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.
- Won 13 Primetime Emmys
- 28 wins & 22 nominations total
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My Review of Season 4 of Love, Death & Robots
Love, Death & Robots began as a breath of fresh air in the genre of animated science fiction. Short but striking novellas with original plots, experimental animation, and provocative themes made the first three seasons a true event.
But what happened in Season 4?
Let me start with the only undeniable positive: the team of artists and animators remained, and the visual style is still top-notch. The studio signatures are recognizable, and the production quality remains high.
And that's where the praise ends.
From a storytelling perspective, the season fails on almost every level. The first and second episodes are uninspired voids, lacking any real idea or emotion. What follows is a series of weak attempts to recapture the show's trademark tone, but the stories are either drawn out or completely devoid of meaning. This isn't philosophical sci-fi anymore-it's self-parody and imitation of former glory.
It feels like the creators just needed to "check a box" and deliver a season. Instead of bold experimentation, we get safe, dull, and forced episodes.
In the end: a complete disappointment. I can only recommend watching the first three seasons-that's where Love, Death & Robots is still alive.
But what happened in Season 4?
Let me start with the only undeniable positive: the team of artists and animators remained, and the visual style is still top-notch. The studio signatures are recognizable, and the production quality remains high.
And that's where the praise ends.
From a storytelling perspective, the season fails on almost every level. The first and second episodes are uninspired voids, lacking any real idea or emotion. What follows is a series of weak attempts to recapture the show's trademark tone, but the stories are either drawn out or completely devoid of meaning. This isn't philosophical sci-fi anymore-it's self-parody and imitation of former glory.
It feels like the creators just needed to "check a box" and deliver a season. Instead of bold experimentation, we get safe, dull, and forced episodes.
In the end: a complete disappointment. I can only recommend watching the first three seasons-that's where Love, Death & Robots is still alive.
Season one was incredible. A little something for anyone. Great variety and vision in small samples. Like short stories. It was 18 episodes!
Season two. Even shorter episodes. Only a few of interest and only 8 episodes with some as shot as 7 minutes.
You can always count on Netflix for a bait and switch. Waited over a year for less than an hour of content.
Season two. Even shorter episodes. Only a few of interest and only 8 episodes with some as shot as 7 minutes.
You can always count on Netflix for a bait and switch. Waited over a year for less than an hour of content.
We are faced with an incredibly creative anthology of 18 different stories ranging from an immense variety of animation designs, cinematography, music-sound use, and transhumanism to cyber punk, from robotics to artificial intelligence, from the life of others to anti-militarism: Love, Death & Robots.
It was obvious from the trailer that we would be watching interesting things, but I didn't expect that much. The taste of each episode remained in my palate. Death, Love & Robots show the end point of the animation. Cyberpunk, love, death, technology, apocalyptic, a variety of topics such as space is told. So each viewer can find something in the series. There were criticisms of sexism and violence, but I didn't encounter such a problem. Episode lengths range from six to seventeen minutes. Although it is a little short, you can understand the quality when you watch. 9/10
It was obvious from the trailer that we would be watching interesting things, but I didn't expect that much. The taste of each episode remained in my palate. Death, Love & Robots show the end point of the animation. Cyberpunk, love, death, technology, apocalyptic, a variety of topics such as space is told. So each viewer can find something in the series. There were criticisms of sexism and violence, but I didn't encounter such a problem. Episode lengths range from six to seventeen minutes. Although it is a little short, you can understand the quality when you watch. 9/10
This show is a masterpiece. Every episode feels like a complete movie. I was surprised that I was able to care for the characters after such a short time. Most shows take 2 or 3 hours to be able to establish that kind of a rapport. The pacing is great, the topics explored are interesting and some of the plot twists are amazing. One of the episodes managed to flip my understanding of all the events completely on its head just in the last few seconds when the truth was finally revealed.
Did you know
- TriviaThe episodes Beyond the Aquila Rift (2019) and Zima Blue (2019) are from a book called "Zima Blue and Other Stories" by Alastair Reynolds.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Shows You Can Binge in One Day (2019)
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- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Love Death + Robots
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime15 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.00 : 1
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