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This is PEAK of my last year.
- Invincible
- For all Mankind
- Pantheon
I'm a huge sci-fi nerd, and can highly recommend The Eternaut I love when movies/shows come up with interesting ideas like this. It's been renewed for 2 more seasons, but sadly it's going to be over a year before season 2 comes out. It was so popular that they greatly expanded the budget and scope. Oh well.
At least season 3 of Silo starts soon.
I wrote out a whole list for you then I accidentally deleted it. I was very proud of that list. Here’s a few:
- Widows Bay
- Our Flag Means Death
- Ted Lasso
- The Good Place
- Watchmen (show not movie)
- Halt and Catch Fire
- Silo
- Man in the High Castle
- Tokyo Vice
- What We Do In The Shadows
Apple TV has a lot of really exceptional Sci-Fi if that’s your thing.
AND FINALLY. The weirdest most indescribable show of all time that will not make sense it is somehow a must watch for me:
Raised by Wolves
Most people won’t like that one. It is the weirdest thing I’ve ever seen. It’s a sci-fi show by Ridley Scott’s company and it feels like the plot was written by a Norwegian Death Metal band.
Androids raise children during the time of a religious war. One Android gives birth to a flying snake. A lady becomes a tree. A sea monster puts a baby into its chest cavity.
EDIT:
I get asked about recommendations a lot so after writing this, I decided to make a list. It’s not finished, I’ll add more over the next few days.
Halt and catch fire
Mr Robot
Silicon Valley
Is my modern tech trio
Fleabag - I can't believe I didn't see it yet in this thread. If you like Phoebe Waller-Bridge then you must see it, and if you're not familiar with her yet, this is a great show to get to know her humor. It's extremely funny and tugs on your emotions, mainly about love, trauma and family.
Comedy? Futurama (be ready to have your feels tickled)
More serious SF but still funny? The Orville
More more serious SF and not so funny, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
Not at all funny and serious SF (anyone seeing a pattern?) Battlestar Galactica (2003-2009)
Extra credit serious SF, worth every hour, dated graphics and all, Babylon 5 Amazing stories, worth every minute it takes to watch it.
Chernobyl was a great show, yes, though technically so wrong on so many levels, but I guess it's in part to make it more exciting
Another recommendation: The Orville. The true successor to Star Trek TNG and DS9. Especially the first two seasons are amazingly good
The scene near the end where the guy explains how the whole process works was amazing.
- Riget by Lars von Trier. Combines hospital drama with horror and adds a dash of black and absurd comedy into the mix. The third season was also quite watchable, but not as essential as the original show.
- Twin Peaks. All three seasons. Takes a quality dip some point at the second season but the third one really ups the ante and redeems.
- The Office UK. Peak cringe comedy throughout, with a dash of drama. The US version is alright, but really its own thing after the first seasons and not really comparable.
- Monty Python's Flying Circus. Peak absurd humour. Some of the stuff probably doesn't fly as well as it did over 50 years ago, but well worth the watch.
Better than the rest
-
The Wire & Homicide: Life on the Street (David Simon Box Set)
-
Atlanta
-
The Expanse
Comedy
- NewsRadio (for Maura Tierney and Dave Foley and Phil Hartman and Khandi Alexander and Vicki Lewis and Stephen Root)
- Schitt's Creek
- Ted Lasso (Seasons 1 and 2)
- Murphy Brown
- Sex Education
Sci-Fi
- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
- Battlestar Galactica (2003-2009)
- Dark
- Devs
- Altered Carbon (Season 1)
Drama
- The Newsroom
- Law & Order (seasons 1-8)
- Succession
- Severance
Intense Drama (TV-MA and little levity)
- Chernobyl
- Adolescence
- Utopia
- MR. ROBOT
- Luther
- True Detective (Season 1)
- Vince Gilligan Box Set (Better Call Saul & Breaking Bad & Plur1bus (has levity))
- Ozark
Anthology shows
- Black Mirror
- Love Death + Robots
Animated
- Rick and Morty
- Samurai Jack (2001-2004, 2017)
- Avatar: The Last Airbender (2005-2008)
- Gravity Falls
- South Park
- Neon Genesis Evangelion
- Final Space
Perpetually on deck for me
- Fargo
- Andor
- Band of Brothers
- Barry
- Legion
- Letterkenny
- Bojack Horseman
- Scavenger's Reign
- Fringe
I forgot about Altered Carbon! That first season was amazing, and it's borderline criminal how shit the follow up season was.
Have you got your copy of Final Space: The Final Chapter yet?
I wish I had the spare $200 for it. Ill have to pick it up used or from collector in, like, 4 years.
Really, though, my discretionary $200+ spent on a single book — at this point — would go to Le Pater. I dig Alphonse Mucha and Art Nouveau.
bsg wouldve been better if they acknowledged the og series, but the showrunner is a "christian/mormon" so he had to insert a messianic message in the show, which rubbed some people the wrong way.
resident alien was fun, but being syfy they cancelled the show after season 4. they dint do ALAN TUDYK justice.
mythology/fantasy:
supernatural 1-5 by kripke, season 6-15 is very cheesy and very "sexualized by the fans to the point the writers just wrote it as a fanfiction.
Grimm, is too similar to SPN, but its fun its a niche way.
With no regard to how big stuff is/was, because OP hadn't seen Chernobyl.
'Chernobyl' is up there. Brutal indictment of a hypercorrupt dying empire that only cares about power and is built almost entirely on lies contrasted with the people it happens to, who largely embody the ideals their government lies about; the heroism of a dead culture striving to save everyone from some of the fuckers who killed it.
'Andor' star wars, but about antifascism instead of wuxia bullshit or daddy issues. Some of the best TV ever made. Weaves in links to history and obscure star wars apocrypha. It's everything it should be and more with amazing layered deliberate fast-slow-fast pacing. There's a long-payoff joke that is also the serious culmination of the first season's meta-arc (the first season of that show would be about five seasons of anything else) and half the fans didn't even notice.
'Severance' or the ~decade earlier whedon-directed much more sex focused show it was linked to, 'dollhouse' if you need fast pace or a slightly more dramatic version of what the internet is now. Low-scifi corpo-surrealism about the ways we treat identity. The two versions come to very different conclusions.
'Scavengers' reign' beautiful uncanny man-vs-nature space narrative, haunting sound track, amazing in every way that matters.
'Westworld' only season 1. Its About Things. No not just the robots. They left some plot threads unresolved for season 2, but they're not really what's important and each season is exponentially worse, riding the first season's nonstop hitting. Season 2 is still okay I guess.
'daredevil' Netflix version, season 1 only. There's more but its not the same quality.
'Cowboy bebop' everybody's favorite film noir space (neo?)western. Dripping with cool. Remade a few years later in a historically accurate Japan right after the consolidation of the Tokugawa dynasty with arguably 10% less style and 30% tighter production.
'Kaos' though it was left extremely unfinished. High budget modern Greek mythology soup. As gay and misothiest as you would ex0ect if you had actually read any.
'Peacemaker' murder-himbo realizes he might be one of the bad guys while trying to save the world with/from the CIA immediately post-'the suicide squad'.
'Harley Quinn' batman villain fucks around, continues fucking around, occasionally finds out. But lesbianly, sharp unhinged comedy.
'Futurama' fox seasons/original run only. Occasionally heart wrenching SciFi comedy that's not trying to be as edgy as 'rick and Morty' later would. Definitely aged, but smart enough it's aged gracefully.
'True detective' season 1 only. The rest are fine, I guess. Southern Gothic neo-noir ambiguously fantasy.
'Star trek: deep space nine' a space station on the edge of falgsc utopia orbiting space-palestine as the toned down space zios do space-zio things. 90s in all the best ways and very few of the worst.
Or the more woo-scifi version which aired I think simultaneously, 'Babylon 5'.
'Community' very few comedy shows age this well.
'Lovecraft country' endritch horror and american racism standing in frame next to each other, while the arc and the anthology flirt over a meal of 'how to love SciFi as a marginalized person?'. The most beautiful wholesome profound bed covered in gore you've ever watched coincidentally 'is this gay, and if so what kind?' sex on.
I'll add more later, and there are more certain people need to see but others don't necessarily.
Just wanna quickly applaud the writing in this comment. Conveying a show's vibes this effectively in just a few sentences is not easy.
(What's the long-payoff Andor joke though? I may have missed it.)
'What we do in the shadows' if 'the real world' house was set in the 'vampire: the masquerade' setting, but everyone is just as petty and cringe despite being 500 year old vampires. Spun off from feature film of the same name.
'Bojack horseman' whip smart surrealist comedy/merciless knife twisting too-real drama about a washed up actor in 2010s hollywood. Revels in clever tounge twisters, word play, and sprinkling dry humor on the cringe-horror. Animated, brutally real, suffused with a quiet desperation that can be painful to watch while making the jokes no less funny.
'The good place' what if moral philosophy 101 was a funny joke? But like really funny. All four seasons. some of the pop culture references aged a little, but the core premise is rock solid and about half the jokes are about people who have been dead for centuries or mythologies originally inscribed on stone.
'King of the hill' and 'silicon valley' borderline anthropological studies of turn if the century small town Texas and 2010s silicon valley from the guy who made 'idiocracy'. Affectionately mocking and mercilessly vicious, respectively. They haven't aged perfectly, but they're still brilliant insightful and funny. Some of the bits are timeless, the characters are amusing even if some look different from post-2020, and the depth of understanding mike judge gives these people is truly stunning.
'Reno911' a parody of 'cops', cops, and the city of reno centering on members of the reno police department. Has aged far too well. Watch an episode or two if you're swamped in copaganda. I have no fucking clue how this got made. Having lived in reno for a year in my youth and interacted with police, I can say I didn't know it was scripted for the entire first season.
'Madoka magicka' just a really good twee magical girl show from a feminist perspective. Pay no attention to the quiet girl with the shotgun, the uncanny architecture, or the twee magic pet thing's choice of food.
'Kill la kill' the sexualization of young girls is a problem. You, young girl, must save us by dressing extra slutty and doing lots of violence. This one is fine for kids.
'Ghost in the shell: stand alone complex' its old cyberpunk, so it's aged a bit, and is somewhat copaganda, but is still remarkably good. Season two is like a different thing and not any good.
'Doom patrol' people with big superpowers and bigger mental illnesses spending basically all their time in every part of comic book nonsense absolutely not allowed in an 'avengers' movie-too smart, too weird, too gross, too subversive, too hostile to expectations. A self aware ontologically queer street is a major side character, and that doesn't even stand out. You need to watch it.
03's 'battlestar galactica' a sequel to an older show of the same name that didn't really matter. Keeps coming up and I endorse, even if its kind of genx shitlib sometimes.
'Better off ted' basically likable upper manager at The Evil Company circa late 2000s.
Not sure if I wanted to include it here, because it's so god damn basic, but 'breaking bad' really is spectacular. The acting, and the way they use death as a motif is really fucking cool. But if you can't with basic-bitch white heteros, you shouldn't bother. The spinoff 'better call Saul' is also very good, and less cringeily basic-bitch.
Good list.
‘Community’ very few comedy shows age this well.
OP doesn;'t mention how long they haven't been watching but I would add Arrested Development to the comedy show list.
Yeah, the two best sitcoms of the 2000s, incredibly deep humor, great stories, so much rewatchability (I know, because I do).
I'm always jealous when I hear someone hasn't seen one or either.
law drama: svu 1-S(when stabler left the show), the new seasons just dont hit as good as pre-2010s, mariska had to be asked to come back to the show with a significant PAY package(shes kinda done with the show). law and order CI with vincent d'nofrio, original, and another that never took off(LA a believe). i dont new cop shows can match these, as they are just mostly copaganda.
SCIF: Stark trek; DS9, TNG, enterprise, voyager.(dont really reccommend movies until you watch the series). Nutrek is just awful except the animated series.
american GODs, sand man, good omens.
the concept of american gods are very similar to other shows like spn, where gods gain power from followers worshipping them,sacrificing them and fade away if they lose followers.
Hold the damn phone:
“'Cowboy bebop' everybody's favorite film noir space (neo?)western. Dripping with cool. “
EXPLAIN THIS NEXT SENTENCE3
Remade a few years later in a historically accurate Japan right after the consolidation of the Tokugawa dynasty with arguably 10% less style and 30% tighter production.
Legion (2017)
It's a psychological drama with Aubrey Plaza in it at her weird best, by the same writer behind Fargo, the TV series and Alien: Earth. Jermaine Clement plays a small but important role. It was nominated for a variety of awards, but only won a couple of minor ones. If that seems interesting to you but you haven't heard of it, it's best to go in blind because spoilers could really ruin it.
The Pitt.
It’s easily one of the best television shows ever made.
Throwing in my recommendations and limiting it to sleeper shows that don't get recommended much. (The expanse, silo, foundation, arcane, severance etc already get lots of love). They aren't all must watch but worth checking out, particularly the first 3
Mr Inbetween - Aussie show about a hit man that plays out like an incredible slice of life.
Sense8 - sci fi based show about based around 8 people who find themselves linked. It's weird, LGBTQ friendly & forward and has some explicit scenes.
The goes wrong show - BBC theatre piece. Amateur theatre company attempt plays. Each actor has their own quirks, faults and confidence issues. Chaos ensues, the show must go on.
------ other decent stuff in case 3 top tier isn't enough
Almost human - cancelled early formula show of he's a cop but his partner's an X (in this case android). Had humans vibes and good chemistry
3 body problem - sci fi adaptation from prominent Chinese author
Community - some people seem to have missed it
You're the worst - a show about terrible people
What We Do in the Shadows
(The movie first, then the TV series). Vampire faux-reality TV comedy. Taika Waititi and Jermaine Clement made the movie it was based on, and were executive producers on the series, so it's that sense of humour.
And a sequel to the movie is planned too!
Interesting, I wonder how they'll connect it to the show.
I'll throw a couple of old, fun ones in I doubt anyone mentioned.
Dead Like Me
Pushing Daisies