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Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Wednesday - Netflix TV Series Review

 WEDNESDAY

Season 1 Streaming on Netflix

~TV Series Review~


*Warning! Moderate Spoilers!*

 

AS AN ALL-AROUND NEWBIE to the Addams family (originally created by Charles Addams), I came into Netflix’s mega-hit with vague recollections of pale people, dark hair, and yes, I did remember the severed hand—who is this series’ MVP. Even being a casual Tim Burton viewer, I was still familiar with the iconic characters of Morticia, Wednesday (played by Jenna Ortega), and Gomez, but boy, is this take ever like Veronica Mars goes to magic school—and I am here for it.

After teenager Wednesday (named after a line from her mother’s favorite poem “Wednesday’s child is full of woe”) sets piranhas on her younger brother’s bullies, she is whisked away to her parents’ old boarding school called Nevermore, where she discovers an entire class of outcasts and odd-ducks—you know, sirens, gorgons, werewolves. Headmistress Larissa Weems (Gwendoline Christie) protects the school from increasing scrutiny by the hostile neighboring town of Jericho, which was founded by a diabolical pilgrim. Wednesday’s magical abilities range from strange visions to deadpan humor to sleuthing, which she immediately puts to use when someone starts attacking students. Like I said, Veronica Mars with magic.

Ortega is hysterical. It does suspend belief that someone could be quite this witty and have the perfect comeback to every authority, but it’s entertaining, and I love that she fully embraces herself and dances like no one is watching (the dance scene had me in stitches). I loved Wednesday's thorny relationship with her mother and the softer side with her father and brother, but the best partnership of course goes out to Thing (the aforementioned severed hand that likes manicures), her closest confidante in cracking the murder mystery of Nevermore. Thing’s origin did make me curious to look up, since in Wednesday’s family, having an animated hand keep tabs on your daughter at boarding school is, ya know, tots normal.

You may guess that Wednesday has a problem with trust, considering the Hand-best-friend-thing, but her intrepid classmates don’t give up on her—including a beekeeper and Enid Sinclair (Emma Myers), her bubblegum-pink late blooming werewolf roommate. I could have sworn Enid would turn out to be a cat instead (give the werewolf trope a break), but I still liked how she finally came into her own. Thankfully no vampires—but will be very interested to see more of the sirens and gorgons in future episodes. I think they jumped the shark a bit on humanizing Bianca Barclay (Joy Sunday), the siren queen bee of the school—her relationship with her mother and the influence that had on her upbringing was too rushed, introduced at a moment where there was too much going on to get the focus it deserved. I also found Wednesday and Xavier’s relationship to be a bit unbelievable, not really seeing what the attraction was when she continued to treat him like gum on the bottom of her shoe.

Despite some moments when there is so much going on, the characterization suffers for it, this is overall another bingeworthy Netflix series that will entrap you for the long haul. We’ve got former Wednesday alum Christine Ricci back in a new role, and gosh does Gwendoline Christie (Brienne of Tarth in Game of Thrones, Lucifer in The Sandman) continue to demonstrate her acting versatility in the sweet-but-lethal headmistress character. Plus you’ve got Catherine Zeta Jones as Morticia, Wednesday’s darkly ethereal mother, and Luis Guzmán as her doting father. Here’s to eagerly awaiting Season 2!

 

*The above is depicted as fiction, not fact