Underwhelming (but not as disappointing as KPOP Demon Hunters)
Wonderfools aspires to a kind of narrative grandeur it never quite earns, settling instead for being intermittently entertaining when it isn’t busy circling its own indecision. The reliably lauded veteran cast deliver precisely what one expects of them (competence bordering on autopilot), though one suspects they’ve been given far more credit than the material warrants. For a series so eager to flirt with superpowered ambition, its central conflict feels almost embarrassingly underdeveloped, reducing potentially harrowing themes (fractured childhoods, moral divergence) into little more than decorative angst. Most disappointing of all is its villain, whose supposed grand vision lacks both scale and cunning, rendering the entire enterprise curiously small despite its inflated self-image.That said, one could do far worse. In an entertainment landscape that occasionally mistakes incoherence for ambition (KPOP Demon Hunters being a particularly egregious not so recent example), Wonderfools, at least, understands the basic virtue of watchability. It may never transcend its own limitations, but it remains consistently engaging and, at times, genuinely funny in ways that feel earned rather than accidental. Faint praise, perhaps, but praise nonetheless.
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