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See
TV Series

See

2019Action, Drama, Sci-Fi • 3 Seasons

Woke Score
6
out of 10

Series Overview

In the early twenty-first century, a virus wiped out all human beings but some who survived lost their sense of sight. See takes place several centuries later, where society has found new ways to socially interact, build, hunt, and survive without vision.

Season-by-Season Breakdown

Season 1

5/10

No overview available.

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Season 2

7/10

Baba Voss is fighting to reunite his torn-apart family and get away from the war and politics that surround him, but the more he moves away, the deeper he gets sucked in, and the emergence of his nemesis brother threatens his family even more.

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Season 3

6/10

Almost a year has passed since Baba Voss defeated his nemesis brother Edo and bid farewell to his family to live remotely in the forest. But when a Trivantian scientist develops a new and devastating form of sighted weaponry that threatens the future of humanity, Baba returns to Paya in order to protect his tribe once more.

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Overall Series Review

"See" delivers a sprawling, often brutal vision of a future where humanity has lost its sight, descending into tribal warfare and entrenched superstition. The series consistently revolves around the central tension of the sighted children—an impossibility feared and violently persecuted by the established, blind order. Over three seasons, the overarching narrative centers on Baba Voss, the fiercely protective patriarch, whose primary motivation remains shielding his family from threats rooted in this societal blindness. The world-building is rich, showcasing diverse cultures built around a fundamental lack of visual input. Thematically, "See" deeply explores the conflict between objective truth and imposed dogma. The show frequently critiques blind faith, showing how religious and political leaders exploit superstition for power. A noticeable pattern emerges in the political landscape: the most ruthless and strategically dominant figures driving the major conflicts are overwhelmingly powerful and ambitious women, ranging from tyrannical queens to calculating commanders. While the primary hero, Baba Voss, embodies traditional, protective masculinity, the leverage points of power and statecraft often rest in the hands of female characters, creating a dynamic tension in leadership roles. The evolution of the series sees it wrestle with the consequences of its own premise. Early seasons focused heavily on the heretical nature of sight itself, driven by a powerful, theocratic villainy. Later installments broadened this to examine the legacy of the sighted past, which is presented as a source of dangerous, forgotten technology and past moral collapse. The final season solidified the core struggle as a full-scale war where the very nature of perception dictated survival, culminating in both acceptance (sighted children finding their place) and tragic denial (a character choosing self-blinding). In summary, "See" is a visually ambitious post-apocalyptic epic defined by visceral action and stark political maneuvering in a world without sight. It pits a warrior determined to protect his unique family against a society terrified of what they cannot understand. The series maintains a consistent focus on how fear of the unknown—personified by the sighted—drives brutal governance, all while presenting a fascinating landscape where the most consequential strategic players are often women manipulating the faith of the masses.

Categorical Breakdown

Identity Politics4/10

Oikophobia6.7/10

Feminism6/10

LGBTQ+4.7/10

Anti-Theism8.3/10