Altered Carbon is an American science fiction television series created by Laeta Kalogridis and based on the 2002 novel of the same title by English author Richard K. Morgan. The first season consists of ten episodes and premiered on Netflix on February 2, 2018.
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Synopsis
The series takes place over 350 years in the future, in the year 2384. In the future, a person's memories have been decanted into "cortical stacks," storage devices of alien design which have been reverse engineered, duplicated en masse, and surgically inserted into the vertebrae at the back of the neck. Physical bodies are called "sleeves," disposable vessels that can accept any "stack." Takeshi Kovacs (Joel Kinnaman), a political operative with mercenary skills obtained during his time as the only surviving soldier of a defeated uprising, wakes up 250 years after his previous "sleeve" is terminated. He is given the choice to either spend the rest of time in prison for his crimes, or to help solve the murder of one of the wealthiest men in the settled worlds Laurens Bancroft (James Purefoy).
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Cast
Main
- Joel Kinnaman as Takeshi Kovacs
- James Purefoy as Laurens Bancroft
- Martha Higareda as Kristin Ortega
- Chris Conner as Edgar Poe
- Dichen Lachman as Reileen Kawahara
- Ato Essandoh as Vernon Elliot
- Kristin Lehman as Miriam Bancroft
- Trieu Tran as Mister Leung
- Renée Elise Goldsberry as Quellcrist Falconer
Recurring
- Will Yun Lee as Stronghold Kovacs
- Hayley Law as Lizzie Elliot
- Marlene Forte as Alazne Ortega
- Byron Mann as O.G. Kovacs
- Tamara Taylor as Oumou Prescott
- Adam Busch as Mickey
- Olga Fonda as Sarah
- Waleed Zuaiter as Samir Abboud
- Hiro Kanagawa as Captain Tanaka
- Matt Frewer as Carnage
- Tahmoh Penikett as Dimitri Kadmin
- Michael Eklund as Dimi 2
- Matt Biedel as Gangbanger / Abuela / Dimi 2
- Antonio Marziale as Isaac Bancroft
- Teach Grant as Jimmy DeSoto
- Zahf Paroo as Curtis
- Cliff Chamberlain and Courtney Richter as Ava Elliot
- Lisa Chandler as Mary Lou Henchy
- Chris McNally as Sergei Brevlov
- Alika Autran as Okulov
- Katie Stuart as Vidaura
- Arnold Pinnock as Hemingway
- Andre Tricoteux as The Mongol
- Stephanie Cleough as Alice ("Anemone")
- Daniel Berhardt as Jaeger
Production
The series was ordered by Netflix in January 2016, fifteen years after showrunner Laeta Kalogridis had originally optioned the novel with the intent of making a feature film. According to Kalogridis, the complex nature of the novel and its R-rated material meant that it was a tough sell for studios before Netflix ordered the series. Steve Blackman served as co-showrunner. Miguel Sapochnik directed the pilot episode. The series was produced in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Episodes
Release
The series premiered on Netflix on February 2, 2018. The official trailer was released on January 11, 2018.
Critical response
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the series holds an approval rating of 63% based on 67 reviews, and an average rating of 6.64/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Altered Carbon leans hard into its cyberpunk roots, serving up an ambitiously pulpy viewing experience that often overwhelms, but never bores." On Metacritic, the season has a weighted average score of 65 out of 100, based on 24 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews."
David Griffin of IGN said the show "gets almost everything right" as a "cyberpunk fantasyland". Griffin praised the visuals and the complexity of the plot, as well as the acting, such as Chris Conner's performance as the AI hotel manager Poe. He also wrote of the show's problems, such as the intricacies of the murder often got "in the way of the show's momentum" and the murder plot "loses steam" early on. He ultimately gave it a score of 8.8 out of 10, summarizing it as "A visual titan with a less than stellar story". Michael Rougeau of GameSpot made a point of calling it "hardcore" science fiction, as a "noir sci-fi/gumshoe thriller bursting with the trappings of both genres, from murdered prostitutes and holographic billboard ads to AIs who flit between the real world and some convoluted cyberspace". The review praised how deeply the show examined and explored the cortical stack, the central concept. Catherine Pearson of Digital Spy said the visuals were "magnificent" and the themes "fascinating", but that it had flaws - for example, the characters "mumbling their way through long expository dialogue".
The Vancouver Sun summarized that the reaction of professional critics was "mixed", and that the critics' conclusion was that the "murder mystery takes a back seat to the show's futuristic visuals". Entertainment Weekly also summarized reviews, saying the consensus was that the visuals were "spectacular", but the violence against women raised questions. Darren Franich of Entertainment Weekly gave it a "B-" grade and wrote that the "show tackles race, gender, and class with all the subtlety of a blowtorch". Forbes criticized other critics for speaking negatively of the show and called it "terrific" and one of the best science fiction shows on television. Andrew Liptak of The Verge called it engrossing, but criticized the lack of focus on the relationships between the characters.
Robert Lloyd of the Los Angeles Times gave it a mixed review, but particularly praised Kinnaman, even if the fight scenes were described as tedious in a way. Jen Chaney of Vulture said the show was "ambitious, convoluted, violent, derivative, and somehow simultaneously grimy and glossy", but ultimately gave it a negative review, saying "the visual candy and philosophical subtext of Altered Carbon may wash over me, but none of it gets absorbed in any lasting way". Radio Times wrote that the "drama tries to find its groove by shifting erratically from noir detective drama to war epic to soap opera, ultimately failing to meet its own lofty ambitions: it's a thunderous haymaker that only manages to graze its target". The review noted that the show takes on too much, and that much of the story could have been left for a second season.
Many of the critics focused on the show's violence. Gavia Baker-Whitelaw of The Daily Dot wrote that the show seemed to use "the dystopian setting as an excuse for sexualized violence", and that the focus on dead, naked women's bodies "was a massive distraction from the show's stronger points, like the well-choreographed fight scenes and Takeshi Kovacs' backstory". Digital Spy defended the level of violence, arguing it accurately reflected the books, and was "the point" of the franchise, as "without showing brutal, unremitting violence, Altered Carbon would fail to fully explore the dystopian reality it aims to present". Kimberly Roots of TVLine also criticized the scenes of violence and nudity, and also said the story suffered from uneven pacing. However, she noted that the investigation part "clicks along smartly," and that the fight sequences were "sophisticated". She gave it a "B-" grade.
Source of the article : Wikipedia
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