

- Shaydeknight9 de abril de 2026The first achievement of Legion is performance. Dan Stevens carries an extraordinarily unstable protagonist without becoming a parody. The role requires charm, menace, vulnerability, and desperation, often within the same scene. He makes the fragmentation readable. Around him, the casting is unusually sharp. Aubrey Plaza is absolutely insane. She's unrestrained and unsettling. Amber Midthunder offers a youthful element to contrast the irrepressible Bill Irwin, who balances eccentricity with warmth. Jemaine Clement, the object of many a nerd's worship, goes for broke and dives into theatrical absurdity, while Jean Smart plays against expectation with controlled authority. The ensemble gives the show permission to be strange without collapsing into parody. Together, the amount of raw talent is fnatastic to see. Conceptually, the series is closer to a surrealist adaptation than a conventional superhero drama. It often feels like a hypothetical where Neil Gaiman was handed a Marvel property and the result was filmed with minimal compromise. The storytelling privileges mood, symbol, and psychological reflection over plot clarity. This works best in season one, where the ambiguity serves the plot structure. The final episode of that season shifts the emotional ground in a way that feels punitive rather than revelatory. I hated it, it felt like a betrayal. That tonal decision drained momentum for me, making season two far too diffuse, predicated upon a plot line I simply didn't care for. Season three recovers some focus and at least lands on a coherent ending, but the intensity and discipline of the first season never return. The visual language is distinctive. The "cassette futurism" aesthetic suits the story, creating a world that feels displaced in time and therefore psychologically unstable. Season one uses it as texture. Season two foregrounds it to the point of distraction. Even so, the design consistently supports the theme that reality is about twelve degrees off of where it should be. The influence of Bill Sienkiewicz (Legion is his character, after all) is visible in the willingness to treat the frame as a collage of styles rather than a stable space. Noah Hawley translates that visual chaos into television form with surprising discipline, especially early on. Music is handled with unusual care. Tracks aren't decorative. They anchor memory, identity, or delusion, and the show often stages entire sequences around them. This reverent use of music helps unify episodes that might otherwise feel fragmented. Special effects follow the same principle. Modest budgets are used intelligently, favouring suggestion over spectacle. The result is restrained but effective, more psychological than explosive, though many scenes are indeed visually stunning. In sum, the series begins as one of the most daring superhero adaptations made for television. It privileges concept, performance, and atmosphere over conventional plotting. After a striking first season, structural choices undermined enjoyment of the story for me, making later seasons struggle to justify their own abstraction. The ending is decent and thematically consistent, but the journey is uneven. Even so, the ambition remains notable, and at its best the show demonstrates how far a comic adaptation can push into experimental territory without losing its core.
- Qu4rta29 de janeiro de 2026This is the best comic adaptation you'll ever see to date. We have some other great series, but Legion is the best. Great acting by some great actors, amazing storytelling that makes everything fits, the way I've ever imagined how a telepath would fight or use their powers (not that stuff from the movies). It's a must watch for every comic/superhero fan, you won't regret.
- CravanThePugilist5 de novembro de 2025Maybe a 4.5... idk, I'd have to rewatch it. I remember not being entirely satisfied with Farouk as the villain in the final season... everything got a bit wacky by then. & I usually love wacky. & some of the wacky was really cool & creative. I SAID IDK I NEED TO WATCH IT ALL AGAIN
- Antonio22 de abril de 2025Simply put: It was confusing in the beginning and confusing at times here and there, but the longer you go, the more you understand. Amazing show. Great story. A lot of fun to watch and experience. Great cast and solid performances from everyone. Hands down, one of MY favorite marvel shows out of them all. Nothing like anything else they've put out. Give it a chance if you're on the fence about it, and absolutely see it through.
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Legiãotem 3temporadas
Legiãotem 27episódios
Os caracteres-chave em Legião são David Haller / Legion (Dan Stevens), Sydney ‘Syd’ Barrett (Rachel Keller), Lenny Busker (Aubrey Plaza).
Legiãofoi dirigido por John Cameron, Michael Uppendahl, Noah Hawley, Tim Mielants, Dana Gonzales, Charlie McDowell, Jeremy Webb, Larysa Kondracki, Ellen Kuras, Keith Gordon, Hiro Murai, Sarah Adina Smith, Arkasha Stevenson, Dennie Gordon, Ana Lily Amirpour, Daniel Kwan, Andrew Stanton, Carlos López Estrada.
Legiãofoi produzido por Craig Yahata, Regis Kimble.
David Haller (Dan Stevens) é um rapaz diagnosticado com esquizofrenia que passou os últimos cinco anos de sua vida em um hospital. Institucionalizado mais uma vez, David se perde na rotina estruturada da vida no hospital, e passa todo o seu tempo em silêncio junto à amiga Lenny (Aubrey Plaza), uma paciente cujo vício em drogas e álcool não diminuiu em nada seu otimismo. Mas a vida de David muda com a chegada de uma nova paciente: Syd Barrett (Rachel Keller).
Legião é avaliado NR.
Legiãoé um show de Drama, Action, Ficção científica.
Legião tem uma classificação de audiência 8.5de 10.
Os episódios de Legião são 50 min duração.
Não, este show foi cancelado após 3 temporadas.





























