Siglo 26, la humanidad se ve amenazada ante un conjunto de alienígenas denominado "El Covenant". Serie basada en el aclamado videojuego Halo y su protagonista, el spartan John 117(Jefe maest... Leer todoSiglo 26, la humanidad se ve amenazada ante un conjunto de alienígenas denominado "El Covenant". Serie basada en el aclamado videojuego Halo y su protagonista, el spartan John 117(Jefe maestro).Siglo 26, la humanidad se ve amenazada ante un conjunto de alienígenas denominado "El Covenant". Serie basada en el aclamado videojuego Halo y su protagonista, el spartan John 117(Jefe maestro).
- Premios
- 6 premios ganados y 3 nominaciones en total
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Resumen
Reviewers say 'Halo' has noteable action, character development, and visual effects. Positive reviews praise the show's potential, engaging storylines, and impressive CGI. Criticisms often target deviations from the original game lore, character portrayals, and pacing issues. Some appreciate the unique narrative, while others feel it misses the games' essence. Master Chief's portrayal, especially his helmet removal, sparks frequent debate. Despite flaws, many acknowledge strong action sequences and visual fidelity, resulting in a divided audience response.
Opiniones destacadas
Having played the games and loving the scifi of it, I was really looking forward to the Halo TV show.
Season 1 took some getting use to, Season 2 is a whole lot better. I understand and respect Master Chief taking his helmet off to show the human perspective and emotional depth of the Spartan. It has grown on me an I like it!
The actors do a phenomenal job of portraying these (super) soldiers, and I love the powerhouse moments of Master Chief both in and out of his suit. Halsey Is also a beautiful gem in the series.
Does it need to be exactly the same as the games?
No not in my opinion, it is still Halo trough and trough.
This Halo Universe has a lot of material and so many stories to tell. It can't be easy to make with many CGI components and the actors physical routines are demanding, but they are doing it! Keep it up!
Season 2 is a whole lot stronger, and I pray we have more Seasons to come.
Season 1 took some getting use to, Season 2 is a whole lot better. I understand and respect Master Chief taking his helmet off to show the human perspective and emotional depth of the Spartan. It has grown on me an I like it!
The actors do a phenomenal job of portraying these (super) soldiers, and I love the powerhouse moments of Master Chief both in and out of his suit. Halsey Is also a beautiful gem in the series.
Does it need to be exactly the same as the games?
No not in my opinion, it is still Halo trough and trough.
This Halo Universe has a lot of material and so many stories to tell. It can't be easy to make with many CGI components and the actors physical routines are demanding, but they are doing it! Keep it up!
Season 2 is a whole lot stronger, and I pray we have more Seasons to come.
I never played the Halo games so I didn't really know what to expect but I have to say I really liked it. First off, Pablo Schreiber is such an underrated actor and does an excellent job in almost everything he does and he's great as the lead here. It seems that most of the people who don't like it is because it's not exactly like the video game. These shows need to be adapted for tv so there going to be a little different. Most people don't read the source material and don't care but I guess some of the ones who do know it do mind. As long as it's entertaining I've never cared if they change it up a little. This story is well written, the acting is good, and there's plenty of action and drama to keep you interested throughout the series. I absolutely recommend this to anyone who's a fan of sci-fi or action.
I love "Halo". I find it entertaining, well made in most aspects. As someone said, Pablo Schreiber is greatly underrated and I think that's owed to his masculine hero image, but he can act, I can tell you that. Ironically, even for a character that's supposed to be a silent super-soldier devoid of our "weaknesses", just following orders supposedly -- Schreiber's Master Chief is both a joy and enigma to watch. His mannerisms are on point and he's able to communicate a lot of confliction and other feelings just with his face. Great casting there! The other Spartans are well-cast too. Natasha Culzac starts a bit in the shadows but there's an episode in the second season where she is given enough to show her range as an actress, and her performance had me in awe. Kate Kennedy is consistently captivating on screen, it seems the more she's given to work with the better the scene with her in it. Natasha McElhone is, in some scenes, in a league of her own, which befits an actress of her renomé. But it's a compliment to Halo that the rest of the cast isn't far behind in terms of acting prowess, the show's so much better for it.
Halo doesn't fumble on the CGI. The Covenant are done masterfully, it's all really impressive, at least for a TV show. It's also done with finesse. When plasma bolts are flying, I have to say I am not getting tired of it. All the better stuff's not blown up all the time, the show has commendable pacing switching between meaningful engaging conversations and the rare battle which too seems to be put in the right place.
On a rare occasion, I feel Halo falls into cookie cutter villain territory, but it recovers quickly enough as the more complex elements of the plot are woven back in and get back into front seat.
I find the plot to be complex enough to be thoroughly entertaining.
Halo is a package. You may not vibe with all of it all the time, but it's been long I've had such a pleasure watching a TV show. There's marvelous, ingenous sci-fi out there, and while Halo could be better, I think it deserves my score. It had a tall order to fill -- please the gaming fan base and what not -- but it won't be forgotten by me the way I forget a lot of other stuff I discover and put away.
I hope Halo has a long run on television and I can only hope the actors are given great material to show off their range. It's not often that so much of the cast is so consistenly good, even the chemistry, for the most part(!), works to the cast's advantage.
Halo doesn't fumble on the CGI. The Covenant are done masterfully, it's all really impressive, at least for a TV show. It's also done with finesse. When plasma bolts are flying, I have to say I am not getting tired of it. All the better stuff's not blown up all the time, the show has commendable pacing switching between meaningful engaging conversations and the rare battle which too seems to be put in the right place.
On a rare occasion, I feel Halo falls into cookie cutter villain territory, but it recovers quickly enough as the more complex elements of the plot are woven back in and get back into front seat.
I find the plot to be complex enough to be thoroughly entertaining.
Halo is a package. You may not vibe with all of it all the time, but it's been long I've had such a pleasure watching a TV show. There's marvelous, ingenous sci-fi out there, and while Halo could be better, I think it deserves my score. It had a tall order to fill -- please the gaming fan base and what not -- but it won't be forgotten by me the way I forget a lot of other stuff I discover and put away.
I hope Halo has a long run on television and I can only hope the actors are given great material to show off their range. It's not often that so much of the cast is so consistenly good, even the chemistry, for the most part(!), works to the cast's advantage.
I am not a Halo Game aficionado. But I watched a few Game Videos, where the cinematic parts of the games are put together.
That said, I think that what this production does is simply the only way to make a consistent SciFi show for a broader audience and not a pure fan-service.
Its decision to show us the human flesh and bone behind the Helmet, how John thinks and how he feels, how vulnerable he is when not behind his armor, how broken as a human, that is the biggest strength of the show from the first season on, and makes this a good experience. Pablo Schreiber is clearly the right choice for this part. Him always behind the Mask, always in combat, would do the show no good.
The Halo TV series can stand for its own as a beautiful, high-level/high-budget modern Space Opera, with the characters and within the world of Halo.
The show does tell a different story than the games, yes. But that is another advantage. If not, it would be just a cinematic recap.
It is, I give that to the critics, not always consistent and perfect. Season one spent too much time on some side-stories and on the new character Kwan, who is kind of annoying to many of the audience, and seems to be hated. But Kwan seems to have a special purpose in connecting the other characters and a big part of the story arc.
But season two is now focused on converging many threads. It is more densely packed and had a breathtaking episode 4, a bit too slow episode 5, in is again gaining momentum in episode 6.
Some voices here write something like "desecration", or even "heresy", as if Halo were some holy book that has to be worshiped. But it is a game with a story and not an Epos that defines mankinds' culture. Some talented people at a gaming company set it up to make it work for players, and now other talented people do the same for the screen. And they do good.
That said, I think that what this production does is simply the only way to make a consistent SciFi show for a broader audience and not a pure fan-service.
Its decision to show us the human flesh and bone behind the Helmet, how John thinks and how he feels, how vulnerable he is when not behind his armor, how broken as a human, that is the biggest strength of the show from the first season on, and makes this a good experience. Pablo Schreiber is clearly the right choice for this part. Him always behind the Mask, always in combat, would do the show no good.
The Halo TV series can stand for its own as a beautiful, high-level/high-budget modern Space Opera, with the characters and within the world of Halo.
The show does tell a different story than the games, yes. But that is another advantage. If not, it would be just a cinematic recap.
It is, I give that to the critics, not always consistent and perfect. Season one spent too much time on some side-stories and on the new character Kwan, who is kind of annoying to many of the audience, and seems to be hated. But Kwan seems to have a special purpose in connecting the other characters and a big part of the story arc.
But season two is now focused on converging many threads. It is more densely packed and had a breathtaking episode 4, a bit too slow episode 5, in is again gaining momentum in episode 6.
Some voices here write something like "desecration", or even "heresy", as if Halo were some holy book that has to be worshiped. But it is a game with a story and not an Epos that defines mankinds' culture. Some talented people at a gaming company set it up to make it work for players, and now other talented people do the same for the screen. And they do good.
It took me a few episodes before I started to really like it. I'm a hardcore Halo fan and I wanted to see something very close to what happens in the games. And this show isn't what I was expecting. It's not like the games. It's a lot that's different. I still don't understand why they didn't just make something that's close to the source material. It has a huge following and the story has a lot of ways you can expand upon some things that they didn't do in the games. A good example is The Last of Us on HBO. They definitely get it. That's how the Halo tv series should've been made. But I started to tell myself this is a different universe from the game. A different timeline. After that I started to enjoy it. The one thing they got 100% right is the look. The VFX is fantastic. It very much so looks like Halo. And it has a great sci-fi story. Just don't expect it to be like the games. Maybe if it was it might not have gotten canceled.
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¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaNatascha McElhone was originally set to voice Cortana, until Jen Taylor, who voices the character in the Halo video game series, replaced her. McElhone plays the role of Dr. Halsey only.
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h(60 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.00 : 1
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