Love, Death & Robots: The Dump – Summary, Review (with Spoilers)
The Dump keeps up the weird vibe of the rest of the anthology but decides it wants to get a bit rustic, and not in a farm life kind of way.
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The Dump keeps up the weird vibe of the rest of the anthology but decides it wants to get a bit rustic, and not in a farm life kind of way.
Good Hunting will likely be one of your favorite shorts to come out of the Love, Death + Robots anthology.
Beyond the Aquila Rift may feel like it cut the bulk of a larger story, but the way it makes you fiend for details is part of the sell.
Long Lost will slowly, but surely, make you question what is happening as things for our lead, Seth, go from weird to you verbally saying “What the f***?”
Confessional has a sense of intimacy which allows each character to personally unfurl to you and deepen the mystery and reveal of the truth.
Shazam! borrows from what you expect from Marvel, adds a touch of Deadpool, but then reminds you DC us the big brother Marvel has long borrowed from.
Us, at first, circumvents a lot of what you expect from a horror/thriller. However, after a while, it overstays it’s welcome and its ending? Well…
While Burn Out has exhilarating races, which may give you a tad bit of anxiety, everything else is very run of the mill.
When The Yogurt Took Over is a bit of an anomaly since it doesn’t feature love, robots, and arguably no death. So, is it good?
Sucker of Souls is quite gory and a tad bit comical. However, it is towards the bottom of the Love, Death & Robots ranking.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.