Alberto Mielgo, who won an Oscar this year for his animated short “The Windshield Wiper,” delivers the most frenetic and nightmarish episode of Volume 3. Like Volume 2, this batch of Love, Death & Robots episodes saved its best for last. And as with my reviews of Volume 1 and Volume 2, I’ve also noted whether each segment actually features love, death, and/or robots - so you can focus on the episodes that actually deliver on your favorite part of the show’s three-pronged title. I’ve ranked all nine segments, below, starting with the worst and ending with the best. The fun of an anthology series like Love, Death & Robots is queuing up an episode with no idea of what it’s going to be about, or even what it will look like - and while some segments in Volume 3 tower above the others, each one is worth checking out, if only for the novelty of it. As with last year’s much-improved Volume 2, this new crop of nine episodes - some as short as 7 minutes, some as long as 21 - largely does an admirable job of serving up the show’s signature, eclectic blend of sci-fi, horror, and comedy (and, more often than not, throws in at least a few buckets of gore). Photo-Illustration: VulturePhotos Courtesy of NetflixĪlmost exactly three years after the series originally premiered, the third volume of Netflix’s animated anthology series Love, Death & Robots is back to deliver … well, all three things it promises in the title.
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