Bodies Doesn’t Do Its Most Heartbreaking Romance Justice

Netflix’s Bodies weaves its tangled web over eight episodes with many arcs colliding across a slew of timelines. Adapted from an out-of-print DC comic series, Bodies focuses on a corpse found in 1890, 1941, 2023 and 2053. Different detectives take up the case, not realizing the same cadaver exists in all time periods as part of some mind-bending conspiracy.It’s all part of Elias Mannix’s murderous plan, allowing him to find a portal and jump from 2023 to 1890 and begin an empire that would last for decades. Luckily, the ending of Bodies has Elias scrubbing his evil, manipulative ways to break the closed loop in what’s essentially a Bootstrap paradox. However, as the first season finishes, Bodies doesn’t properly service its most heartbreaking romance, which really detracts from the diversity and progressive edge the series promotes.Bodies has a few romances developing in the first season. But the one that gets the most screen time that forms the biggest emotional connection for fans is that between Detective Hillinghead and a photojournalist, Ashe. They begin working the case on the corpse found on the streets in 1890, although it’s clear Ashe is hiding something. Hillinghead realizes Ashe can’t reveal full details of how he found the body and why he was there at that place and time. It would compromise him as he would have to admit he ended up there after a tryst with the police commissioner’s son.How One Star Trek: Voyager Episode Almost Visited the Mirror Universe

Netflix’s Bodies weaves its tangled web over eight episodes with many arcs colliding across a slew of timelines. Adapted from an out-of-print DC comic series, Bodies focuses on a corpse found in 1890, 1941, 2023 and 2053. Different detectives take up the case, not realizing the same cadaver exists in all time periods as part of some mind-bending conspiracy.

How One Star Trek: Voyager Episode Almost Visited the Mirror Universe

It’s all part of Elias Mannix’s murderous plan, allowing him to find a portal and jump from 2023 to 1890 and begin an empire that would last for decades. Luckily, the ending of Bodies has Elias scrubbing his evil, manipulative ways to break the closed loop in what’s essentially a Bootstrap paradox. However, as the first season finishes, Bodies doesn’t properly service its most heartbreaking romance, which really detracts from the diversity and progressive edge the series promotes.

Bodies has a few romances developing in the first season. But the one that gets the most screen time that forms the biggest emotional connection for fans is that between Detective Hillinghead and a photojournalist, Ashe. They begin working the case on the corpse found on the streets in 1890, although it’s clear Ashe is hiding something. Hillinghead realizes Ashe can’t reveal full details of how he found the body and why he was there at that place and time. It would compromise him as he would have to admit he ended up there after a tryst with the police commissioner’s son.

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