Reddit Reddit reviews Undone - Season 1

We found 3 Reddit comments about Undone - Season 1. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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Undone - Season 1
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3 Reddit comments about Undone - Season 1:

u/chrisabraham · 8 pointsr/UndoneTV

I wrote this out of excitement a couple days after binging it in one day:

[SPOILER ALERT] I believe I discovered the new series on Amazon Video Prime on the day it launched. I finished it on the first day.

Undone starts off slow self-indulgent, making you wonder why it needed to be beautifully rotoscoped after all. Then, all of a sudden, it becomes a masterclass in magical realism. The series is reminiscent of the novel The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle by Haruki Murakami. The veil between the other and this material world dissolves and the story evolves from being just a story of a cute, edgy, Latinx, mestiza, Alma, who says awesome things like "broken people break people" and who can seriously put down a lot of tequila into the story of the blossoming of a Priestess, the most powerful shaman that her dead theoretical physicist dad has ever seen. I don't want to go too deeply into the plot or the storyline because there are so many twists and turns; I also don't want to remotely address the end of the series except I was extremely disappointed⁠—if only because I am a true believer. This is how it is described over on IMDB:

>"A woman discovers she has a new relationship with time after surviving a car accident that almost killed her."

I plan make a much deeper dive into this beautiful, deep, complex, honest, and smart series. The series would have been perfectly wonderful were it only an exploration of the surface issues: the mom's connection to the church, the girl's connection to her indigenous roots, the loss of a white dad, Jacob, the sister's engagement to a man more out of a desire for stability and prestige over deep love, the relationship between the girl and her boyfriend Sam. Their life living in San Antonio, Texas, and, of course, issues of mental illness, brokenness, relationships, addiction, feminism, race, gender, and even what it's like to be a woman of color, a South Asian Indian immigrant, and all of those things.

Even without the magical realism, the exploration into the confluence of theoretical physics with shamanism and witchcraft and what's defined as schizophrenia, this is a brilliant series.  Most of the main characters are deep and fully-crafted, fully-realized—except maybe Alma's sister Becca's fiancé Reed, who plays it as a bro, and his mom Beth, who plays it like a rich, entitled, bro's mom. They're both played for comedic effect. 

I'm mad about Rosa Salazar, who stars as Alma Winograd-Diaz, who also played Alita in Alita: Battle Angel. She nails both a lightness of being as well as suffering under the weight of the world. I thought she was going to only be a social justice warrior-type at first but her pathos is deep and her intelligence, creativity, and spirit shines through, both from the actress and the character that was written on the page as Alma. Bob Odenkirk plays her dad, Jacob Winograd, and doesn't just play another version of Emmett Lathrop "Doc" Brown, Ph.D., which is good. Very quickly, the entire dad-as-Yoda façade starts breaking away almost immediately and you can quickly tell that dad's selfish, exploitive, and extremely narcissistic.

I want to give Constance Marie, who played Alda's mom, Camila Diaz; Siddharth Dhananjay, who played the live-in boyfriend Sam; and Angelique Cabral, who played Alma's engaged sister Becca Winograd-Diaz, all the kudos in the world as they weren't just foils or archetypes or tropes that Alma Winograd-Diaz could play off of, they were all real, fully-fleshed-out characters, with all their flaws and admirable traits. Even Saint Camila, Alda's mom, wasn't played at all as perfect.

I guess that's all I have to say about this series without doing too much harm to all the fun you're going to have with the timespace and time-travel stuff. The fun you'll have seeing the world through the eyes of a baby shaman as she becomes an ascended master—if that's what's actually happening. Enjoy! You only get to see a series like this for the first time once.  I will watch it—and read about it—again before posting another blog about the series.

u/Magnetar12358 · 3 pointsr/alitabattleangel

That's why we call her RosAlita so often on this subreddit. Rosa + Alita = RosAlita. Rosa is one with and inseparable with Alita. Not just on a physical level but on a "spiritual & psychic" level. I've "joked" numerous times that Rosa is Alita's avatar in our Universe.

RosAlita is getting recognition as she landed a starring role on Undone. At this point, I think people in the industry know that RosAlita is a very, very talented actor who has an extraordinary ability to emote. Undone is animated and that role required strong acting abilities as well as the ability to emote that could "punch through" the animation.

u/wardimus · 2 pointsr/SchizoFamilies

Are you talking about the Amazon Prime animated series? Link here for reference. I haven't seen it but the plot is intriguing. I'm curious what you are concerned about, but would recommend that you watch the series and decide what topics to be ready to discuss, if you think it's appropriate. There are plenty of other shows that I have been apprehensive about (The Joker film, American Horror Story, The End of the F***ing World (Netflix), Maniac (Netflix) etc). All I can say is that I have been surprised at the positive conversation some of these shows have provided opportunity for.