Spider Rose
- El episodio se transmitió el 15 may 2025
- C
- 17min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.0/10
6.9 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
En una lejana mina de asteroides, una desconsolada trabajadora mejorada tecnológicamente encuentra una amistad inesperada y la oportunidad de enfrentarse al asesino de su cónyuge, pertenecie... Leer todoEn una lejana mina de asteroides, una desconsolada trabajadora mejorada tecnológicamente encuentra una amistad inesperada y la oportunidad de enfrentarse al asesino de su cónyuge, perteneciente a una facción rival de modificación genética.En una lejana mina de asteroides, una desconsolada trabajadora mejorada tecnológicamente encuentra una amistad inesperada y la oportunidad de enfrentarse al asesino de su cónyuge, perteneciente a una facción rival de modificación genética.
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Opiniones destacadas
A traumatized cyborg seeks revenge against the people who killed her lover. Along the way, she finds possible healing, though.
This was an interesting episode, and certainly more in line with what I was hoping for. After a music video and a sophomoric comedy short, we finally get a science fiction story. The science fiction elements were pretty cool, but the short runtime meant that you didn't really get a lot of detail.
The art is amazing, which perhaps explains why it's so short. It's in a pretty realistic style and has a solid emotional base. You get to know the cyborg's suffering fairly well during your brief time with her, and her emotions come through well in the artwork. The voice acting captured the characters well, too.
I would have liked to have seen something a bit more exciting during the climax, but the action sequences were done well. It definitely gave off vibes of Heavy Metal, especially the climactic fight, which was gory and intense.
The most essentially science fiction part of the episode is not really the cyborg. It was her payment for a salvage job -- an alien pet that gives her a reason to live besides vengeance. It was interesting and kept the episode from being something as straight-up "here's some badasses in a gunfight" like Kill Team Kill.
Overall, definitely an episode for people like me. If we had an entire season of episodes like this, I would be satisfied, but I hope we get some more crazy stuff like ZIma Blue, The Witness, and Jibaro.
This was an interesting episode, and certainly more in line with what I was hoping for. After a music video and a sophomoric comedy short, we finally get a science fiction story. The science fiction elements were pretty cool, but the short runtime meant that you didn't really get a lot of detail.
The art is amazing, which perhaps explains why it's so short. It's in a pretty realistic style and has a solid emotional base. You get to know the cyborg's suffering fairly well during your brief time with her, and her emotions come through well in the artwork. The voice acting captured the characters well, too.
I would have liked to have seen something a bit more exciting during the climax, but the action sequences were done well. It definitely gave off vibes of Heavy Metal, especially the climactic fight, which was gory and intense.
The most essentially science fiction part of the episode is not really the cyborg. It was her payment for a salvage job -- an alien pet that gives her a reason to live besides vengeance. It was interesting and kept the episode from being something as straight-up "here's some badasses in a gunfight" like Kill Team Kill.
Overall, definitely an episode for people like me. If we had an entire season of episodes like this, I would be satisfied, but I hope we get some more crazy stuff like ZIma Blue, The Witness, and Jibaro.
Netflix's "Love, Death and Robots" returns for a fourth season. Overall, I've enjoyed the first three runs and have written individual reviews for each episode. I think I'll continue that approach with this set too.
Lydia (Emily O'Brien) lives in an asteroid ring, trying to trade with passing ships. Lydia is planning revenge against Jade (Feodor Chin) but has so far only been able to kill his clones, and not Jade himself. She is temporarily left with the pet of one of her trading partners, a creature that absorbs the DNA of those that it eats. She bonds with the creature, nicknamed Nosey, but Jade has discovered her location and is planning an attack.
We're back with Blur Studios here, and their level of near photo realism animation is back too. To be fair, this is not quite at the highest level of graphics we've seen, but a strong contender. Unfortunately, many of these visually splendid efforts are pedestrian with their stories and I'm afraid that "Spider Rose" felt like another one of those to me.
There was a gory battle scene, which was intense, but nothing else particularly memorable about the episode.
Lydia (Emily O'Brien) lives in an asteroid ring, trying to trade with passing ships. Lydia is planning revenge against Jade (Feodor Chin) but has so far only been able to kill his clones, and not Jade himself. She is temporarily left with the pet of one of her trading partners, a creature that absorbs the DNA of those that it eats. She bonds with the creature, nicknamed Nosey, but Jade has discovered her location and is planning an attack.
We're back with Blur Studios here, and their level of near photo realism animation is back too. To be fair, this is not quite at the highest level of graphics we've seen, but a strong contender. Unfortunately, many of these visually splendid efforts are pedestrian with their stories and I'm afraid that "Spider Rose" felt like another one of those to me.
There was a gory battle scene, which was intense, but nothing else particularly memorable about the episode.
This story feels like a retread of a previous seasons.
The one with a human going in to space to investigate a hive mind entity and then decides they would make a better queen and ruler of the hive and then finds out the old hive / queen isn't happy about that idea.
The agenda of the aliens is kind of unclear did they send the cute pet on purpose to harvest the spider rose / human / augmented dna ? Or where they merely trying to maintain their ' arrangement' ?
The timing of the villain attack is also somewhat circumspect and coincidental.
Animation and voice acting off the charts with amazing sound stage to sell it.
The one with a human going in to space to investigate a hive mind entity and then decides they would make a better queen and ruler of the hive and then finds out the old hive / queen isn't happy about that idea.
The agenda of the aliens is kind of unclear did they send the cute pet on purpose to harvest the spider rose / human / augmented dna ? Or where they merely trying to maintain their ' arrangement' ?
The timing of the villain attack is also somewhat circumspect and coincidental.
Animation and voice acting off the charts with amazing sound stage to sell it.
The first two episodes of this season were disappointing. I was pleasantly surprised that "Spider Rose" gives us a small glimpse of the show's former glory.
Now, the episode isn't a masterpiece, not by any means. In fact, in my ranking of Love, Death & Robots episodes, it would probably fall around the middle. This is the show at its core: a visual feast for the eyes coupled with an interesting sci-fi concept. As far as the story for this one goes, I didn't necessarily love it, but it was more than passable. "Spider Rose" manages to capture the grief of a woman who has lost what she loves, but the runtime is too short for me to truly get attached or emotionally resonate with her. Nonetheless, it does an effective job of establishing context. The villain is fine. Nothing extraordinary, but he fulfills his purpose. My one question would be why he sends the real copy of himself to attack Rose when he could've just sent more copies and safely hid himself.
Animation is great as always, pacing was decent, the ending was predictable, but it fit the vibe of the episode. Solid episode all around, one of the standouts of Season 4.
Now, the episode isn't a masterpiece, not by any means. In fact, in my ranking of Love, Death & Robots episodes, it would probably fall around the middle. This is the show at its core: a visual feast for the eyes coupled with an interesting sci-fi concept. As far as the story for this one goes, I didn't necessarily love it, but it was more than passable. "Spider Rose" manages to capture the grief of a woman who has lost what she loves, but the runtime is too short for me to truly get attached or emotionally resonate with her. Nonetheless, it does an effective job of establishing context. The villain is fine. Nothing extraordinary, but he fulfills his purpose. My one question would be why he sends the real copy of himself to attack Rose when he could've just sent more copies and safely hid himself.
Animation is great as always, pacing was decent, the ending was predictable, but it fit the vibe of the episode. Solid episode all around, one of the standouts of Season 4.
This one was maybe the closest to what Love, Death and Robots used to be, and yet, you will not find me re-watch it. It has elements that we have explored before, but this time, it is told in a less shocking or exciting fashion. Nothing unique about our character, we've seen this done multiple times, just about watchable. I'd say it was ok-ish overall, but just below average. Unfortunately, it will not get better than this when it comes to storytelling or vibe...which is annoying and disappointing for something that used to make people go "whoah, now what is something creative". I also found something about our character's face being a bit too much in terms of animation, but that is just a small thing, might be just me.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaTakes place in the same universe as Swarm (2022), also based on a short story written by Bruce Sterling.
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- Tiempo de ejecución
- 17min
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
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