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Inspired by her profound will of uncovering the truth behind the mysterious vanishing of her sweetheart, Lily Chan, a youthful brilliant engineer works at a notable organization, investigates on the advancement of computers in the organization that she thinks to be liable for his disappearance.
Devs is also downright gorgeous to look at, alternately vibrant and stark, earthy and modernistic, and jam-packed with striking imagery that sears right into your brain.
"Devs" is a cerebral pleasure that gets very philosophical and presses its brainy atmosphere with lots of ponderous soundtrack music and deadpan acting.
Devs is groovy, quietcore sci-fi that hums with humanity, and at only eight-episodes it seems to be adequately paced, with little room to fail or flail.
The deliberately unbalanced feel of it might be off-putting... But I assure you, don't back off or you'll miss what is, for all of its aesthetically mesmerizing chill, a pretty damn engrossing modern horror story.
The show is what it wants to be, but what it wants to be put me in mind of the big whiffs of the immediate post-Sopranos era, a hefty, pretentious, high-profile exercise in trying to make you Google de Broglie-Bohm theory.
Garland uses his time wisely, and his beautiful vision of a ghastly future is undeniably insightful. Some of its ideas may not be welcome - they sure as shit aren't comforting - but "Devs" sticks with you, whether you want it to or not.