Feeling as though there's something missing in their lives, four ordinary people stumble across a puzzle hiding just beyond the veil of everyday life, and their eyes are opened to a world of... Read allFeeling as though there's something missing in their lives, four ordinary people stumble across a puzzle hiding just beyond the veil of everyday life, and their eyes are opened to a world of possibility and magic.Feeling as though there's something missing in their lives, four ordinary people stumble across a puzzle hiding just beyond the veil of everyday life, and their eyes are opened to a world of possibility and magic.
- Awards
- 1 win & 2 nominations total
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Featured reviews
Really different, fascinating show
Jason Segal is one of the most fascinating "creatives" in the entertainment industry. He is constantly re-inventing himself and his career, from "Freeks & Geeks" to "How I met your mother," from "Forgetting Sarah Marshall" to re-inventing The Muppets.
This is his latest, a limited series based on a mysterious ARG that popped up in San Francisco a few years back (and then, just as mysteriously disappeared.)
It's anything but safe. It's funny, clever, disturbing and very addictive. It's anything but boring, concerning 4 people who find themselves caught up in a strange company by the name of The Jejune Institute. A company which may or may not be real and may or may not contain the answers we all seek.
Starting created, directed and written by Segal.
Co-starring Sally Field, Richard E. Grant and Andre Benjamin (3000).
Really interesting, highly recommended.
5prpw
Such promise, destroyed by the final episode
It started off slow, got to a really interesting place and then meandered....
Off a cliff.
It's based on an interactive game that was played in SF a few years back. See the documentary THE INSTITUTE for more details.
The premise interested Segal enough that he wanted to make a series about it. Kudos for AMC to breaking out of the Zombie and vampire hell they've created for themselves but still.
If only someone had been brave enough to tell him to throw out the last episode, never to be seen again, this would've rated as high as an eight.
Instead it changes into something else entirely.
Off a cliff.
It's based on an interactive game that was played in SF a few years back. See the documentary THE INSTITUTE for more details.
The premise interested Segal enough that he wanted to make a series about it. Kudos for AMC to breaking out of the Zombie and vampire hell they've created for themselves but still.
If only someone had been brave enough to tell him to throw out the last episode, never to be seen again, this would've rated as high as an eight.
Instead it changes into something else entirely.
Just like the experience in San Francisco!
Everything about this felt like it felt to "play the game" in San Francisco". We went to the "jejune Institute" ~10 years ago for "Nonchalance" and played 2 rounds of the game and never quite figured out what was going on, but it was amazing and fun and quirky, just like the show. Very well thought out and imaginative. I'm hoping the show continues and we can finally reach an understanding of what on Earth we were doing and where it was leading...
Was so good at first, what happened??
The first 7 episodes of this show were great!
It was nice seeing Sally Field in a show again, and I didn't realize how much I'd missed Andre 3000.
The diversity of the cast was nice, the plot seemed a little out there but in a fun and interesting way.
Unfortunately by episode 8 things start to slide, episode 9 does a poor job of wrapping anything up, and episode 10 is self indulgent, pretentious nonsense best left unwatched.
Seriously, if you haven't seen it yet, don't bother, it adds nothing to the show and is not the feel-good, uplifting ending they seemed to think it was going to be.
Disappointed.
Facinating but chaotic....
After watching the first episode I found it intriguing yet chaotic. I kept wondering where it was going but at the same time wanting to find out. I can however now see why David Lynch loved Philadelphia so much as the city comes off as quirky as this presentation. The jury is still out for me as maybe I should smoke something before I watch the next episode?
Did you know
- TriviaBased on Games of Nonchalance, an alternate reality game in San Francisco which ran from 2008 to 2011.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Talking Dead: Stalker (2020)
- How many seasons does Dispatches from Elsewhere have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 45m
- Color
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