Lore

6.669%46%6.9
Producenci seriali The Walking Dead i The X-Files przedstawiają serial Lore: Opowieści niesamowite, oparty na podcaście A. Mahnke. Serial odkrywa prawdziwe wydarzenia, które dały początek naszym najgorszym koszmarom. Poprzez połączenie dramatycznych scen, animacji, archiwów i narracji Lore wyjawia jak legendy horrorów, takie jak wampiry, wilkołaki i porywacze ciał, zakorzenione są w prawdzie.
⭐⭐⭐½ (out of 5) Lore – When fact meets fright in a dark little history lesson.
“Lore” is one of those rare hybrids that’s hard to pin down — part documentary, part horror, part historical deep dive. Maybe call it a horromentary or docorror if you like, because that’s exactly what it feels like: eerie stories told with the authority of a lecture and the atmosphere of a campfire tale.
Based on the hit podcast, Lore explores the origins of myths, legends, and superstitions — from vampires to hauntings to real-world horrors that inspired fiction. It’s educational, yes, but also unsettling in a way that sneaks up on you. The presentation walks a fine line between dramatization and narration, and somehow, it works.
It’s not all blood and screams — this is horror with a historian’s eye. The pacing is calm, the tone intelligent, and the stories linger long after the credits. You might not know exactly what category it fits into, but it’s absolutely worth the watch.
If Creepshow is campfire chaos and 50 States of Fright is folklore gone wild, Lore is their well-read cousin who shows up with receipts — and a few skeletons in the closet.
⭐⭐⭐½ (out of 5) Lore – When fact meets fright in a dark little history lesson.
“Lore” is one of those rare hybrids that’s hard to pin down — part documentary, part horror, part historical deep dive. Maybe call it a horromentary or docorror if you like, because that’s exactly what it feels like: eerie stories told with the authority of a lecture and the atmosphere of a campfire tale.
Based on the hit podcast, Lore explores the origins of myths, legends, and superstitions — from vampires to hauntings to real-world horrors that inspired fiction. It’s educational, yes, but also unsettling in a way that sneaks up on you. The presentation walks a fine line between dramatization and narration, and somehow, it works.
It’s not all blood and screams — this is horror with a historian’s eye. The pacing is calm, the tone intelligent, and the stories linger long after the credits. You might not know exactly what category it fits into, but it’s absolutely worth the watch.
If Creepshow is campfire chaos and 50 States of Fright is folklore gone wild, Lore is their well-read cousin who shows up with receipts — and a few skeletons in the closet.




















