Do you have a video playback issues?
Please disable AdBlocker in your browser for our website.
Due to a high volume of active users and service overload, we had to decrease the quality of video streaming. Premium users remains with the highest video quality available. Sorry for the inconvinience it may cause. Donate to keep project running.
V returns in its' season two following the debacles that fill the planet in the wake of arriving these UFOs there. In the opening we see the entire world in a real danger when Anna settles on her choice to release Red Sky. Meanwhile, there is a reprisal in its way to her, Chad, looking for reclamation for being utilized by her.
Yves Simoneau, David Barrett, Bryan Spicer, Frederick E.O. Toye, Dean White, Jonathan Frakes, Robert Duncan McNeill, Bobby Roth, John Behring, Ralph Hemecker, Steve Shill, Jesse Warn, Jeff Woolnough
If this alien-adventure melodrama were any more cartoonish, you might expect the Road Runner to "Beep Beep!" behind the evil Anna the next time she's foiled.
If you relish the prospect of Elizabeth Mitchell kicking ass and Morena Baccarin being ridiculously inappropriate, with the occasional moment of squickiness or splodiness thrown in for good measure, then you'll want to make a date with V.
Do we care? Well, not really. The groan-worthy dialogue, usually spoken in a monotone by alien and human alike, is rarely credible and lacks the kind of self-aware irony that might make this enjoyable.
Worse is evil lizard leader Anna and her war on emotion that turns into a literal soul-sucking crusade that rivals the plot of Star Trek V as one of the silliest sci-fi plots of all time.
To me, this was V's finest hour: A twistedly funny, fast-paced good time, which simultaneously gave me what I want and snatched all my hopes and dreams out from under me.