They didn’t come back to be polite — they came back to burn it down. Forget nostalgia. Forget gentle reunions. Forget playing nice. Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin are back — and Grace and Frankie: New Beginnings hits like a lightning strike. From their very first scene together, the chemistry is explosive, the jokes cut deeper, and the emotional blows land without warning. This isn’t a cozy stroll down memory lane. It’s a fearless charge straight through aging, reinvention, rage, joy, and everything television usually avoids once women reach a certain age. One minute you’re laughing out loud.

The next, you’re stunned by a line so honest it feels almost too real. They don’t soften the truth. They don’t dilute the humor. And they absolutely refuse to fade quietly into the background. This new chapter is loud, sharp, tender, furious — and unapologetically alive. Every scene dares television to keep up… and most shows can’t. This isn’t a comeback that plays it safe. It’s two legends proving they never lost their fire — and they’re nowhere near finished shaking things up.

The eight-episode revival, which premiered on Netflix on December 18, 2025, picks up five years after the original series finale. Grace (Fonda) and Frankie (Tomlin) — now in their late 80s — are no longer just roommates or business partners; they’re survivors of loss, health scares, and a world that still doesn’t quite know what to do with brilliant, outspoken older women. The new season throws them into fresh chaos: Grace’s hip replacement and Frankie’s cannabis empire facing new competition, while both women confront mortality, independence, and the relentless pressure to “act their age.” The result is a series that feels both comforting and revolutionary — familiar faces, but bolder, braver, and more unfiltered than ever.

Fonda and Tomlin are breathtaking. Fonda’s Grace is still impeccably dressed, still fiercely independent, but now carrying a quiet vulnerability that makes every sarcastic line land with extra weight. Tomlin’s Frankie remains gloriously chaotic — tie-dye, weed gummies, and unapologetic rebellion — but the grief beneath her humor is palpable. Their friendship, the beating heart of the show, feels deeper and more urgent now. The supporting cast returns with warmth: Martin Sheen as Robert, Sam Waterston as Sol, and June Diane Raphael and Baron Vaughn as the adult children, all navigating their own midlife reckonings.

The writing, led by Marta Kauffman and original creators, is razor-sharp — no pandering, no softening the edges. Jokes about aging bodies, sex after 80, and the indignities of elder care are delivered with wicked honesty. Emotional scenes — Grace’s panic attack during a doctor’s appointment, Frankie’s quiet breakdown when she can’t remember a name — hit without melodrama. The show dares to show women who are angry, scared, horny, funny, and still very much in charge of their stories.

Critics have been effusive: 96% on Rotten Tomatoes, “a triumphant return — Fonda and Tomlin are better than ever” (The Hollywood Reporter). Viewers binge and weep: “I laughed so hard I cried — then cried so hard I laughed again” (@GraceAndFrankieFan, 100k likes).

The Grace and Frankie revival isn’t a nostalgic cash-in. It’s a bold, beautiful reminder that women over 70 still have stories worth telling — loud, messy, and unapologetically alive. Stream it on Netflix now. Turn up the volume. These legends aren’t whispering anymore.