It's been three years since we bid farewell to the Pretty Little Liars of Rosewood, and it's taken all that time to unravel every twist from the Freeform series. Just as
(we think) we've figured it out, a new reboot of the show is headed to HBO Max. Pretty Little Liars: Original Sin has received a direct-to-series order from the streaming platform, three weeks after news of the show's development was announced. Riverdale's Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa is the creative force behind the reboot, alongside his Chilling Adventures of Sabrinacollaborator Lindsay Calhoon Bring.
“Roberto and Lindsay are expanding the Pretty Little Liars universe with more murder, mysteries, and scandal, and we can’t wait,” Sarah Aubrey, head of original content at HBO Max, said in a statement. Ahead, everything we know about those new mysteries, which member of the original PLL cast may be involved, and when you can watch.
'A' will target a new group of friends.
The OG Pretty Little Liars aired for seven seasons on Freeform, delivering a shocking series finale in 2017. That show followed Aria (Lucy Hale), Hannah (Ashley Benson), Emily (Shay Mitchell), and Spencer (Troian Bellisario)—a circle of friends in the fictional town of Rosewood grappling with the death of their friend Alison (Sasha Pieterse). In each episode, the group's secrets were threatened to be exposed by the veiled villain "A."
Pretty Little Liars: Original Sin will introduce viewers to a new set of teens and depart from the franchise's 16 books and three companion novels of source material, written by Sara Shephard. A description of the show, per HBO Max, reads:
Twenty years ago, a series of tragic events almost ripped the blue-collar town of Millwood apart. Now, in the present day, a group of disparate teen girls—a brand-new set of Little Liars—find themselves tormented by an unknown Assailant and made to pay for the secret sin their parents committed two decades ago…as well as their own. In the dark, coming-of-RAGE, horror-tinged drama Pretty Little Liars: Original Sin, we find ourselves miles away from Rosewood, but within the existing Pretty Little Liars universe—in a brand new town, with a new generation of Little Liars.
This isn't the first Pretty Little Liars spinoff.
Three years between the original series and a reboot seems like a slim window, but this isn't even the first PLL-affiliated series to emerge since the show's 2010 debut. The hit drama spawned two spinoffs—Pretty Little Liars: Ravenswood in 2014 and Pretty Little Liars: The Perfectionists in 2019. Ravenswood took place in a fictional town near Rosewood and followed the character of Caleb (Tyler Blackburn). Meanwhile, The Perfectionists depicted Alison and Mona's (Janel Parrish) lives at Beacon Heights University.Neither project really clicked with an audience and lasted only one season each.
The show is being made by teen TV royalty.
Executive producer/writer Aguirre-Sacasa is also coming off a few stalled Riverdale spinoffs. CW's Katy Keene, starring PLL alum Hale, was cancelled after only a season. His Netflix series Chilling Adventures of Sabrina will also end after its upcoming fourth season.
Considering his resume, the teen genre is a world Aguirre-Sacasa knows well, as does co-executive producer/writer Calhoon Bring of Sabrina. In a statement, the pair praised the original PLL and paid homage to creator I. Marlene King:
We’re such huge fans of what I. Marlene King and her iconic cast created, we knew that we had to treat the original series as #CANON and do something different. So we’re leaning into the suspense and horror in this reboot, which hopefully will honor what the fans loved about the hit series, while weaving in new, unexpected elements.
That duo will produce the series through Aguirre-Sacasa’s Muckle Man Productions and Alloy Entertainment along with Warner Bros. Television. Alloy’s Leslie Morgenstein and Gina Girolamo have also signed on as executive producers.
Lucy Hale may return as a producer.
While none of the original cast members have signed on to appear in the reboot, Hale said in May that she would like to be involved in a different capacity. "When the time comes that they want to do it with a whole new cast, I might have to produce it because I'm way too protective of it," she told Entertainment Tonight. Considering Hale worked with Aguirre-Sacasa on Katy Keene, this collaboration seems likely.
Original Pretty Little Liars series creator I. Marlene King isn't involved.
One name not listed as part of the Original Sin team is PLL's series creator I. Marlene King. As of now, she's not involved with the new iteration and addressed her absence on Twitter. "The #OGPLL fans are the most passionate, loving and loyal in the universe. Thank you for all of your support. We are family forever. I love you," she tweeted on September 25.
The #OGPLL fans are the most passionate, loving and loyal in the universe. Thank you for all of your support. We are family forever. I love you. ❤️ #PLLFamily#OGPLLFamily
— I. Marlene King (@imarleneking) September 25, 2020
Aguirre-Sacasa responded to the tweet with three heart emojis, while Parrish retweeted King's statement and added, "What she said. Love you @imarleneking."
What she said. Love you @imarlenekinghttps://t.co/aJJVON6sRD
— Janel Parrish Long (@JanelParrish) September 25, 2020
There's no release date yet.
Since the series has just been confirmed, there's no additional casting or release info. Both Aguirre-Sacasa and Calhoon Bring have packed schedules, as he resumes production on Riverdale in Canada and she finishes work on the final Sabrina season. Pretty Little Liars: Original Sin will likely premiere after HBO Max's other high-profile reboot of a beloved teen drama, Gossip Girl, which will begin filming this fall.
Until then, the original Gossip Girl andPretty Little Liars are available to stream on HBO Max.