1899 Movierulz | Watch 1899 Web Series Review in 4movierulz

1899 movierulz

1899 Movierulz: ‘DARK’ is a sensation in the history of world TV and web series. It is said to be one of the best web series of all time. ‘Dark’ has got such a good name because it adds thrilling elements to the time travel genre and tells a complex story in a comprehensible way. When Janje Freese and Baran Boo Oodar, the creators of this web series, announced a new web series called ‘1899’, the expectations for it increased. The series is now streaming on Netflix. And did ‘1899’ meet those expectations?

1899 Story: The ship ‘Kerberos’ leaves London for New York. There will be a total of 1612 people including the captain and crew in that ship. Four months before the departure of Kerberos, the ship ‘Prometheus’ disappears en route. After traveling for years, the Kerberos ship receives a signal from an unknown ship. A closer look reveals that it is Prometheus. But the signals stop when Kerberos approaches Prometheus. 

The captain (Andreas Peichmann) goes aboard some Prometheus. There they find only one little boy. The boy has a triangle. He is brought to Kerberos. The captain receives orders from his company to sink the ‘Prometheus’. But the captain decides to ignore them and take Prometheus back to London. Since then, strange things happen on the ship. Why is that happening? Who is behind them? To know, you have to watch this series which is streaming on Netflix.

1899 Analysis: Telling a simple story into a complicated one is a great art. After the completion of the eight episodes in this series, if we turn off the TV and calmly sit in the chair and think ‘what is the story in this?’ Its writers Janje Frese and Baran Boo Oodar have been 100 percent successful in making it complicated and engaging the audience as well. 

1899/Netflix

Baran Boo Oodare is also the director of the eight epipods of this series. This is not a series that can be easily understood when we start a series on TV and watch it while we are looking at our phones and doing other things. When we want to watch this series, we can enjoy it only if we put the phone aside and give our full attention. As mentioned above, if we look in the middle, we stop in the middle because we don’t understand anything.

The first episode of this series starts off very simply. A ship, the passengers on board, slowly peel back the curtain, introducing their different backgrounds. But the reappearance of the missing ship, only to find a boy on board, slowly takes interest in the series. The graph of the series, which has grown slowly in the first four episodes, suddenly rises from the fifth episode. 

From there, it takes your breath away with unexpected twists, turns, and supernatural elements. The characters behave according to the situations and scenes which are written without any standard template like hero, heroine, and villain.

But here and there in the first four episodes, the story moves a little slowly. Some unnecessary characters were also given more scenes and screen space. And while the series finale is a perfect lead-in to the second season, it feels a bit unsatisfying that the nature of the key characters hasn’t been revealed yet. The highlight is the final scene that shocks again, keeping up with the audience’s imagination of what the end of the season might be like after seven episodes.

1899/Netflix

Technically this series is also amazing. Especially the background score is unique. Care has been taken to keep the dark shades fresh here and there. Along with the music, the cinematography and set work are also amazing. The 1899 ship is set in a magnificent setting. It was shown so naturally.

As for the cast… the main character for this season is Mara Franklin played by Emily Beecham. She fits the role well. It has cultivated the necessary emotions in different scenes. After him, the most important character is the boy found on the ship. Flynn Edwards played the role well. Andreas Peichmann, who played the middle-aged Jonas Kahnwald in Dark, impresses as the ship’s captain. All others have done justice to their roles.

Overall… This is a web series that should be watched rather than a time pass. If you give it an eight-episode run time, 1899 has a lot of surprises in store for you.


Episode-wise rating:

1. The Ship – 3.5/5

2. The Boy – 3/5

3. The Fog – 2.75/5

4. The Fight – 3/5

5. The Calling – 3.5/5

6. The Pyramid – 3.5/5

7. The Storm – 3.75/5

8. The Key – 3.25/5

1899 – An exclusive clip reveals the release date of the Netflix series from the creators of Dark

1899/Netflix

An exclusive clip released at Netflix Tudum revealed the release date of the most mysterious project coming to the platform.

Among the most anticipated projects of the next autumn television season, there is certainly 1899, a thriller series by the creators of the cult Dark, Jantje Friese, and Baran Bo Odar. Fans were able to get a first look at the show thanks to the teaser trailer released by Netflix in recent months. Yesterday – during the Netflix Tudum – an exclusive clip was also shared, in which the cast reveals the expected release date of 1899: November 17th.


1899 – plot and cast of the Netflix thriller series

A group of migrants leaves London for New York. Coming from different nations, the passengers of the ship bound for the New Continent are united by hope for the future and the new century. Their journey, however, will soon turn into a nightmare, which will begin with the discovery of a boat adrift. The eight episodes that make up the first season were shot entirely in English and – according to the first rumors – the first episode will be entitled, in fact, The Ship. 

The cast – as well as the lead group of characters – is incredibly multicultural: Emily Beecham, Lucas Lynggard Tonnesen, Miguel Bernardeau, Andreas Pietschmann, Mathilde Ollivier, Maciej Musial, and Alexandre Wilaume. Beecham – recently seen in The Pursuit of Love – Chasing love and live-action Cruella – will have a central role in the story, which will at the same time maintain a strongly “choral” nature and who will take the right time and space to explore the past and the character of each individual character.

Speaking of the reasons behind the decision to start the series, Friese and bo Odar said: “What struck us about the idea was the fact that we had a truly European show with a mixed cast and from different territories. At its core is the question of what unites and divides us as a people and how fear can trigger precisely these divisions “. According to Said Kelly Luegenbiehl – head of the original content division of Netflix Europe – the series is completely different from Dark but maintains its complexity and added that probably the collaboration between the authors and Netflix is ​​destined to continue.

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