best Production Design in a Dramatic Series | Tony Wohlgemuth (for "A Kiss Before Dying") | Won | |||
Best Sound Editing in a Dramatic Series | Brian Lyster (for "Tales from the Darkside") | Nominated | |||
MTV Movie & TV Awards | Best Kiss | KJ Apa and Camila Mendes | Nominated | [196] | |
Best Musical Moment | Riverdale | Nominated | |||
Scene Stealer | Madelaine Petsch | Won | |||
Show of the Year | Riverdale | Nominated | |||
People's Choice Awards | Drama Show of 2018 | Riverdale | Won | [197] | |
Drama TV Star of 2018 | KJ Apa | Nominated | |||
Female TV Star of 2018 | Camila Mendes | Nominated | |||
Male TV Star of 2018 | Cole Sprouse | Nominated | |||
Saturn Awards | Best Action-Thriller Television Series | Riverdale | Nominated | [198] | |
Best Performance by a Younger Actor in a Television Series | KJ Apa | Nominated | |||
Lili Reinhart | Nominated | ||||
Cole Sprouse | Nominated | ||||
Teen Choice Awards | Choice Breakout TV Star | Vanessa Morgan | Won | [199] | |
Choice Hissy Fit | Madelaine Petsch | Won | |||
Choice Drama TV Actor | KJ Apa | Nominated | |||
Cole Sprouse | Won | ||||
Choice Drama TV Actress | Camila Mendes | Nominated | |||
Lili Reinhart | Won | ||||
Choice Drama TV Show | Riverdale | Won | |||
Choice Liplock | Cole Sprouse and Lili Reinhart | Won | |||
Choice Scene Stealer | Vanessa Morgan | Won | |||
Choice TV Ship | KJ Apa and Camilla Mendes | Nominated | |||
Lili Reinhart and Cole Sprouse | Won | ||||
Choice TV Villain | Mark Consuelos | Won | |||
2019 | Dorian Awards | Campy TV Show of the Year | Riverdale | Nominated | [200] |
Kids' Choice Awards | Favorite TV Drama | Riverdale | Won | [201] | |
Leo Awards | Best Cinematography in a Dramatic Series | Brendan Uegama (for "A Night to Remember") | Won | [202] | |
Ronald Richard (for "The Midnight Club") | Nominated | ||||
Best Production Design in a Dramatic Series | Tony Wohlgemuth (for "The Red Dahlia") | Won | |||
MTV Movie & TV Awards | Best Kiss | Charles Melton and Camila Mendes | Nominated | [203] | |
Best Show | Riverdale | Nominated | |||
Saturn Awards | Best Action-Thriller Television Series | Riverdale | Nominated | [204] | |
Best Performance by a Younger Actor in a Television Series | KJ Apa | Nominated | |||
Cole Sprouse | Nominated | ||||
Teen Choice Awards | Choice Drama TV Actor | KJ Apa | Nominated | [205] | |
Cole Sprouse | Won | ||||
Choice Drama TV Actress | Camila Mendes | Nominated | |||
Lili Reinhart | Won | ||||
Choice Drama TV Show | Riverdale | Won | |||
Choice TV Ship | Madelaine Petsch and Vanessa Morgan | Nominated | |||
Lili Reinhart and Cole Sprouse | Won | ||||
2020 | People's Choice Awards | Drama Show of 2020 | Riverdale | Won | [206] |
The Male TV Star of 2020 | Cole Sprouse | Won | |||
The Female TV Star of 2020 | Lili Reinhart | Nominated | |||
Drama TV Star of 2020 | Cole Sprouse | Nominated | |||
2021 | Critics' Choice Super Awards | Best Actress in a Superhero Series | Lili Reinhart | Nominated | [207] |
Saturn Awards | Best Action / Thriller Television Series | Riverdale | Nominated | [208] | |
2022 | Saturn Awards | Best Fantasy Television Series | Riverdale | Nominated | [209] |
In September 2017, it was reported that a live-action television series based on the comic series Chilling Adventures of Sabrina was being developed for The CW by Berlanti Productions and Warner Bros. Television, with a planned release in the 2018–2019 television season. The series, featuring the Archie Comics character Sabrina Spellman, would be a companion series to Riverdale. Lee Toland Krieger directed the pilot, which was written by Aguirre-Sacasa. Both are executive producers along with Berlanti, Schechter, and Goldwater. [210] In December 2017, it was reported that the project had moved to Netflix under a new title. In January 2018, CW president Mark Pedowitz noted that, "at the moment, there is no discussion about crossing over" with Riverdale. [211] Aguirre-Sacasa added that no crossovers were planned so that each series could establish "their own identities and own set of rules". [212] Filming for first season began on March 19, 2018, just as filming of the second season of Riverdale concluded, which allowed the same crew members to work on both series. [213]
Sabrina's town, Greendale, is introduced in the second season of Riverdale. Following that, several references to the two cities are made regularly in the two series, visually or with dialogue. [214] In the first season of Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, Moses Thiessen reprises his role as Ben Button from Riverdale during an episode. [215] In the episode "Chapter Sixty-Seven: Varsity Blues" from the fourth season of Riverdale, Ty Wood reprises his role as Billy Marlin from Sabrina. [216]
In episode "Chapter Twenty-Three: Heavy Is the Crown" from the third part of Sabrina, the teenage witch and her cousin visit Riverdale in search for a crown that was owned by Benjamin Blossom, an ancestor of Cheryl. On their way, they pass the town sign. On its back, Jughead Jones spray painted the message "JJ Wuz Here", his signature. Three episodes later, a member of the Southside Serpents is attacked by Hilda Spellman. [217]
Regarding a proper crossover, Aguirre-Sacasa said in October 2018 he would "hate for [a crossover] to never happen" between the two series, adding a potential idea for one could see the characters of Riverdale "hear[ing] about a haunted house in Greendale and try to break in and it's Sabrina's house". He also felt since each series was already established, a crossover could happen in a standalone film with both casts, potentially titled Afterlife with Archie, based on the Archie Horror comic of the same name. [218]
The series was canceled in July 2020, when showrunner Sacasa later announced that if it had been renewed, Riverdale and Sabrina would have had a proper crossover event. [219]
On October 7, 2021, it was announced that Kiernan Shipka would be reprising her role as Sabrina in the sixth season of Riverdale. [220] Shipka appeared in "Chapter Ninety-Nine: The Witching Hour(s)" set in an alternative universe called Rivervale where Sabrina is called by Cheryl to help her with a spell. Shipka also reprised the role later during the same season, in an episode set in the original continuity of the two series and after the events of Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, providing closure to plot points from the latter series. [221] Nicholas Scratch also appeared in the episode, portrayed by Cole Sprouse, following a temporary resurrection spell used on Jughead's body. [222]
The sixth season also introduced the character Heather, played by Caroline Day, a witch from Greendale and from Sabrina's coven.
In August 2018, Aguirre-Sacasa revealed that another spin-off was in development at The CW. He said that the series would be "very different from Riverdale" and that it would be produced "in [the 2018–19] development cycle." [212] By January 2019, The CW issued a pilot order for the series stating that the plot will: "[follow] the lives and loves of four iconic Archie Comics characters—including fashion legend-to-be Katy Keene (Lucy Hale)—as they chase their twenty-something dreams in New York City. This musical dramedy chronicles the origins and struggles of four aspiring artists trying to make it on Broadway, on the runway and in the recording studio." [223] In February of the same year, it was announced that Ashleigh Murray, who portrays Josie McCoy in Riverdale, had been cast in a lead role for Katy Keene, leading to her exit from the former. [224] By August 2019, Michael Grassi announced that there is a crossover between Riverdale and Katy Keene being developed. [225] The crossover episode aired on February 5, 2020. [226] [227]
In the episode "Chapter Six: Mama Said" from the first season of Katy Keene, Robin Givens reprises her role as Sierra McCoy from Riverdale. Four episodes later, Casey Cott reprises his role as Kevin Keller in "Chapter Ten: Gloria". [228] [229] In the last episode of the first season, Mark Consuelos reprises his role as Hiram Lodge.
On July 2, 2020, the series was canceled after one season. [230] Despite the cancellation, characters from Katy Keene appear in Riverdale: Zane Holtz reprised his role as K.O. Kelly in the first episode of season five and in the tenth episode of season six, followed by Ryan Faucett as Bernardo in the seventh episode of the same season, Lucy Hale reprised her role in a voice-over cameo in the eighth episode, and Camille Hyde reprised her role as Alexandra Cabot in the fifteenth episode. [231] [232] [233] The character Chad Gekko, who appeared in two episodes of Katy Keene, also returned as a recurring character in season five, played by Chris Mason. Mason replaced Reid Prebenda, who portrayed the character in the spin-off. [234]
In 2022, Aguirre-Sacasa confirmed that Riverdale and Pretty Little Liars: Original Sin , and by extension the original series, its two spin-offs, and web series, were set in the same universe. In the sixth episode of Original Sin, Eddie Lamb, a character from the original series, states that some of the more lucrative patients at the Radley Sanitarium were sent to the Sisters of Quiet Mercy in Riverdale before the Radley was converted to a hotel, effectively confirming that both series are part of a larger shared universe.
In the second season, subtitled Summer School, recurring character Greg Mantzoukas reveals that he is the cousin of Kevin Keller in the sixth episode, further cementing the connection between both series.
By September 2020, Aguirre-Sacasa was preparing another spin-off series based on an Archie Comics property. In August 2021, The CW announced Jake Chang, a noir teen mystery drama series spinoff of Riverdale focusing on the character of Jake Chang, a teen prodigy detective mystery solver. The network later ordered a pilot in May 2022. Aguirre-Sacasa as well various other crew members from the show's production team were to write and executive produce for the series. [235] The CW officially passed on the series in May 2023. [236]