Divide by Zero
The Living Force
I just finished watching Wayward Pines and found it to be entertaining and interesting.
Wayward Pines (TV Series 2015–2016) - IMDb
It shows how a society engineered to work doesn't work.
There's not much I could say beyond that without spoilers that get revealed in the middle of season 1.
Spoiler alert scroll down for info if you don't mind to learn the basis of this town and general plot
It's a good primer to see if the show interests you:
A scientist in 2014 saw the upcoming destruction of the human race and decided to build an "Ark" by putting people into cryogenic chambers. Some were volunteers, others were not.
His plan was to wait 2000 years to re-seed humanity in the town Wayward Pines.
A lot of drama ensues as the truth of what happened is not fully revealed to the adults from the past. This is because in the first version of the town, once the people knew the truth, they destroyed the town.
However, the children are allowed to know the truth as they were started in this community. They also were giving a sort of patriotic duty mentality, to "save the human race".
What lies outside the walls of this town is a mutated version of the human race that lives in the wild.
In the show you see how the young generation, being raised in this town's system, are virtually brainwashed in the ways taught by the originator. This causes clashes with the adults who have memories of the past and other ways on how to do things. The mutant human race at some point starts to become a threat to the town because they seek expansion to make food and become bigger.
Wayward Pines (TV Series 2015–2016) - IMDb
Secret Service agent Ethan Burke arrives in the bucolic town of Wayward Pines, ID, on a mission to find two missing federal agents. But instead of answers, Ethan's investigation only turns up more questions. What's wrong with Wayward Pines? Each step closer to the truth takes Ethan further from the life he knew, from the husband and father he was, until he must face the terrifying reality that he may never get out of Wayward Pines alive.
It shows how a society engineered to work doesn't work.
There's not much I could say beyond that without spoilers that get revealed in the middle of season 1.
Spoiler alert scroll down for info if you don't mind to learn the basis of this town and general plot
It's a good primer to see if the show interests you:
A scientist in 2014 saw the upcoming destruction of the human race and decided to build an "Ark" by putting people into cryogenic chambers. Some were volunteers, others were not.
His plan was to wait 2000 years to re-seed humanity in the town Wayward Pines.
A lot of drama ensues as the truth of what happened is not fully revealed to the adults from the past. This is because in the first version of the town, once the people knew the truth, they destroyed the town.
However, the children are allowed to know the truth as they were started in this community. They also were giving a sort of patriotic duty mentality, to "save the human race".
What lies outside the walls of this town is a mutated version of the human race that lives in the wild.
In the show you see how the young generation, being raised in this town's system, are virtually brainwashed in the ways taught by the originator. This causes clashes with the adults who have memories of the past and other ways on how to do things. The mutant human race at some point starts to become a threat to the town because they seek expansion to make food and become bigger.