In the third and final season of Dark on Netflix, the show takes even more twists and turns through time - and other worlds - and brings further questions about the characters. It covers more years than the first two seasons, even jumping back to the 1800s. In the scenes from 1888 in episode two, we meet an old blind man who is a bit of a mystery at first, as he's not outright identified. But after putting the pieces together, we now know who the blind man is.
First, let's fast forward to how the entire show ends. The older Claudia (Lisa Kreuzer) tells Adam (Dietrich Hollinderbäumer) that she knows how to untie the knot that will break the entire cycle of time travel, and the answer lies with H.G. Tannhaus. He's the clockmaker who created the original time travel machine in 1986 in the origin world. By attempting to go back in time,...
First, let's fast forward to how the entire show ends. The older Claudia (Lisa Kreuzer) tells Adam (Dietrich Hollinderbäumer) that she knows how to untie the knot that will break the entire cycle of time travel, and the answer lies with H.G. Tannhaus. He's the clockmaker who created the original time travel machine in 1986 in the origin world. By attempting to go back in time,...
- 7/3/2020
- by Hedy Phillips
- Popsugar.com
[Note: The following contains spoilers for “Dark” Season 3, including the ending.]
For as much as the show invited questions of who was or wasn’t one, the villain of “Dark” never really mattered as much as many of the potential antagonists would have had you believe. After all the talk of inevitability, it seemed like this grand trilogy of seasons was destined to be a rope that, rather than snapping under the tension pulling at either end, would instead unravel in a pile, however neat.
That’s how the series comes to a close in Season 3, capped off by an ending that pushes aside the idea of an ultimate victor. Seemingly doomed to spend an infinite number of years inside quarreling realities dominated by time travelers with flexible morality, “Dark” ends with the idea that power comes from a different place entirely: humility. As Jonas (Louis Hofmann) and Martha (Lisa Vicari) dislodge themselves from a loop that also includes their scarred...
For as much as the show invited questions of who was or wasn’t one, the villain of “Dark” never really mattered as much as many of the potential antagonists would have had you believe. After all the talk of inevitability, it seemed like this grand trilogy of seasons was destined to be a rope that, rather than snapping under the tension pulling at either end, would instead unravel in a pile, however neat.
That’s how the series comes to a close in Season 3, capped off by an ending that pushes aside the idea of an ultimate victor. Seemingly doomed to spend an infinite number of years inside quarreling realities dominated by time travelers with flexible morality, “Dark” ends with the idea that power comes from a different place entirely: humility. As Jonas (Louis Hofmann) and Martha (Lisa Vicari) dislodge themselves from a loop that also includes their scarred...
- 6/30/2020
- by Steve Greene
- Indiewire
[Editor’s Note: The following contains spoilers from “Dark” Season 2.]
Netflix’s sci-fi series “Dark” requires intense concentration to watch, and not just because viewers have to put down their phones to read the subtitles. Created by Baran bo Odar and Jantje Friese, the German-language series packs in a dense story about the small town of Winden, whose residents harbor secrets spanning generations, including the abduction and murder of young boys. On top of that, frequent time travel makes it difficult to keep storylines, genealogy, and even concepts of spacetime straight.
Therefore, viewers could be forgiven for missing smaller details amidst all of this insanity. But just as the creators are fond of meticulous plotting, so too are they about including hidden meanings and jokes throughout the series. And yes, “Dark” is funny, even as everyone’s lives are at stake. Really, what’s funnier than finding out that your daughter is also your mother?!
Here are eight things you...
Netflix’s sci-fi series “Dark” requires intense concentration to watch, and not just because viewers have to put down their phones to read the subtitles. Created by Baran bo Odar and Jantje Friese, the German-language series packs in a dense story about the small town of Winden, whose residents harbor secrets spanning generations, including the abduction and murder of young boys. On top of that, frequent time travel makes it difficult to keep storylines, genealogy, and even concepts of spacetime straight.
Therefore, viewers could be forgiven for missing smaller details amidst all of this insanity. But just as the creators are fond of meticulous plotting, so too are they about including hidden meanings and jokes throughout the series. And yes, “Dark” is funny, even as everyone’s lives are at stake. Really, what’s funnier than finding out that your daughter is also your mother?!
Here are eight things you...
- 6/26/2019
- by Hanh Nguyen
- Indiewire
Kirsten Howard Joseph Baxter Jun 7, 2019
Netflix's first original German series, Dark, is returning for a second creepy season.
Dark Season 2 is coming to Netflix – and coming soon, no less!
The time-bending German mystery, which saw the streaming giant dip its toes into the water of original, non-English language live action projects, was a solid hit for the streaming giant, which premiered the inaugural season on December 1, 2017. Thus, Netflix’s green light for the second season of Dark arrived less than a fortnight after said premiere. (Check out our Dark Season 1 review!)
The creepy Kraut series, the creation of showrunners Baran bo Odar and Jantje Friese, proved to be a bellwether offering, with other non-English genre offerings having since manifested on the streaming platform.
Dark Season 2 Trailer
An intense, appropriately mind-bending teaser trailer has arrived for Netflix's Dark Season 2!
Video of Dark Season 2 | Mystery Teaser | Netflix Dark Season 2 Release Date...
Netflix's first original German series, Dark, is returning for a second creepy season.
Dark Season 2 is coming to Netflix – and coming soon, no less!
The time-bending German mystery, which saw the streaming giant dip its toes into the water of original, non-English language live action projects, was a solid hit for the streaming giant, which premiered the inaugural season on December 1, 2017. Thus, Netflix’s green light for the second season of Dark arrived less than a fortnight after said premiere. (Check out our Dark Season 1 review!)
The creepy Kraut series, the creation of showrunners Baran bo Odar and Jantje Friese, proved to be a bellwether offering, with other non-English genre offerings having since manifested on the streaming platform.
Dark Season 2 Trailer
An intense, appropriately mind-bending teaser trailer has arrived for Netflix's Dark Season 2!
Video of Dark Season 2 | Mystery Teaser | Netflix Dark Season 2 Release Date...
- 12/21/2017
- Den of Geek
Beta sells other territories on the film based on Noah Gordon’s trilogy of books.
The Physician’s producers Wolf Bauer and Nico Hofmann have indicated that they may take on the other two books of Noah Gordon’s trilogy, of which The Physician is the first part: Matters Of Choice and Shaman.
Speaking exclusively to ScreenDaily ahead of the world premiere of The Physician in Berlin on Monday evening, Bauer explained: “We have discussed this with Noah Gordon and would have access [to the properties].”
“But we won’t have this discussion before the film has reached 3m admissions in Germany and Spain,” said Bauer, who is currently reading Shaman for the seventh time.
Moreover, the producers would have freedom in casting since Shaman is set in the 19th century some 800 years after the events in The Physician.
Hofmann revealed that, as part of the film’s financing from broadcaster Ard Degeto, a longer...
The Physician’s producers Wolf Bauer and Nico Hofmann have indicated that they may take on the other two books of Noah Gordon’s trilogy, of which The Physician is the first part: Matters Of Choice and Shaman.
Speaking exclusively to ScreenDaily ahead of the world premiere of The Physician in Berlin on Monday evening, Bauer explained: “We have discussed this with Noah Gordon and would have access [to the properties].”
“But we won’t have this discussion before the film has reached 3m admissions in Germany and Spain,” said Bauer, who is currently reading Shaman for the seventh time.
Moreover, the producers would have freedom in casting since Shaman is set in the 19th century some 800 years after the events in The Physician.
Hofmann revealed that, as part of the film’s financing from broadcaster Ard Degeto, a longer...
- 12/17/2013
- by screen.berlin@googlemail.com (Martin Blaney)
- ScreenDaily
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