Hot topics close

3 Body Problem TV review — mind-bending sci-fi with splashy ...

3 Body Problem TV review  mindbending scifi with splashy
The Netflix series begins with gripping suspense in 1960s China but becomes unwieldy

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.

3 Body Problem is not, strictly speaking, David Benioff and DB Weiss’s first series since wrapping up Game of Thrones. The first project of their lucrative deal with Netflix was, improbably, The Chair, a sharp, underrated campus satire which they executive produced. It was cancelled after one season, its modest budget perhaps now funding a single second of CGI in this exceedingly costly sci-fi series, created by Benioff and Weiss along with Alexander Woo.

The show, which revolves around telegenic scientists, apocalyptic events and strange galactic phenomena, is based on Liu Cixin’s eponymous bestseller: an opus combining physics, philosophy and politics. But if adapting such rich material seems like a no-brainer, the show itself is middling fare that bends minds but rarely engages them in its meditations on human nature, technology, the state of this planet and those far beyond.

The eight-part first season begins in 1960s Maoist China, where a brilliant, regime-renouncing astrophysicist called Ye Wenjie (Zine Tseng) is forced to work at a secret military observatory. There she makes an extraordinary discovery and a world-shaping decision — the repercussions of which we follow in the show’s second, present-day storyline.

Benedict Wong in ‘3 Body Problem’ © Ed Miller/Netflix

In this alternate 2024, science is “broken”; alarming data anomalies and distressing visions have driven dozens of leading scientists to apparent suicide. So when tech innovator Auggie (Eiza González) begins to see an ominous countdown in front of her eyes, she and four other former Oxford classmates start searching for answers. Instead, they encounter more inexplicable mysteries: disappearing stars, an invisible woman, a VR headset containing an unnervingly immersive problem-solving game. Following them all the while is a shadowy, saturnine detective, Clarence (Benedict Wong), who brings a touch of procedural earthiness to this sky-gazing sci-fi.

Recommended

Illustration from Liu Cixin’s graphic novel ‘The Wandering Earth’

While the series initially manages to offset early confusion with gripping suspense, slick pacing and well-timed reveals, it becomes unwieldy as it progresses. Characters saddled with explaining abstruse mechanical theories, meanwhile, never really seem to have more than one dimension themselves.

Still, there’s sufficient intrigue and splashy production to keep enough of us watching and dissuade Netflix from consigning 3 Body Problem to the same fate as The Chair. But I know which one I’d rather was renewed.

★★★☆☆

On Netflix from March 21

Similar news
News Archive
  • Lucas Digne
    Lucas Digne
    Steven Gerrard ready to shatter Villa transfer record for Yves Bissouma as Lucas Digne deal nears
    13 Jan 2022
    6
  • BetterCloud
    BetterCloud
    BetterCloud adds Integration Center to help developers build and share integrations
    26 Sep 2019
    3
  • EZE
    EZE
    German electric charge point operator EZE secures Arcus backing
    20 Jun 2024
    1
  • Pilbara
    Pilbara
    Pilbara Ports throughput increases 9%
    18 Dec 2024
    2
  • Dan Stevens
    Dan Stevens
    Dan Stevens explains why he tore into Boris Johnson: 'It's rare to see someone speaking their mind on TV'
    14 Apr 2022
    4
This week's most popular news