Golgotha
- El episodio se transmitió el 15 may 2025
- C
- 10min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.2/10
5.9 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Un vicario recibe a un visitante alienígena que está convencido de que su salvador divino ha regresado a la Tierra, en forma de delfín. Un peculiar cuento de ciencia ficción protagonizado po... Leer todoUn vicario recibe a un visitante alienígena que está convencido de que su salvador divino ha regresado a la Tierra, en forma de delfín. Un peculiar cuento de ciencia ficción protagonizado por Rhys Darby.Un vicario recibe a un visitante alienígena que está convencido de que su salvador divino ha regresado a la Tierra, en forma de delfín. Un peculiar cuento de ciencia ficción protagonizado por Rhys Darby.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Moe Daniels
- The Lupo
- (voz)
Trevor Logan
- Angry Protestor
- (as Trevor Logan Judy)
Cheryl Dent
- Protester
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Just imagine if we were visited by an alien species, and if it took the side of what we considered inferior species, and saw the level of destruction that the only animal species considered intelligent, the human, has.
A very good episode, if you look at it from that perspective. If aliens arrived and communicated with insects, what would they say? Or with cattle, or with birds? Are we really the most intelligent? Looking from the outside looking in on the way we're doing on this planet, I don't think so.
If we take all humans out of the equation, I think the planet has a better chance of survival.
A very good episode, if you look at it from that perspective. If aliens arrived and communicated with insects, what would they say? Or with cattle, or with birds? Are we really the most intelligent? Looking from the outside looking in on the way we're doing on this planet, I don't think so.
If we take all humans out of the equation, I think the planet has a better chance of survival.
An alien emissary requests that a priest (Rhys Darby) who witnessed the apparent resurrection of a dead dolphin take it to the site of the miracle. The premise of aliens arriving on Earth only to reveal that perhaps we, as a species, are not as important as we'd like to think we are has been done before ('Star Trek: The Voyage Home' is another cetacean example) and can be a fun comment on our hominid hubris, but this short tale could have been a lot better. The special effects are pretty good, although the 'walking octopus' isn't very convincing from 'the neck down' and Darby doesn't make for a very plausible conflicted pastor (he is not helped by his script). The story would have been greatly improved if a bit more thought given to the design of the alien, such that the final scene made a bit more sense (as well as dispensing with the line "...their home is a gas giant").
A priest who witnessed the resurrection of a dolphin greets the alien cephalopods who believe it to be a messiah.
This is a live-action episode with CGI, most obviously the alien. It's a pretty short episode, and there isn't a whole lot going on here. It seems like it probably belongs in a more traditional anthology collection than LD&R.
I can't really say that I've seen much in the way of alien messiahs in my science fiction. So, it's got that going for it. However, it doesn't really go anywhere particularly exciting or interesting with that hook. It's basically just a setup for a simple message.
It's not bad. The acting is fine, and the humor is fine. It seems like the sort of thing you might find on YouTube, though. I half expected the priest to turn to the camera at the end and say, "Don't forget to like and subscribe!"
I was so excited about the next season of LD&R, but this season has been such a bust. It might have been better if season 3 had been the last one, and we ended on a high note.
Episodes like this make me appreciate The Drowned Giant. I'm still not even sure how much I liked that episode. But The Drowned Giant left me wondering exactly what it was about and what it meant, if anything. This wasn't bad, but it feels like a throwaway episode whose only reason for existing is to blow some stuff up via CGI.
This is a live-action episode with CGI, most obviously the alien. It's a pretty short episode, and there isn't a whole lot going on here. It seems like it probably belongs in a more traditional anthology collection than LD&R.
I can't really say that I've seen much in the way of alien messiahs in my science fiction. So, it's got that going for it. However, it doesn't really go anywhere particularly exciting or interesting with that hook. It's basically just a setup for a simple message.
It's not bad. The acting is fine, and the humor is fine. It seems like the sort of thing you might find on YouTube, though. I half expected the priest to turn to the camera at the end and say, "Don't forget to like and subscribe!"
I was so excited about the next season of LD&R, but this season has been such a bust. It might have been better if season 3 had been the last one, and we ended on a high note.
Episodes like this make me appreciate The Drowned Giant. I'm still not even sure how much I liked that episode. But The Drowned Giant left me wondering exactly what it was about and what it meant, if anything. This wasn't bad, but it feels like a throwaway episode whose only reason for existing is to blow some stuff up via CGI.
Being live-action in a series where unique animation is key is a bold thing to do - You'd think it would use the format wisely, maybe use it to its advantage... Well, it doesn't. The concept - again - has huge potential, and it ends up being a big nothing sandwich. Hollow, doesn't dare to dive into anything worth exploring...And you have RELIGION to play with - in an anthology series that where episodes are self-contained. What better canvas do you need to be creative??! It just simply does nothing with the world it created, does nothing to be funny at least, forget shock-factor or a twist. I like Rhys as the next guy, but you have given him nothing here to make is worth our while.
For the first live-action episode in the series since Ice Age, I was hoping for something that would impress, and this episode fell very short of doing so. Almost no character was given to anyone, and the entire plot would have played out the same if the main character were absent. I struggle to see what this episode was trying to say or accomplish besides a very shallow "humans harm the earth".
With very little to bring to the table in terms of story, characters, and messages, it can't even give interesting visuals for me to at least turn my brain off and enjoy watching. Most of all, the sin this episode is most guilty of is being boring.
With very little to bring to the table in terms of story, characters, and messages, it can't even give interesting visuals for me to at least turn my brain off and enjoy watching. Most of all, the sin this episode is most guilty of is being boring.
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 10min
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
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