Orphan Black: Echoes

Orphan Black: Echoes

2024-06-23 1 Season
Sci-Fi & Fantasy Drama
6.7
User Score
26 votes

"New story. Same DNA."

Overview

In the near future, a group of women weave their way into each other's lives and embark on a thrilling journey, unravelling the mystery of their identity and uncovering a wrenching story of love and betrayal.

Seasons

Season 1

Season 1

2024-06-23

10 Episodes

Top Billed Cast

Show Details

Status

Canceled

Original Language

en

Number of Seasons

1

Number of Episodes

10

First Air Date

2024-06-23

Last Air Date

2024-08-25

Recommendations

Reviews

misubisu

misubisu

2025-12-30T01:36:32.535Z

### **Review: *Orphan Black: Echoes (2024)*** **Score: 8/10 — A Worthy, If Uneven, Return to the Clone Club Universe** As a devout fan of the original series—who lived for the twists, celebrated the sisterhood, and still uses “sestras” unironically—walking into *Orphan Black: Echoes* was equal parts thrilling and terrifying. Could it recapture the electric, paranoid energy and thematic depth that made *Orphan Black* a masterpiece? The answer is a qualified yes. *Echoes* is not a reboot or a rehash; it’s a bold, next-chapter expansion of the mythology that succeeds most when it embraces its own new identity, even if it occasionally stumbles in the shadow of its iconic predecessor. **What Works Brilliantly for the Fan:** * **Krysten Ritter’s Compelling Anchor:** Stepping into the Tatiana Maslany role is an impossible task, but Ritter wisely doesn’t try. As Lucy, a woman “printed” from a genetic source with no memory of her past, she delivers a performance of raw, physical vulnerability and fierce determination. Her journey of self-creation—of choosing who to become—feels like a natural, poignant evolution of the original’s “identity is a choice” theme. * **Thematic Legacy & New Tech:** The show brilliantly updates the core questions for a new era. If *Orphan Black* was about nature vs. nurture and bodily autonomy, *Echoes* asks: **What is the self when you are literally a copy?** The move from cloning to “printing” people opens terrifying new doors about consciousness, trauma, and the ethics of creation, feeling like a logical, frightening next step for the neolutionist nightmare. * **Nostalgia Done Right:** The connections to the original are **organic and thrilling**, not cheap fan service. Returning characters and locations (hello, Dyad Institute aesthetics) are woven in with care, serving the new story. Hearing certain names or seeing certain symbols delivers genuine, earned chills. The show respects the legacy without being enslaved by it. **Where It Stumbles for the Fan:** * **The Pace of the Paranoia:** One of the original’s greatest strengths was its breakneck, white-knuckle pacing. *Echoes* adopts a more deliberate, mystery-box slow burn. While this allows for deeper character immersion, fans might miss the relentless, episode-to-episode cliffhangers and the chaotic, multi-clone energy that Maslany orchestrated so effortlessly. * **The “Sestra” Dynamic (or Lack Thereof):** This is the biggest adjustment. The profound, complex sisterhood between Sarah, Alison, Cosima, and Helena was the soul of *Orphan Black*. *Echoes* is, at its heart, a story about a fractured mother-daughter relationship (a superb Keeley Hawes and Amanda Fix) and found family. The bond between the “echoes” themselves is compelling but doesn’t yet—and may never—reach the transcendent, chosen-family heights of the Clone Club. You long for that specific chemistry. * **Villainy Scale:** The original’s rogues' gallery—from icy Rachel to the Proletheans—was iconic. The central antagonist here, while intellectually frightening in its corporate, systemic evil, lacks the immediate, personal menace of a Helena or a Dr. Leekie in the early going. **The Verdict for the Clone Club:** *Orphan Black: Echoes* will not replace the original in your heart, nor should it. It is a different show—more cerebral, more melancholic, and focused on a different kind of family trauma. But it is a **worthy successor** that expands the universe in smart, respectful ways. It proves there are more stories to tell in this world, and Ritter is a fantastic guide for this new chapter. Watch it not to relive 2013, but to see the consequences of that story ripple into a terrifying future. Stay for the questions it asks, the stellar performances, and the hope that, somewhere, the sestras are still out there, fighting the good fight. It’s a solid, often gripping **7.5/10** that earns its place in the canon, even if it doesn’t quite clone the original’s magic.