Why Drops of God( Season 1) on Apple TV+ Stayed With Me Long After the Final Episode
I’ve watched a lot of television over the years, but every so often a series comes along that doesn’t just entertain, it lingers-Drops of God, Season 1. At first glance, it sounds like a niche premise: a multilingual drama about wine, spanning France and Japan, told in English, French, and Japanese. But a few episodes in, I realized this wasn’t really a show about wine at all. It’s about people, memory, inheritance, and the complicated ways we try to understand one another, sometimes without ever saying the things that matter most.
Wine as Memory, Not Status
I’ll be honest: I’m not a wine expert. I don’t swirl expertly or name notes of leather and tobacco with confidence. And that’s exactly why Drops of God surprised me. The series never talks down to viewers who aren’t connoisseurs. Instead, it treats wine as something deeply personal, connected to moments in time, relationships, grief, and love.
As I watched, I found myself thinking about how smells and tastes can instantly bring us back to people we’ve lost or places we once called home. The show captures that beautifully, turning each tasting into an emotional excavation rather than a technical exercise.
Between France and Japan
One of the things I appreciated most was how respectfully the series moves between cultures. France and Japan aren’t just locations, they represent different ways of seeing the world.
France feels rooted in tradition and history, where wine carries generations of meaning. Japan brings discipline, restraint, and an almost spiritual dedication to mastery. Watching these perspectives collide and occasionally soften felt incredibly human. No culture is presented as superior; instead, each learns from the other, just as the characters do.
The Power of Silence and Language
The multilingual nature of the show adds to its intimacy. Characters switch between English, French, and Japanese depending on context, emotion, and power dynamics. Sometimes what isn’t said feels just as important as the dialogue itself.
I found myself leaning in more, paying closer attention. This isn’t background television. It rewards patience and I appreciated being trusted as a viewer to keep up emotionally, not just intellectually.
A Quiet, Confident Kind of Acting
The performances are subtle in a way that feels increasingly rare. No one is trying to steal the scene. Emotions simmer instead of explode. Grief, resentment, pride, and longing are expressed through small gestures, a pause before answering, a tightening of the jaw, the careful way a glass is held.
It reminded me that some of the most powerful drama happens inside a person.
Visually, It’s a Pleasure
The cinematography deserves its own mention. Vineyards in France feel warm and timeless; Japanese interiors feel precise and contemplative. Even the wine itself is filmed with reverence. Each episode looks composed, thoughtful, never flashy, always intentional.
Why This Series Matters to Me
What stayed with me most is the idea that taste is shaped by life. We don’t experience the world in isolation; everything we’ve loved, lost, learned, and endured colors how we perceive things, even something as simple as a sip of wine.
Drops of God reminded me that inheritance isn’t just about what we’re given, but what we choose to understand, accept, or redefine for ourselves.
Final Thoughts
This is not a binge-it-in-the-background kind of show. It’s a series to watch slowly, maybe with a glass of wine nearby, not to analyze it, but to feel it.
When the final episode ended, I didn’t immediately move on to the next show. I sat there for a moment, letting it settle. And to me, that’s the mark of storytelling done right.
Quiet. Elegant- Human. Drops of God earns its place among the most thoughtful series Apple TV+ has produced.
- The Plot: When world-renowned wine authority Alexandre Léger dies, he leaves behind a $148 million wine collection. To inherit it, his estranged daughter, Camille Léger (Fleur Geffrier), must compete against his brilliant protégé, Issei Tomine (Tomohisa Yamashita), in a series of sensory tests.
- Season 2: Premiered on January 21, 2026, this season follows Camille and Issei as they travel the world to uncover the origin of a mysterious, legendary wine that their father could never solve.
- Critical Reception: The show won the 2024 International Emmy Award for Best Drama Series. Reviewers from NPR praise it as a "high-gloss drama" that turns wine tasting into a "sports epic"
- I am starting to watch Season 2. It is not as captivating as Season 1, but if you love wine, go ahead and watch the show with a glass wine on your side.
- Meanwhile, My Photo of the Day: Wild Flowers from Southern California
Lastly, here's the latest news on the Iran-Israel-US War
🔥 Major Military Escalation
U.S. and Israeli forces have intensified strikes across Iran, targeting military infrastructure and Tehran following the assassination of Iran’s Supreme Leader.
Iran has launched widespread retaliatory attacks on U.S., Israeli, and allied military assets throughout the Middle East, including energy infrastructure and bases.
U.S. leadership stresses the campaign is focused and “not endless,” aimed at dismantling Iran’s offensive capabilities.
🇮🇷 Iran’s Leadership and Internal Crisis
The killing of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in recent strikes has plunged Iran into a leadership crisis amid war conditions.
A temporary leadership council has been formed, and analysts warn the regime faces its most serious challenge since 1979.
🌍 Regional Spread and Diplomacy
Clashes have spread beyond Iran’s borders: Hezbollah has fired rockets from Lebanon; Gulf states like Saudi Arabia have summoned Iranian diplomats over attacks.
A British Royal Air Force base in Cyprus was struck by Iranian-made drones, prompting raised alert levels and expanded defense postures.
European leaders are reacting to the crisis and broader regional impact during specialized coverage.














