Paradise is one of the most beautiful TV series of 2025. Dan Fogelman managed to combine the emotional and emotionally disruptive story of This is Us with the intricate mystery and bearer of theories at Lost. Not only but in the second season that debuted on Disney+ from February 23 with the first three bets, he managed in the arduous enterprise to broaden both aspects.
A dedalo of characters and stories awaits the viewer who has to take his time, not be in a hurry perhaps waiting on March 30 and the last episode to then do the binge watching. There would be nothing more wrong because Paradise is a TV series from the early 2000s brought into streaming mode, a series that brings forth theories and discussions, in which you always have to pay attention to every word and scene because sooner or later it could come in handy. Paradise is a TV series that must be sedimented and that in 2000 with 15 episodes per season it would have had its ideal format.
(Disney/Ser Baffo)
Because the feeling, even in this second season, is that Paradise lasts too little. Few points for breath, body and development to his characters. Especially the new ones that come out on this journey outside the bunker but also from the flashbacks. Dan Fogelman, who in This is Us has played wisely for years with the different time plans, learned the lesson of Lost by filling Paradise with flashbacks that are fundamental for the continuation of the narrative but continuing to introduce stories and characters that pass quickly. Toppo.
In the second season of Paradise there is no one and only protagonist. Because the bunker is the protagonist of the story, the place from which everything starts, where someone wants to get there and others want to escape. Because everything is relative to the point of view from which you look at things. Dan Fogelman fortunately refutes to some easy choices of survival dramas by instilling humanity and emotions the disappearing world but in which everything could start again. Music is another protagonist of the story. The soundtrack guides the emotion of those who watch by bringing the viewer to reach the tears at the precise moment in which history needs it.
(Disney/Ser Baffo)
Paradise is a jewel arrived too late (or maybe too soon). Because it’s one of those shows we wanted to be company for months. In a fast series world, where everything is consumed quickly in the time of a binge watching that makes you forget what you saw the day before, Paradise is a cuddle for true fans of seriality.
L’articolo Paradise 2, the review: the TV series for real fans of the serial story (beyond the fashions) proviene da Dituttounpop.it.




