After finishing 12 Monkeys, I found myself trapped in that mix of paradoxes and emotions the series wove with surgical precision . It wasn’t just science fiction: it was a philosophical journey where every character fit together like gears in an impossible clock.
And of course, one might think that after such an experience the logical step would be to look for something lighter… but no. Still under the influence of 12 Monkeys, I decided to dive into another space/time adventure, this time with a different focus but just as ambitious:Dark
, by Baran bo Odar and Jantje Friese.
Here there’s no “classic time machine.” Access to time travel comes through a cave and phenomena tied to the nuclear plant, closer to the mythical than the technological . What begins as the disappearance of a boy in Winden soon turns into a labyrinth of generations, paradoxes, and causalities that challenge both logic and the viewer’s patience.
More than science fiction, Dark is a temporal tragedy: a mirror of how time itself can be prison, destiny, and labyrinth all at once.
So yes, I wanted something light… but I ended up choosing an existential puzzle that demands more neurons than vacations . Once I finish the first season, I’ll be back to share whether I managed to escape the cycle or got stuck in Winden with the rest.![]()
Dark is probably the best show on Netflix, period. Just pay attention, don't be going for a snack or looking at your phone, something could be said and you'll be lost for many episodes trying to figure out what's going on.

