Mara Kint goes through a personal tragedy that affects her life and causes her many psychological problems that seem very tired. After that, Lara becomes a university professor and tries to deal with psychologically missing people because she is an expert in human behavior.
Matt Earl Beesley, Jaume Collet-Serra, Kenneth Fink, Michael Katleman, Melanie Mayron, P.J. Pesce, John F. Showalter, Wendey Stanzler, Daisy von Scherler Mayer, Dawn Wilkinson
Reverie is brightly colored and nicely designed when it's tripping. But it's also all over the place, and probably not worth the overall trouble of trying to grasp.
This new drama offers the none-too-subtle message of "Get off your phones and take in the world around you." Wait a sec. I got a text. Where was I? Oh, yeah. Reality: let's embrace it.
Audiences have gotten familiar with this kind of cautionary yarn, where technology offers a lonely simulacrum of human contact. But Reverie's pilot turns the idea toward optimism and earnest schmaltz - with extremely dull results.
It's not clear where Reverie will head next, but that uncertainty is part of the fun, and we're willing to go on this journey of endless possibilities as long as the show can keep the creativity coming.