See Season 1 - Threesixtyp -
In a streaming landscape saturated with dystopian clones, Apple TV+’s See arrived in 2019 with a premise so audacious it seemed destined to fail. A future where a virus has decimated the human race, leaving all survivors blind. Centuries later, sight is a myth, a dangerous superstition. Then, twins are born with the fabled "sense" of vision.
Furthermore, the show’s hyper-violence can feel gratuitous. Throats are slit in every episode. The argument that “violence is how the blind navigate threat” only goes so far; sometimes, it feels like shock for shock’s sake. Looking back from 2026, See Season 1 stands as a monument to a brief era when streamers took insane risks. It is not a show about disability. It is a show about perception . In our current world of algorithmic echo chambers and digital filters, we are drowning in images, yet we understand less than ever. See Season 1 - threesixtyp
The Alkenny tribe (led by the ferocious Baba Voss, played by a grunting, grieving, utterly committed Jason Momoa) doesn’t stumble through the dark. They have built a society. They read via knotted ropes. They navigate via echolocation and the vibration of spider silk. They fight with a terrifying choreography that replaces visual parries with auditory feints. In a streaming landscape saturated with dystopian clones,
The show’s sound design is its true protagonist. Every crunch of leaves, every whistle of an arrow, every whispered breath is amplified. Director Francis Lawrence ( The Hunger Games ) forces the viewer to feel blind. We are the ones disoriented when a character suddenly stops walking, listening to a threat we cannot see. Season 1’s action sequences—particularly the “waterfall fight” in Episode 3—are ballets of tension, where combat is less about looking cool and more about survival via spatial memory. The central conflict isn’t just survival; it’s theology. The Witchfinder General, Tamacti Jun (a revelatory Alfre Woodard), hunts “witches”—those suspected of seeing. In this world, sight is not a gift; it is a blasphemy. To see is to be disconnected from the collective, to be arrogant enough to believe you are above the shared darkness. Then, twins are born with the fabled "sense" of vision
On paper, it sounds like a gimmick. But watching Season 1 of See is not an exercise in disability voyeurism; it is a masterclass in sensory world-building, brutalist poetry, and a startling meditation on faith, power, and what happens when the natural order inverts.
Watch it for: The sensory sound design, Alfre Woodard’s chilling monologues, and the best fight choreography you’ll hear all year. What did you think of the Season 1 finale? Was Baba Voss right to destroy the “glasses”? Join the conversation in the comments below.
See suggests that true community might require blindness—the willingness to touch, to listen, to trust without the corrupting proof of your own eyes.
