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5.1
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Showing 12 User Reviews
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Feb 14, 2026
4
I couldn’t get through the first 30 minutes of this—awkward and implausible. It’s OK to aim for over the top surrealism and irony but you also need gravity and suspense. This show doesn’t have either. An excruciating watch.
Dec 7, 2025
3
It didn't seem bad at first, but certain situations seemed a bit unbelievable even within the context of the story. Also, I didn't like the main characters, especially the two "teenagers" who I found extremely annoying.
Oct 21, 2025
8
What is the song called in episode 5 when Laura and Alex are together and Laura has Alex crawl to her. Cannot locate it on the soundtrack. Great show full of lots of twists and turns.
Sep 28, 2025
1
They deleted my first review so I have to write another one to save people the time wasted on this garbage. That one point is for Tony Collett. She steals any scene she is in. The question is, why is she in this?
Oct 8, 2025
0
Couldn't get passed the first episode. The acting and characters are all terrible.
Oct 6, 2025
1
One point for Collette, reliable as ever. The rest is unwatchable garbage that attempts thrills but comes off as a stack of ludicrous cliches.
Oct 1, 2025
5
Impossibly introverted and suffocatingly convoluted, this has ''Toronto'' written all over it. (Been there, done that, came back.)
Read Timothy Findlay's classic ''Headhunters'' to understand why and how. I doubt Vancouver has any answers, though!
Sep 30, 2025
5
Wayward has all the ingredients to hook viewers: an unsettling mystery, a dark atmosphere, and a strong cast led by the brilliant Toni Collette, who once again proves she can carry any story on her own. The series knows how to build atmosphere and interesting characters, drawing you in from the very first **** problem comes when the plot, which initially promises tension and surprising twists, stretches longer than necessary. The sense that the story was extended to fill eight hours is clear, and that takes away some of the intensity. Still, the narrative keeps the audience engaged thanks to its charismatic cast and suspense that, while uneven, delivers at key moments.Visually, the production shows great care, and the strange community setting recalls psychological thrillers like The Wicker Man or even Stranger Things, though without the same **** the end, Wayward is an effective thriller, with clear strengths in acting and atmosphere, but weighed down by excessive length. A show worth watching, but one that could have been much more with a tighter approach.
Sep 28, 2025
1
This is not entertainment . It is an appallingly naff attempt at normalising a toxic ideological agenda dressed up as -- frighteningly flat, bad --entertainment. Lame and boorish and extremist trash. Should have never been produced in the first place.
Sep 28, 2025
8
How would i describe this show in Couple words Cult, Drama, Plot Twist, Realistic, What i love about this show is how faces Truth of Modern Society when it comes to being a Parent, that truth being how Parents can broken people who make broken children by having kids, and as result of that, it leads to cycle, where the same thing happens over and over again in show there is no blame or hatred towards people who are broken, just people who show understanding towards that and want to fix it, of course the methods are...... quite force full, it works at cost but that what i love about dymanic of this show you see people trying to fix this broken cycle, but the people-children in this show fight against that, struggle of humanity what it means to be human more specifically a Teenager/Kid
Sep 27, 2025
0
Some of the worst acting and dialogue of anything I’ve ever seen in my life. Totally unwatchable hot garbage. Atrocious and the tone of the show makes no sense. A waste of time and frankly shockingly bad.
Sep 26, 2025
8
"Wayward" is the kind of series that lures you in with its postcard-perfect setting before pulling back the curtain to reveal something much darker underneath. Created by Mae Martin, this Canadian-British limited series aims to expose the troubled teen industry’s sinister underbelly while weaving together a web of generational grief, manipulation, and buried secrets. At its center are two teen slackers, Leile (Alyvia Alyn Lind) and Abbie (Sydney Topliffe), whose rebellion masks deeper wounds. Still reeling from the loss of a sibling, Leile clings desperately to Abbie, dragging her best friend into her spiral of grief and recklessness. Their dynamic captures the restless energy of youth, though the series never fully explores their inner lives beyond the archetypes of “angsty teens with too much to lose.” On the other side of town, police officer Alex Dempsey (Martin) and his pregnant wife Laura (Sarah Gadon) arrive in Tall Pines hoping for tranquility, only to discover that their picturesque new home harbors layers of rot. The supposedly restorative Tall Pines Academy becomes the series’ epicenter, presided over by Evelyn Wade (Toni Collette), a chillingly charismatic headmistress with Svengali-like control over her students. Collette’s work here recalls her unforgettable turns in Hereditary and The Sixth Sense, characters defined by their fragility teetering on the edge of mania, whose every whisper and glare carries menace. As Evelyn Wade, she embodies the kind of authority that feels at once maternal and predatory. It’s a performance rooted in psychological complexity, where manipulation hides under warmth, and devotion masks something darker. She dominates nearly every scene she’s in, elevating the material and reminding us of her rare ability to balance terror with humanity. Thematically, Wayward swings for big ideas: how vulnerable teens become pawns in industries designed to “fix” them, how grief and ambition warp into control, and how entire communities collude in keeping ugly truths buried. At its best, the series captures this uneasy duality, the serene façade of Tall Pines contrasted with its sinister indoctrination tactics. And stylistically, the show gives off an undeniable Twin Peaks vibe: idyllic small-town trappings, eccentric characters, surreal flourishes, and a creeping sense that reality itself is unreliable. That atmosphere keeps the audience uneasy, even when the plot falters. Yet for all its ambition, the eight-part series doesn’t always land its punches. The pacing can be uneven, bogged down by melodrama in some stretches while rushing past potentially richer character moments in others. Martin’s passion as showrunner, writer, and star is undeniable, but Wayward sometimes feels like it’s juggling too many perspectives at once. The teen arcs, while compelling in setup, too often serve as pieces orbiting Wade’s dominating presence rather than fully realized stories in their own right. Still, the show benefits from very strong performances across the board. Lind and Topliffe bring a raw edge to Leile and Abbie’s fraught friendship, and Gadon lends quiet gravitas to Laura, grounding the series’ more surreal flourishes. But it’s Collette who elevates Wayward from standard Netflix thriller to something more unsettling, embodying the seductive pull and hidden cruelty of systems that claim to “save” while slowly destroying. In the end, "Wayward" is both sinister and suspenseful, a series with a compelling premise, excellent performances, and thematic ambition, but one that falters in coherence and emotional depth. It may not redefine the genre, but for viewers drawn to stories about power, control, and the thin line between guidance and manipulation, it offers enough intrigue to warrant a watch.