
Alice in Borderland · Season 1 · Netflix
Alice in Borderland Season 1
Alice in Borderland Season 1 is a WORTH-IT, BollyMeter 7.8/10. 8 episodes on Netflix from 10 December 2020.
Updated
What BollyAI Thinks
Season 1 of Alice in Borderland earns its place through production design - an empty Tokyo rendered as genuinely disquieting rather than simply depopulated - and through its game mechanics, which are inventive enough that each encounter generates distinct strategic tension. Director Shinsuke Sato's background in commercial action cinema reads in the set pieces; this is not a drama that happens to contain violence but a thriller that constructs its violence around spatial problems. Critics noted the character work as the primary limitation: Arisu's internal journey is legible but not distinctive, and the secondary cast's motivations are underwritten compared to the game design they inhabit. The 82% score is a warm endorsement with a clear asterisk. For viewers who came for the games, Season 1 delivers. For viewers who came for the characters, Season 2 is where the show meets them.
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The Room
“Alice in Borderland delivers taut survival thriller mechanics and a genuinely eerie empty-Tokyo aesthetic that overcomes its character shortcomings.”
Rotten Tomatoes (critics consensus)
Standout Episodes
The hours worth arguing about — premieres, finales, and the turning points. BollyAI reads the room episode by episode.
- E1Episode 18.0
The premiere establishes Arisu, Karube, and Chota in their pre-Borderland lives - efficiently and without sentimentality - then drops them into an empty Shibuya with the matter-of-factness of a dream that has stopped pretending to be ordinary. The first game's spatial logic is introduced and the stakes are made permanent within the episode's running time.
The moment: Shibuya crossing empty at night - the show's founding image, which communicates its entire aesthetic contract in a single frame.
“A confident genre premiere - the world-building is immediate and the emptied-city atmosphere is genuinely unsettling.” — Rotten Tomatoes (critics consensus)