INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
credits roll.Amazing Stories, in its own bland way, tries to venture down this road and immediately gets off at the first exit without
kicks off with probably its weakest episode, called The Cellar, that opens in 2019 with two brothers played by Dylan O'Brien and Micah Stock
barometer (yes, you read that right) in the basement of the house and is shuttled back to 1919 once the town is hit by a once-in-a-lifetime*
low-pressure weather system
confronting these problems in any real way
sort of catharsis for the time you invested
And it does that for every episode.Worse, character development is done in such a contrived, mechanical and painstakingly long way, that you
almost begin to dislike the characters
One particularly egregious example of this is when the show's second episode feels compelled to introduce you to family members of one of
Not in terms of its premise, nor in terms of its ability to present something compelling
audiences to think too hard about its characters, their motivations or their situations.It's a huge disappointment as far as anthology
In another, it's an alien's literal sacrifice to save a character's life
lackluster anthology series.Long story short, as much as I admire Apple's decision to keep things warm and fuzzy, Amazing Stories
ultimately plays it too safe and Apple TV Plus is all the worse for that decision.qbsU5HwwL9qcbwGDUqSGe8.jpg?#