In School Spirits, death has never meant the end of the story. But in season three, it finally starts to feel like the rules, whatever they once were, are breaking.
Created by Nate and Megan Trinrud, the Paramount+ drama returns with its most ambitious chapter yet, plunging Maddie Nears and her friends into a deeper, darker mystery as the veil between worlds grows dangerously thin. What began as a grounded supernatural whodunit has evolved into something more unsettling: a story about unfinished business, emotional fractures, and the terrifying consequences of knowing too much.
After clawing her way back to life, Maddie is no longer simply searching for answers. She is burdened by them. Visions haunt her, secrets fester at Split River High, and the cost of protecting both the living and the dead grows heavier with every revelation. Season three does not just raise the stakes. It interrogates them.
The Knockturnal’s Jai Singh Nanda sat down with multiple members of the School Spirits ensemble to unpack how the series expands its mythology while keeping its emotional core intact, speaking with Nick Pugliese and Sarah Yarkin, Jennifer Tilly and Josh Zuckerman, Spencer MacPherson, Kiara Pichardo, and Rainbow Wedell, and Miles Elliot and Ci Hang Ma about the shifting dynamics, darker tone, and surprising humanity behind the show’s most intense season yet.
A Darker Turn and Deeper Teamwork
For Sarah Yarkin, who plays the sharp-tongued Rhonda, season three marks a noticeable shift, not just in tone, but in how her character relates to the group.
With the mystery intensifying and the stakes affecting everyone, Rhonda is forced into unfamiliar territory: collaboration. Yarkin described a season where sillier moments give way to something more focused and more urgent, as Rhonda learns, uncomfortably, to be a team player. The darkness is not just external. It demands emotional growth.
Her co-star Nick Pugliese, who plays Charley, echoed that evolution from a different angle. While Charley has always wrestled with insecurity, season three magnifies those feelings by placing him in a relationship amid chaos. The result is a tonal balancing act the show embraces. Life-or-death stakes collide with deeply personal conversations about identity, love, and vulnerability. It is a contrast that feels true to the DNA of School Spirits: spooky, yes, but always human.
Stepping Into the Storm
Season three also introduces new energy into Split River High, most notably with Jennifer Tilly joining the cast as Dr. Hunter-Price. A deliciously unhinged addition, the character is narcissistic, power-hungry, and increasingly terrifying, and Tilly relished the challenge.
She spoke openly about the intimidation of stepping into an already tight-knit ensemble, but also about the thrill of playing someone with so few redeeming qualities. For Tilly, the appeal lay in digging for humanity where it barely exists and embracing a character who slowly transmogrifies into something truly horrific by season’s end.
For Josh Zuckerman, who returns as the enigmatic Mr. Martin, season three represents an earned unraveling. What once presented as confidence and authority begins to fracture as secrets surface, leaving Mr. Martin exposed, desperate, and emotionally adrift. Zuckerman credited the show’s creators and writers for being deeply communicative about the larger themes at play, emphasizing that School Spirits is never just about plot. It is about meaning.
Friendship Under Pressure
If season three interrogates the nature of truth, it also tests the strength of friendship. In conversations with Spencer MacPherson (Xavier), Kiara Pichardo (Nicole), and Rainbow Wedell (Claire), one theme emerged again and again. Pressure does not weaken these bonds. It reveals them.
MacPherson noted that the friendships at the center of the show are stronger than ever because they have to be. Wedell described the group as trauma-bonded, united by secrets they cannot share with anyone else. And for Pichardo, Nicole’s journey this season is about learning confidence under fire, guided by relationships that challenge her comfort zone.
Together, the trio painted a picture of an ensemble that thrives on trust, both on screen and off. That sense of safety, they agreed, is what allows the show to go to darker places without losing its heart.
Expanding the Afterlife
As the world of School Spirits widens, so too does its emotional and thematic reach. Miles Elliot and Ci Hang Ma, whose characters further expand the mythology of the afterlife, spoke about discovering new layers of meaning as season three reveals long-buried truths about Split River High.
For Ma’s Quinn, waking up in death paradoxically offers freedom, a second chance at belonging that life never quite provided. But that freedom comes with consequences, as the warnings left behind in season two begin to materialize. Elliot emphasized that this season does not just answer questions. It forces every character to rethink their place in a world that may be far more dangerous than they realized.
Grounding those revelations, both actors stressed, required constant communication with directors, writers, and each other to ensure the supernatural never eclipsed the emotional reality. Ghosts may haunt the halls, but it is the characters’ fear, hope, and longing that keep the story anchored.
A Haunting Evolution
By the end of these conversations, one thing became clear. School Spirits season three is not interested in easy answers. It is a season about consequences, of curiosity, of silence, of love stretched beyond its limits.
As the mystery deepens and the boundaries between worlds continue to blur, the series doubles down on what has always set it apart: an ensemble willing to go emotionally all in, even when the ground beneath them is not solid.
And if season three proves anything, it is that in School Spirits, the most frightening thing is not death. It is what happens when the truth refuses to stay buried.
Spending time with this cast, that passion extends far beyond the screen. There is a genuine sense that these are actors who not only care deeply about the work, but about the audience experiencing it. In a story built on connection between worlds, it feels fitting that the people behind it are just as invested in the connection with the fans watching along.