A collection of animated short stories that span various genres including science fiction, fantasy, horror and comedy.A collection of animated short stories that span various genres including science fiction, fantasy, horror and comedy.A collection of animated short stories that span various genres including science fiction, fantasy, horror and comedy.A collection of animated short stories that span various genres including science fiction, fantasy, horror and comedy.A collection of animated short stories that span various genres including science fiction, fantasy, horror and comedy.
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Love, Death + Robots is a 5-time Emmy winning animation anthology series produced by Blur Studio. Launched in March of 2019 on Netflix, Love, Death + Robots delivers a variety of style and story unlike anything else, spanning the genres of science fiction, fantasy, comedy, horror, and more. Created by Tim Miller with David Fincher as executive producer, the series brings together a global team of directors and animation studios to push and expand the medium. Eighteen shorts in all, Love, Death + Robots has something for everyone.
Top review
Season 1: amazing. Season 2: what happened??
I really liked season 1 of the series: a new kind of format, amazing graphics, sometimes thought provoking and serious, even dark, sometimes just simply funny. Diverse themes and animation styles. It was kind of like Black Mirror, but animated. Or like reading a collections sci-fi short stories.
But season 2... I was looking forward to it so much, and it let me down. The animations are as good as in season 1, and there is one or two episodes that are kind of OK, but otherwise they have forgotten *the* most important thing that made season 1 so good: the stories. I don't know what they were thinking, but they are very basic in season 2, sometimes do not even make sense. The punch lines are basically missing, or very weak.
Season 1 = 10 starts. Season 2 = 3 stars.
But season 2... I was looking forward to it so much, and it let me down. The animations are as good as in season 1, and there is one or two episodes that are kind of OK, but otherwise they have forgotten *the* most important thing that made season 1 so good: the stories. I don't know what they were thinking, but they are very basic in season 2, sometimes do not even make sense. The punch lines are basically missing, or very weak.
Season 1 = 10 starts. Season 2 = 3 stars.
helpful•170
- fagzal
- May 19, 2021
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