Culture Cinema & Tv Show reviews

Strange Planet

Strange Planet | Show review

Strange Planet is perhaps about the most universally relatable piece of content yet to be released to a Western audience. It is built with that particular intention: every element is expressly designed to resonate with human behaviours, however sensical or nonsensical they may be. 

A near-direct lift from American author and illustrator Nathan Pyle’s comic strips of the same name, this series, from Rick and Morty’s creator Dan Harmon, consists of pithy standalone 20-minute episodes. Adult cartoons (though this is largely family friendly in terms of content, a lot of references might whizz over the head of a younger viewer) are of course increasingly prevalent nowadays, and are an ideal medium for this sort of project. There are no stunning – or even particularly engaging – visuals on show here, but each little story has its own charm, focusing on and parodying different curious human and societal behaviours. All manner of things are rephrased as entirely literal alternatives (tanning becomes “damage from our nearest star”, birthday is “emergence day”), and this is primarily where the humour and entertainment value lies. 

The characters, as in the comic strips, are nondescript, blue and largely ungendered beings (some visual stereotypes, but they/them pronouns all round) – essentially a blank vessel for the parody of human activity. They tend to be archetypes of the distinctive characters encountered both in life and (in exaggerated form) in film and TV. This works very effectively for its purpose, but it does make for a slightly bland aesthetic experience. 

Strange Planet is an eminently watchable series: essentially light television and without a linear overarching narrative that needs to be clung to, it presents as an extremely gentle, subtly amusing and overtly intriguing mockery of the so very familiar human experience. 

Will Snell

Strange Planet is released on Apple TV+ on 9th August 2023.

Watch the trailer for Strange Planet here:

More in Shows

Thunderbolts

Mae Trumata

British filmmaker Molly Manning Walker to lead Un Certain Regard Jury at 2025 Cannes Film Festival

The editorial unit

Prime Video sets May 2025 premiere for Nine Perfect Strangers season two with new cast and Austrian Alps setting

The editorial unit

New horror-thriller Weapons set for UK cinema release in August 2025

The editorial unit

“He’s stuck in between two chapters of his life”: Jan-Ole Gerster on Islands

Selina Sondermann

Parthenope

Mark Worgan

Another Simple Favour

Antonia Georgiou

“Every time I work with Gareth, I learn more about storytelling through action and action through storytelling”: Jude Poyer on Havoc

Mae Trumata

“I link the character’s body to my own so I can feel their pain”: Emilie Blichfeldt on The Ugly Stepsister

Selina Sondermann