WEDNESDAY
Season 2 Review
Netflix
*Warning! Moderate Spoilers!*
SEASON 2 of the hit Netflix series Wednesday has dropped to
get us in the Halloween spirit. While eager to see where the story goes next,
the verdict is it all feels a bit—much?
So many villains. So many plots. The biggest and strongest
arc is the evolving Addams family dynamics, in which Wednesday (Jenna Ortega)
has lost her premonition gift, and she is at odds with mother Morticia
(Catherine Zeta Jones) about how to get it back. Wednesday’s stubbornness and
refusal to listen gets a bit frustrating, but hey, teenagers. Steve Buscemi’s
smarmy and superbly odious Headmaster Dort plays a driving force in keeping
Wednesday’s parents at Nevermore Academy for the deadly duel between daughter
and mother to play out.
And honestly, that would have been enough right there. Focus
on the classes and what the Nightshades are actually learning to advance their
skills, bring in the highly talented Gwendoline Christie as Wednesday’s ghostly
new spirit guide much sooner, and it would have allowed much more character
development and atmospheric tension to mount. Instead we get Tyler (Hunter
Doohan), the monstrous Hyde from last season galivanting about, murderous crows
pecking people’s eyes out and left and right, Wednesday’s dense younger brother
raising a zombie, the Sirens worrying about an offscreen cult leader, a brief
stunt with a cartoonish depiction of the militarized boy scouts, and Enid's love life, to name a few.
By the way, does Hunter Doohan not look like uncannily
Millie Bobby Brown?? The entire time, I’m thinking Eleven’s having a really bad
day.
![]() |
credit: positivenegativity8 - Reddit |
All the scattered plot lines do come together in the end,
but the emotional payoff is lacking. Thing starts bonding with other “parts” of
a “whole,” and trying to reconcile with its identity moving forward, but then
one of the key leaders driving this group gets casually killed off in the next
episode. By the time Enid calls the Nightshades together to face the Big Bad,
it’s utterly underwhelming because they’ve spent the entire season apart, and
their teamwork hardly amounts to much. I did like the zombie/Frankenstein
monster villain but it felt like that could have been an entire season unto
itself.
As much, I hope for Season 3 that things slow down. We’ve
got a great set up with hopefully just ONE family insider nemesis who
potentially uses ravens to do her bidding? Is the spying bird with the bloody
eyes a crow or a raven? (My theory is Judi Spannegel is a red herring.) Because
as Hitchcock demonstrated, you can do enough with killer birds for a whole
season. Less is more.
***Oh, and the part where the Addams family blows up a stop
sign and then laughs it off, even as this action promptly leads to a car
accident? Yeah, couldn’t respect these characters after that.
*The above is depicted as fiction, not fact
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.