When Netflix quietly added the cult sci-fi drama Falling Skies to its library just recently, fans wasted no time revisiting one of the most gripping alien invasion sagas of the 2010s.
For newcomers, it is quickly becoming the kind of word-of-mouth obsession that turns casual viewers into late-night binge-watchers.
Created by screenwriter Robert Rodat and executive-produced by Steven Spielberg, the series premiered in 2011 and ran for five seasons.
Set in the shattered aftermath of an extraterrestrial assault that has decimated Earth, it follows Tom Mason, played by Noah Wyle (The Pit), a former history professor forced into reluctant heroism.
Mason becomes second-in-command of the 2nd Massachusetts Militia Regiment, a ragtag resistance group made up of civilians and former soldiers struggling to survive outside a ruined Boston.
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On paper, the premise sounds familiar: humanity versus alien invaders in a broken world. But viewers insist Falling Skies manages to be unique despite the premise.
One fan writes on IMDB, ‘I am totally hooked on this show.’
Another admits, ‘Normally not one to watch many TV-series but this one caught my eyes.’
What begins as a straightforward survival drama gradually expands into a gripping drama.
Will you be watching Falling Skies on Netflix?
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Definitely!
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No aliens for me…
The aliens themselves, from the multi-legged ‘Skitters’ to towering mechanised threats, provide spectacle, and the series earned two Primetime Emmy nominations for Outstanding Special Visual Effects.
Yet it is the human stakes that keep audiences invested. As one detailed IMDb review puts it, the characters ‘have emotions and soul, personality. They seem real.’
That equilibrium may explain why viewers describe it as ‘so gripping’ and ‘a full ride’.
Even those who acknowledge its cable-TV budget limitations argue it punches above its weight.:‘Granted it’s not a super high budget & all but doesn’t deserve the low rating it has now,’ one fan writes.
‘It’s entertaining, tense & not repetitive.’
Another praises the ‘good makeup & cgi, wasn’t over or under done it’, suggesting the visual effects serve the story rather than overwhelm it.
At the centre is Wyle’s performance. Best known to many as the earnest doctor from ER or his new award-winning series The Pit, here he trades hospital corridors for guerrilla warfare.
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