There seems to be more ambiguity in the girl who survived a serious heart transplant. When she survived a heart transplant, things seemed to be going in a mysterious twist, consumed by the mystery surrounding the heart that saved her life. This girl is trying to come close to revealing the fact of the sudden death of her donor. Although she is looking for the truth, she only begins to deal with the characteristics of the deceased and some of them are very evil.
This bingeable teenage fever dream is never less than entirely creepy - like a ghost story that sounds absurd as you are taking it in but still keeps you awake half the night.
Chambers' terrifying narrative about loss, grief, and trauma spins us into a horrifying whirl of monsters and madness, it also highlights the dangers of family secrets.
The ingredients are there for a loopy body-horror freakout, but this series' pulse stays damnably faint, even when it should be sending yours through the roof.
Even as the series foregrounds ideas of racial and cultural erasure and forced assimilation, it struggles to turn them into the compelling, propulsive narrative they deserve.
This turned out to be an efficient little horror series with a Carrie-esque setting, a strange and loveless high school in the middle of a blood-red landscape.
We're still waiting for an answer to the mystery; we're still waiting for a reason to invest in these people or this story; we're still just waiting, and in a post-"Gypsy" era, who has time for that?