Une ville bucolique mais sinistre explore les subtilités insidieuses de l'industrie de l'adolescence et la lutte éternelle de la prochaine génération.Une ville bucolique mais sinistre explore les subtilités insidieuses de l'industrie de l'adolescence et la lutte éternelle de la prochaine génération.Une ville bucolique mais sinistre explore les subtilités insidieuses de l'industrie de l'adolescence et la lutte éternelle de la prochaine génération.
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Weighed down by weak lead performance
I binged Wayward in a single day because the mystery, Toni Collette's magnetic performance as the academy director, and the phenomenal child actors kept my attention. Unfortunately, the show stumbles where it matters most: the central couple.
Mae Martin, who is non binary and plays Alex, simply doesn't carry the weight this role demands. Their youthful look works in some contexts but makes the marriage to Laura feel more like mother and son than spouses. The lack of believable chemistry is striking, and it drains tension from scenes that should feel emotionally charged.
The problem isn't their identity, it's the performance. Alex is meant to be a grounded, authoritative police officer, but the portrayal feels more like an inexperienced high schooler. Combined with inconsistent character motivations, illogical decisions, and unresolved elements of the academy, these issues undermine the otherwise strong atmosphere. For example, Laura's abrupt behavioral shifts, Alex's questionable choices, and the ambiguous fates of other characters leave significant gaps in the story.
The real standouts are the kids and Toni Collette, who steal every scene and make the series watchable despite its flaws.
Overall, Wayward has style, mystery, and standout supporting performances, but weak acting from the lead and unresolved plot issues prevent it from fully succeeding.
Mae Martin, who is non binary and plays Alex, simply doesn't carry the weight this role demands. Their youthful look works in some contexts but makes the marriage to Laura feel more like mother and son than spouses. The lack of believable chemistry is striking, and it drains tension from scenes that should feel emotionally charged.
The problem isn't their identity, it's the performance. Alex is meant to be a grounded, authoritative police officer, but the portrayal feels more like an inexperienced high schooler. Combined with inconsistent character motivations, illogical decisions, and unresolved elements of the academy, these issues undermine the otherwise strong atmosphere. For example, Laura's abrupt behavioral shifts, Alex's questionable choices, and the ambiguous fates of other characters leave significant gaps in the story.
The real standouts are the kids and Toni Collette, who steal every scene and make the series watchable despite its flaws.
Overall, Wayward has style, mystery, and standout supporting performances, but weak acting from the lead and unresolved plot issues prevent it from fully succeeding.
Entertainig if your not picky!
We watched first episode to see if it was worth it to continue with the series,ended binging the lot in one night,lucky was able to sleep in next morning. We are older couple 70's+ except for Toni Collette we did not know any of the Actors in the series,found the the show current with todays problems of troubled teens and Just enough Mystery to keep us hooked and looking forward to seeing some of these young actors again in the future,the series ended in such a way a second series could be possible.we gave it a 7/10.
good enough
What a sad world we live in, the online world is getting really insufferable - this series is barely out and the first reviews here are from people who rage against an actor who happens to be trans.
His performance was very decent btw - he did the best he could with a character that just isn't that deep or developed during the show.
For me personally the show was overall decent due to the very good actors. Otherwise I feel I've seen this subject too much already - in the last years it's all about trauma trauma trauma, manipulation, cults, people being unspeakably cruel.. Although I think it's very good and important these themes are getting attention, I can't stomach another emotionally triggering show or movie.. at this point in time reality is triggering enough..
However i am sure this show will help someone out there..
His performance was very decent btw - he did the best he could with a character that just isn't that deep or developed during the show.
For me personally the show was overall decent due to the very good actors. Otherwise I feel I've seen this subject too much already - in the last years it's all about trauma trauma trauma, manipulation, cults, people being unspeakably cruel.. Although I think it's very good and important these themes are getting attention, I can't stomach another emotionally triggering show or movie.. at this point in time reality is triggering enough..
However i am sure this show will help someone out there..
A perfect cozy autumn weekend binge!
Most shows that include LGBTQ+ characters tend to focus heavily on their identity, instead of allowing them to simply exist in their everyday lives. What I loved about this series is how realistic it felt: the trans character faces comments or makes jokes themselves, but the plot is not built around their identity. On top of that, there's another LGBTQ+ character casually woven into the story - it felt authentic, not forced.
The narrative is gripping, and I loved how smoothly my feelings towards the characters shifted from sympathy to frustration and back again. It's a great watch for a weekend - I binged it in two evenings. As someone who's into true crime and psychology, it hit the right spot for me: suspenseful, engaging, and easy to relate to.
My only real critique: the ending. It felt a bit too subtle and didn't quite match the intensity of the rest of the series. Still, overall, a fantastic autumn weekend binge that I'd happily recommend!
The narrative is gripping, and I loved how smoothly my feelings towards the characters shifted from sympathy to frustration and back again. It's a great watch for a weekend - I binged it in two evenings. As someone who's into true crime and psychology, it hit the right spot for me: suspenseful, engaging, and easy to relate to.
My only real critique: the ending. It felt a bit too subtle and didn't quite match the intensity of the rest of the series. Still, overall, a fantastic autumn weekend binge that I'd happily recommend!
Takes you nowhere
This could have so much better. Not one question brought up in the story was resolved. Maybe the plan was to resolve them in a second season, but I doubt they get a second season. Acting was not great either. Martin had no range of emotions. Actually the 2 teenage girls might have been the best actors in the cast. I feel like I wasted my time.
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Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesMae's friend Nicole, who inspired the series, became a consultant in the show, according to Cosmopolitan. The Wayward writers' room also included a writer who had attended one of the controversial schools.
- ConnexionsFeatured in CTV News at 11:30 Toronto: Épisode datant du 9 septembre 2025 (2025)
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