Netflix’s ‘Altered Carbon’ transports you to the 24th century, where death is no longer the ultimate truth


Technological advancements in such a society are at their peak, along with the disparity between the haves and the have-nots

On the other hand, morality becomes the primary victim; the one thing close to hitting rock bottom

If Blade Runner is the first movie that comes to your mind after reading the aforementioned explanation, then voilà! You have hit the bullseye

You have correctly identified one of the cinematic works of art associated with this particular genre of fiction

 The Matrix trilogy and the anime, Akira, are a couple of other big names belonging to this particular subgenre, and can rightly be termed as cult classics

But there is a new kid on the block vying for the same kind of attention

Adapted from Richard K Morgan’s 2002 novel of the same name, Netflix’s Altered Carbon is the latest offering from the cyberpunk stable

The sci-fi noir mystery, with its 10-episode long season, is a heady mixture of Ridley Scott’s 1982 classic, Blade Runner, and Roman Polanski’s noir masterpiece, Chinatown, with HBO’s hugely popular TV show Westworld thrown in for added measure

https://www

youtube

com/watch?v=dhFM8akm9a4&t=72s Before delving deep into reviewing Altered Carbon, I find it essential we discuss some of the vital components of the world from which this tale originates

One of the major technological advancements the Altered Carbon universe can boast of is known as a ‘stack’

This little metal disc contains the digitised version of a person’s consciousness, and can easily be popped inside the base of their skull

As long as the stack is kept safe, a person’s consciousness can be downloaded into a new body

This roughly translates into human immortality, provided you can financially afford a new body – ‘sleeve’, in Altered Carbon lingo – for your stack, once your old figure has perished

The uber rich, who are called ‘Meths’, are also able to ‘needle-cast’ – upload, in simple words – their consciousness to a cloud satellite

This way, even if their stack gets destroyed, they can continue to live forever

In the year 2384, in a future Californian megalopolis, Laurens Bancroft (James Purefoy), one of the richest and most influential Meths, buys a new sleeve for Takeshi Kovacs (Joel Kinnaman)

Takeshi is an extremely fierce and a highly intelligent rebel soldier, whose sleeve (Will Yun Lee) was killed some 250 years ago

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="600"] Photo: Netflix[/caption] [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="600"] Photo: Netflix[/caption] Takeshi has been brought back by Laurens to investigate his own murder, in which both his stack and his sleeve were killed

Now, since he is a Meth, he already had a backup needle-cast stack, plus a lot of sleeve clones to jump back into

However, since Laurens has no recollection of his murder, he wants Takeshi to investigate it, with his wife and kids leading the suspects’ list

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="600"] Photo: IMDb[/caption] [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="600"] Photo: Netflix[/caption] The sleeve that Takeshi’s stack is now housed in previously belonged to a man called Detective Ryker

His partner and girlfriend, Lieutenant Kristin Ortega (Martha Higareda), is now following Takeshi’s every move, and together the duo is led down some really dark figurative and literal alleys

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="600"] Photo: IMDb[/caption] Despite the spectacular futuristic look and feel that Altered Carbon possesses, it is the old-fashioned mystery at the heart of the narrative which makes the show stand out

The victim was all alone – locked inside his study – when he was killed

An intriguing whodunit in even the most ordinary of settings, but add in a 24th century California to the mix, and you have got a surreal experience arguably beating anything on TV at the moment

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="600"] Photo: Netflix[/caption] And if this lethal combination of sci-fi and mystery noir is still not enough for you, there is always the thought-provoking philosophy of identity and faith vis-a-vis immortality

Moreover, let’s not forget the requisite sexual and violent content, without which the cyberpunk genre cannot be considered complete

The production design, with all the world-building requirements, is simply phenomenal

As for the writing, the screenplay is intelligent, and considering how a whole new world, along with a murder mystery plot, is supposed to be presented to us in just 10 short episodes, I found the usage of exposition extremely efficient

[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="600"] Photo: Netflix[/caption] In recent times, the amount of content Netflix has managed to throw at us can be a little overwhelming

A lot of it, of course, doesn’t really deserve our precious time

But Altered Carbon is amongst the select few shows that not just merits our attention, but perhaps deserves its own cult following as well



Date:21-Mar-2018 Reference:View Original Link