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Nevers Finale Went Full Sci-Fi: Farscape's Claudia Black, Amalia

HBO’s The Nevers—about Victorians with superpowers—always hinted that it was about much more than that. With the first part of season one now complete, we finally have insight into some of the show’s mysteries, and a revived interest in what will happen next.

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Review: 'The Nevers' Part 1 Finale Is a Messy Disappointment | Entertainment


As for who, and what, is Amalia True? It’s just as convoluted. She’s not the person who we saw jump into the river in episode 1, but rather someone from that apocalyptic future who got put in the suicidal Mrs. True’s body by the alien, which is called a Galanthi, apparently. What the series fails to understand, is that some simplicity would have gone a long way here. If the Touched acquired their powers from a vague cosmic event (and not an alien from the future) and Amalia was a person who tried to take her own life but now found a new purpose in guiding others who were changed as she was, that would’ve been more than enough to fuel the story. What’s more, the real Mrs. True’s tragic history is a very human one that we can understand, while this soldier from the future is much harder to connect with. The penultimate episode, “Hanged,” ended with the streets of London flooded by an anti-Touched riot, started by Maladie (Amy Manson), and helped along by Lord Massen, leaving us fearful of what might become of the orphanage. This seems like more than enough meaty story to dig into without the futuristic subplot, which is more a distraction at this point than anything else.

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Review: 'The Nevers' Part 1 Finale Is a Messy Disappointment | Arts & Entertainment


In this series, a cosmic event in 1896 has left a small group of women with unusual abilities.
As for who, and what, is Amalia True? It’s just as convoluted. She’s not the person who we saw jump into the river in episode 1, but rather someone from that apocalyptic future who got put in the suicidal Mrs. True’s body by the alien, which is called a Galanthi, apparently. What the series fails to understand, is that some simplicity would have gone a long way here. If the Touched acquired their powers from a vague cosmic event (and not an alien from the future) and Amalia was a person who tried to take her own life but now found a new purpose in guiding others who were changed as she was, that would’ve been more than enough to fuel the story. What’s more, the real Mrs. True’s tragic history is a very human one that we can understand, while this soldier from the future is much harder to connect with. The penultimate episode, “Hanged,” ended with the streets of London flooded by an anti-Touched riot, started by Maladie (Amy Manson), and helped along by Lord Massen, leaving us fearful of what might become of the orphanage. This seems like more than enough meaty story to dig into without the futuristic subplot, which is more a distraction at this point than anything else.

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The Nevers recap: Season 1, Episode 4, "Undertaking"


When
The Nevers first introduced Lord Massen, he seemed like your standard-issue, old-white-guy fearmonger. By using societal fear of the Touched to consolidate power around himself, and labeling the Touched and their turns as threats to national security, Lord Massen has been an enemy of Mrs. True, Penance, and the other inhabitants of St. Romaulda’s Orphanage from the start. He’s clearly working with other lords to plan some kind of consolidated action against the Touched; recall the paperwork they were reading through in last week’s episode “Ignition.” He has a decades-long friendship with Lavinia Bidlow, which perhaps suggests that he knows about her experiments with Dr. Hague and those human/cyborg things. I’m not saying he’s a good guy! But… does he have a point to be a little afraid of what the Touched can do? Especially now that whatever entity responsible for their powers is trying to make contact?

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