Your data. Your choice.

If you select «Essential cookies only», we’ll use cookies and similar technologies to collect information about your device and how you use our website. We need this information to allow you to log in securely and use basic functions such as the shopping cart.

By accepting all cookies, you’re allowing us to use this data to show you personalised offers, improve our website, and display targeted adverts on our website and on other websites or apps. Some data may also be shared with third parties and advertising partners as part of this process.

Netflix
Review

3 Body Problem: the future’s here – and it’s grim

Luca Fontana
20-3-2024
Translation: Jessica Johnson-Ferguson

Netflix’s 3 Body Problem is a different kind of sci-fi. Expect a mix of science, philosophy and alien threat that will captivate viewers with its sinister vibe.

One thing in advance: there are no spoilers in this review. I won’t be mentioning anything that hasn’t already been revealed in the trailers.

It can probably be described as one of the most bold science fiction projects of recent years. If not the boldest. Netflix has heralded its latest science fiction epic as next level. Not in spite of, but because of the novel it’s based on. Namely, the trilogy Remembrance of Earth’s Past.

I must admit, I haven’t read the books. At least not yet. But I’m about to change that. Because after finishing the first season, I can’t possibly wait another two years to find out how the story continues. Especially considering the next season hasn’t even been confirmed yet. 3 Body Problem’s simply way too good to wait.

The plot of 3 Body Problem

It’s broken. Science, that is. At least that’s what researchers around the world are saying. So broken, in fact, that it’s driving some people to suicide. Others are seeing a mysterious countdown in front of their eyes. Always – even when they shut their eyes. Or gouge them out. Nobody wants to experience what happens when the countdown ends.

The world’s gone mad.

There’s natural phenomena that shouldn’t be occurring. Especially in the night sky. What is that? Or rather, who is that? It’s the enemy. But no ordinary enemy. But an enemy that roams the dark forest like a hungry predator. Drooling. Stalking. Waiting. Until its prey is silly enough to reveal its location. But this predator isn’t on earth, but in space. We’re talking about an extraterrestrial enemy. And we’re the prey that was negligent about its whereabouts.

Dropping one by one: science, philosophy and heart

Honestly, I didn’t see it coming. Not in this way at least. Although the trailers released so far have promised a lot of visual spectacle, 3 Body Problem is actually a genuine psychological thriller with surprisingly few frills. A thriller that starts off a little sluggish but raises many questions that are only gradually answered. Answers like dominoes falling one by one, revealing an overall picture that resembles an unstoppable intergalactic domino.

Goosebumps, anyone?

It’s precisely these seemingly unstoppable dominoes that has viewers on the edge of their seats. Especially when you see the main characters giving it their all to stop the events. In the first season, these are mainly Auggie, Jin, Jack, Saul and Will – brilliant physicists from Oxford and close friends. But when the world and laws of nature start to go off the rails, their mentor Vera Ye commits suicide. As do dozens of other scientists.

But as someone who hasn’t read the book, I’d say it’s a risk that pays off. Especially towards the end of the season, when the personal drama surrounding the fate of some of the characters pushes the science fiction aspect of the series into the background for one or two episodes. Which is probably also the main reason why the story was moved to the West – so that the predominantly Western Netflix audience can better relate to the characters.

Don’t expect complexity à la Dark, or you’ll be disappointed

Unlike the book, however, the series itself is said to have noticeably reduced the complexity of the science and the extent of philosophical questions. In fact, I rarely catch myself thinking at length about the big questions facing humanity and whether we’re even worthy of being saved.

At the same time, this didn’t bother me. In a way I’m grateful that 3 Body Problem, the series, tells its story in a fairly straightforward thriller-style way and has avoided making it even bigger than it already is. After all, there’s enough going on with a vastly superior civilisation hunting down its inferior prey, while the latter’s trying to figure out how to escape the hunters and also fight back.

What’s more, the drama towards the end of the season is so touching, I can’t possibly wait for the still unconfirmed next season. Not to mention that the outcome of the story is still uncertain. What can I say, this series is a true «page-turner». The same evening I finished watching 3 Body Problem, I went out to buy the first two books of the trilogy.

Conclusion: more thriller than sci-fi

I’m not even sure what I was expecting after seeing the first trailers of 3 Body Problem. Probably a far more complex story reminiscent of the German Netflix hit series Dark – just with aliens and more elaborately produced.

What remains is what I consider a classic thriller with a melodramatic touch and the odd spectacular and shocking image. The only difference being that, unlike most other thrillers, it’s not the fate of individuals that’s at stake, but that of humanity as a whole. This highly exciting approach leaves you wanting more.

3 Body Problem available on Netflix from 21 March. The series consists of eight episodes of around 60 minutes each. Age rating: 16.

Header image: Netflix

110 people like this article


User Avatar
User Avatar

I'm an outdoorsy guy and enjoy sports that push me to the limit – now that’s what I call comfort zone! But I'm also about curling up in an armchair with books about ugly intrigue and sinister kingkillers. Being an avid cinema-goer, I’ve been known to rave about film scores for hours on end. I’ve always wanted to say: «I am Groot.» 


Review

Which films, shows, books, games or board games are genuinely great? Recommendations from our personal experience.

Show all

These articles might also interest you

  • Review

    Hats off to Netflix for Avatar: The Last Airbender

    by Luca Fontana

  • Review

    Daredevil: Born Again – a return of blood and shadow

    by Luca Fontana

  • Review

    Andor: a rebellion at the heart of the brand

    by Luca Fontana