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Telly addicts

Recommend a dystopian series please!

76 replies

Blankspace4 · 21/07/2021 19:40

I’ve watched, and really enjoyed, Black Mirror, Years & Years, and the Handmaids Tale.

Really like stuff that isn’t obviously ‘futuristic’ but is an alternate reality and a little bit dark. Total escapism.

Can anyone recommend other series I might enjoy?

OP posts:
amylou8 · 21/07/2021 21:02

...and See on Apple TV

Blankspace4 · 21/07/2021 21:11

Thanks so much!!!!

OP posts:
TheNestedIf · 21/07/2021 22:34

If you have Prime, "The Boys".

slightlysnippy · 21/07/2021 23:06

Brave New World, amazing series. I even liked it better than the book.

InTheNameOfAllThatIsHonest · 21/07/2021 23:10

Colony! It's on Netflix

SheldontheWonderSchlong · 24/07/2021 22:25

Brave New World and Raised By Wolves - both on Now Tv and very enjoyable.
I love a dystopian tv show!

HasaDigaEebowai · 24/07/2021 22:28

The man in the high castle
Dark (watch it in German with subtitles it is truly amazing)
The OA

ArabellaPilkington · 24/07/2021 22:32

Devs
The Rain
Sens8

My teen DD really enjoyed the 100.

Blankspace4 · 24/07/2021 22:36

Yes!! We need another lockdown so I can get though these (JOKE!!!!) but got some leave coming up and hol has been cancelled so DH and I will be immersing ourselves in some of these.

OP posts:
CalmConfident · 24/07/2021 22:37

I loved les revenAnts, the soundtrack is fabulous. bookmarking the others here, liked devs too

FeelingLikeAnAlien · 24/07/2021 23:11

Brave new world is on sky and is quite good.

Mardycustard123 · 25/07/2021 01:32

@InTheNameOfAllThatIsHonest LOVED Colony but it got cancelled just as it was getting into its stride. So many unanswered questions.

GrimDamnFanjo · 25/07/2021 01:46

If you can find it, the original Survivors from the 70s.
A flu like virus is released accidentally from a lab in China...

Pieceofpurplesky · 25/07/2021 01:48

War of the Worlds (the one with Daisy Edgar Jones).

MercyBooth · 25/07/2021 02:25

1990 Originally billed as 1984 + 6 its only ever been broadcast ONCE on BBC2 in the late 1970s. I watched it on You Tube two years ago,

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1990_(TV_series)

eofftvreview.wordpress.com/2018/09/26/1990-1977-1978/

1990 (1977-1978)
Posted on 26 September 2018 by Kevin Lyons

"Dystopian futures were all the vogue on British television in the 1970s. Everything from The Guardians (1971) to Terry Nation’s post-apocalyptic Survivors (1975-1977), from episodes of children’s shows like The Tomorrow People (1973-1979) to hit space opera Blake’s 7 (1978-1981) and more Plays for Today (1970-1984) and Tomorrow (1982) than you can shake a stick at took a jaundiced view of our possible futures. One of the BBC’s most ambitious such undertakings was Wilfred Greatorex’s 1990 which ran for two series between 18 September 1977 and 10 April 1978.

Edward Woodward stars as journalist Jim Kyle on the last independent newspaper left in the country, The Star. The Britain he reports on is under the tyrannical heel of the Home Office’s Public Control Department (PCD), an oppressive bureaucracy that has risen to power on the back o f a huge financial disaster. Civil liberties are a thing of the past, draconian laws punish everything from the most petty to the most serious of crimes with the same severity and dissidents are confined to “Adult Rehabilitation Centres.”

Kyle decides to make a stand and fight back against the PCD, headed by Controller Herbert Skardon (Robert Lang) while becoming romantically involved with PCD Deputy Controller Delly Lomas (Barbara Kellerman) – the second series saw the return of Lynn Blake (Lisa Harrow), Kyle’s former lover, and along the way he’s aided by fellow dissidents Dave Brett (Tony Doyle) and mysterious government informer “Faceless” (Paul Hardwick).

Greatorex had created the hugely popular business skulduggery dramas The Plane Makers (1963-1965) and its sequel The Power Game (1965-1969) for ITV and the BBC lured him over to their camp to create 1990 to reflect some of the great public and political concerns of the day. Describing the series as “1984 Plus Six“, Greatorex artfully extrapolated a nightmarish near-future while rarely getting on his soap box, delivering his potent messages about the misuse of power and the horror of an out of control bureaucracy that seems to answer to no-one in the guise of a mature, thoughtful and always engrossing drama. He drip-feeds the audience what they need to know about how Britain reached this sorry state, the back story emerging through dialogue rather than delivered in indigestible, stodgy lumps as was all too often the way. Greatorex trusted his audience to keep up and pay attention.

The relationship between the two protagonists, the idealistic and determined Kyle and the Big Brother-ish Skardon, forms the core of the ongoing story and the performances from both Woodward and Lang were key to keeping the audience engaged. They rose to the occasion magnificently and, gifted some cracking dialogue from Greatorex and fellow writers Edmund Ward, Arden Winch and Jim Hawkins (various episodes were directed by former Hammer directors Alan Gibson and Peter Sasdy) , turn in superb performances. These, and the large and ever-changing supporting cast, are characters with real depth and the increasing frustrations and dangers that present themselves to Kyle as he struggles to break the PCD’s grip of the country feel very real and absorbing. It’s not a fun series – it’s bleak and often despairing but always with a glimmer o hope, mainly thanks to the strident, unflappable Kyle who never for a second doubts that what he’s trying to do is both right and achievable.

For many years, 1990 existed only in the memories of those who were glued to Kyle’s struggle each week back at the end of the 1970s with only a pair of paperback novelisations to help prompt recall of the details. Thankfully, both series were released on DVD by Simply Media in 2017, bringing the series back into the limelight. It’s not only stood the test of time but passed it with honours – at times it still seems horribly relevant and there are moments here that seem to be being played out on our television news programmes on an almost daily basis. For dystopian fiction there can be few higher – or more depressing – accolades"

Stroller15 · 25/07/2021 02:35

I started Upload on Prime tonight and am enjoying it, just saw it is 2.30am now(!!) - it's not heavy though.

Magicstars · 25/07/2021 03:20

Noughts & crosses on bbc.

ZingDramaQueenOfSheeba · 25/07/2021 07:53

Misfits is great as well

Matildatoldsuchdreadfullies · 25/07/2021 08:16

12 Monkeys. The TV series rather than the film. You will have to pay for it, but it’s worth it, honestly.

ZingDramaQueenOfSheeba · 25/07/2021 08:59

ooh, how could I forget Umbrella Academy!

it's fantastic and a new series has been confirmed.

Bryonyshcmyony · 25/07/2021 09:01

Black Summer

Bryonyshcmyony · 25/07/2021 09:03

I loved Devs

Amazing soundtrack. If you enjoyed it then Annihilation on Netflix is the same director and very good

Snorkello · 25/07/2021 09:07

Utopia - the uk version is great!

Inks42 · 25/07/2021 09:08

Znation

GalaxyGirl24 · 25/07/2021 09:38

3% is amazing!

I loved Sense8 - not dystopian but a story about connection across area/country/sexuality/gender/ethnicity etc it's bloody amazing. One of my all time favourites.