Season #: 2, 1
User Score
8.4

Universal acclaim- based on 117 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Negative: 7 out of 117
Watch Now

Where To Watch

Stream On
Buy on

Review this tv show

  1. Your Score
    0 out of 10
    Rate this:
    • 10
    • 9
    • 8
    • 7
    • 6
    • 5
    • 4
    • 3
    • 2
    • 1
    • 0
    • 0
  1. Submit
  2. Check Spelling

User Reviews

  1. Dec 21, 2019
    0
    This series looks amazing, but the story is incredibly boring and too political. If you watch it o mute you're not losing anything.
  2. Sep 14, 2019
    0
    Incredibly overrated. Fooled by critics once again. A totally banal American story of a young adult, where narcissism and egotism are mistaken for introspection in this day and age of "social media". Our main female protagonist suffers an American mid-life existential crisis and thinks that makes it interesting. Sigh...And she blabs, blabs, blabs about how her life is boring, repetitive,Incredibly overrated. Fooled by critics once again. A totally banal American story of a young adult, where narcissism and egotism are mistaken for introspection in this day and age of "social media". Our main female protagonist suffers an American mid-life existential crisis and thinks that makes it interesting. Sigh...And she blabs, blabs, blabs about how her life is boring, repetitive, while deluding herself that she is better than that.
    A little example of the inanity and triviality of these thoughts:
    Quote in ep 1: "have you ever felt that your life is like a play? except that you are the only one who knows it's a play...and the others are just playing and they don't know"
    This summarises the level of nihilistic arrogance of a generation and a culture that hasn't read enough books and watched too many super-hero movies.

    Dear American critics (except Slant magazine), please do read some books (classics) before writing anything on television.

    PS: The gimmick of the cartoon-like images is supposed to make us feel...nauseated?
    Expand
  3. Dec 25, 2021
    1
    (Mauro Lanari)
    Virginia Woolf's stream of consciousness and Molly Bloom's soliloquy in the last chapter of Joyce's "Ulysses" plus the feminine torments of "Desperate Housewives" and the matriarchy vaticinated by the "next age": in "Undone" there is nothing else, and woe to those who confuse it with the version, updated to contemporary physics, of "Altered States" (1980) and of the
    (Mauro Lanari)
    Virginia Woolf's stream of consciousness and Molly Bloom's soliloquy in the last chapter of Joyce's "Ulysses" plus the feminine torments of "Desperate Housewives" and the matriarchy vaticinated by the "next age": in "Undone" there is nothing else, and woe to those who confuse it with the version, updated to contemporary physics, of "Altered States" (1980) and of the experiments of the time on the effects of the Mexican hallucinogens amplified in the sensory deprivation tanks. Only the Brian Greene of "The Last Mimzy" (2007) had ventured to hypothesize similar abstruseness.
    Expand
Metascore
86

Universal acclaim - based on 17 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 16 out of 17
  2. Negative: 0 out of 17
  1. Reviewed by: Ed Power
    Jan 3, 2020
    80
    Just like BoJack Horseman, Undone is about a person in a dark place trying to make sense of the world. As a portrait of an emotional breakdown so severe it causes reality itself to fracture it’s both disorientating and riveting.
  2. Reviewed by: Alan Sepinwall
    Dec 30, 2019
    60
    It’s a marvelous achievement in design and among the most visually stunning things you’ll see on television this year. But when you look past the gorgeous presentation and into the substance, Undone proves more hit-or-miss.
  3. Reviewed by: Melanie McFarland
    Sep 16, 2019
    100
    Masterful employment of rotoscoping. ... “Undone” is a fantastic, humorous tragedy that refuses to unstick itself from our attention very easily. ... Turn it on and let yourself go.