Jumanji meets the complexities of human nature
Jumanji is absolutely one of my favourite movies so imagine my delight when we got another dice/board game themed production, very along the lines of the original plot yet promising more danger and deep fangled insight into the human psyche - of complicated emotions like the guilt of actions, the delight of praise, the need to feel wanted, the threat of jealousy and much more.
We got barely a drop of this.
The Dark Dice, on paper, had a great formula. Eight strangers, some of them familiar, some of them friends, all get stuck in a game after an accidental roll of a dice. They discover that they're playing a game called Djuhety, a game of wits that will grant the winner a wish. They obviously have no choice but to play the first game since they're stuck in a parallel dimension similar to their own and realise that finishing the game is the only way to leave. There's no trust between most of them but they somehow get through it - and you get the sense that this is how the story will move - teamwork, discovering the secrets of the game, complicated emotions causing rifts and betrayals, your usual tropes.
Unfortunately, much like a lot of titles I've watched of a similar genre, it's strikingly clear that there are only two or three leads in this. The eight players is a red herring - the story focuses on its chosen players, and they're not even for the sake of continuity in most cases.
Samut, Aom, Mamay, they're clearly the main characters. Kaen, Mark, Pie, Don and Benz.. they're there to expedite the healing process of these characters.
And for the same reason, the games also work in a way to highlight the stories of the three of them. Which would usually not be a problem.. but I had the hardest time liking any of the characters. Literally any of them. Sure we want growth, but they began the series like they ended it, no real growth.
Besides the fact that no character had any impact on me, the story itself was such a rollercoaster. Exciting sure, but when it dropped, it was a steep drop and it only picked up slowly before engaging in another another steep drop. They chose to focus on three characters, but none of their arcs got a satisfying ending either!! Not a single one. The explanations, the reconciliations, the conclusions, something in each of them left me feeling a little.. bleh. The explanation regarding Samut's backstory involving Atom was used a means to get the audience to sympathize with Mamay. Mamay's reconciliation with Kaen, who she used and manipulated throughout their relationship was brushed aside because she helped him during one of the games. And the conclusion to Aom's story - the story which played a huge role in the latter half of the series - was the worst of the lot. I can't even consider that as something that occurred within the series.
The games themselves were good, I really enjoyed the different types of games and the gameplay involving strategy, trust and (unavoidable) manipulation - but the purpose behind the games was really convoluted.
Overall, depth is not what you want to be looking forward to starting this - it's has it's exciting moments, some decent acting and just kind of okay everything else. I wish all of the characters had equal focus, or atleast the chance to explore their backstories a bit more. But as it stands - this was a good thriller, but just an okay story.
We got barely a drop of this.
The Dark Dice, on paper, had a great formula. Eight strangers, some of them familiar, some of them friends, all get stuck in a game after an accidental roll of a dice. They discover that they're playing a game called Djuhety, a game of wits that will grant the winner a wish. They obviously have no choice but to play the first game since they're stuck in a parallel dimension similar to their own and realise that finishing the game is the only way to leave. There's no trust between most of them but they somehow get through it - and you get the sense that this is how the story will move - teamwork, discovering the secrets of the game, complicated emotions causing rifts and betrayals, your usual tropes.
Unfortunately, much like a lot of titles I've watched of a similar genre, it's strikingly clear that there are only two or three leads in this. The eight players is a red herring - the story focuses on its chosen players, and they're not even for the sake of continuity in most cases.
Samut, Aom, Mamay, they're clearly the main characters. Kaen, Mark, Pie, Don and Benz.. they're there to expedite the healing process of these characters.
And for the same reason, the games also work in a way to highlight the stories of the three of them. Which would usually not be a problem.. but I had the hardest time liking any of the characters. Literally any of them. Sure we want growth, but they began the series like they ended it, no real growth.
Besides the fact that no character had any impact on me, the story itself was such a rollercoaster. Exciting sure, but when it dropped, it was a steep drop and it only picked up slowly before engaging in another another steep drop. They chose to focus on three characters, but none of their arcs got a satisfying ending either!! Not a single one. The explanations, the reconciliations, the conclusions, something in each of them left me feeling a little.. bleh. The explanation regarding Samut's backstory involving Atom was used a means to get the audience to sympathize with Mamay. Mamay's reconciliation with Kaen, who she used and manipulated throughout their relationship was brushed aside because she helped him during one of the games. And the conclusion to Aom's story - the story which played a huge role in the latter half of the series - was the worst of the lot. I can't even consider that as something that occurred within the series.
The games themselves were good, I really enjoyed the different types of games and the gameplay involving strategy, trust and (unavoidable) manipulation - but the purpose behind the games was really convoluted.
Overall, depth is not what you want to be looking forward to starting this - it's has it's exciting moments, some decent acting and just kind of okay everything else. I wish all of the characters had equal focus, or atleast the chance to explore their backstories a bit more. But as it stands - this was a good thriller, but just an okay story.
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