Skip to main content

TV Show Review: Paper Girls (2022 - Amazon Prime)

Paper Girls One Sheet

If ever there was a show that was not what I was expecting, based on the trailer, it's Paper Girls. The trailer suggests the basic plot is four pre-teen paper delivery girls from 1988 somehow, find themselves transported into the future (2019), and must find their way back with the help of at least one of their adult selves.

It's a cool idea, and the time travel aspect piqued my interest enough to see what a show, seemingly targeted at young adult girls, was all about.

While the first episode is somewhat purposefully all over the place, raising more questions with no answers in sight, once you get to the second episode... wow. This is not your basic, we gotta get back to our time, time travel plot.

If you're a fan of Science-fiction, time travel stories, or just really great character development, this show has all three in spades. It's by no means basic, or dumbed down for younger viewers. While it does present like a show for tweens, there's plenty here for older viewers to identify with as the show explores youthful  idealism crashing headlong into reality and life experience.

While I would say the character development is a very strong part of the show, the science fiction and time travel elements are not glossed over as simple plot devices. There is a whole other story going on as to why these girls time travelled, how they were able to travel, and  the people they meet along the way who know all about time travel.

I'm deliberately not spoiling anything because when certain events happen it blew my mind in a, I didn't see that coming at all, kind of way. To the point where I started to think the show just might be bonkers in a good way.

There are some online comparisons to the Netflix show, Stranger Things, but other than the four girls ride bikes and come from the eighties, that's really where the similarity ends. That show is more horror than Sci-fi (I should know I've watched every season), and this show doesn't spend enough time in the eighties to really feed the nostalgia.

My one criticism of the show is a trope that does seem like it's becoming a staple of any 'coming of age' type story for pre-teenage girls... having to deal with getting your first period. While I'm not at all squeamish or grossed out by such scenes or talking about it, I kind of wonder if girls of this age are actually as clueless about it as these four that they needed to spend so much time on it (spanning two episodes and several scenes)? I'm not saying leave it out but the show did spend a lot of time, on resolving one of the girls getting their first period and what to do about it.

That aside, the four main cast members all give great, believable performances, that really do get you invested in each of their individual story arcs. I'm equally as interested in all of them as I am with finding out the mechanics of all the time travel stuff going on around them.

It feels like no one is really talking about this show because its trailer really under sells it to the wider audience (like me) who aren't aware of the comic book series it's based upon. It easily looks like a show for young adults, specifically female young adults, however there's plenty to give it a wider appeal to a much broader audience of any age and gender.

Currently there is only one season, and the full story is not resolved by the end - which isn't really a spoiler as most shows rarely are resolved by the end of the first season. I just hope it gets a second season (at least) because it really deserves to. I mean Ali Wong alone is doing some of her best dramatic acting in this and she doesn't particularly stand out because everyone is equally as good.

Definitely worth checking out.


Comments

Buy Gifts and Apparel featuring art by TET.

Popular posts from this blog

Movie Review: A Complete Unknown (2024) *No Spoilers*

Y ou would think the Bob Dylan story would be 'wind-swept and interesting,' to quote Billy Connelly, however, despite  A Complete Unknown  being quite an engaging film, it feels like it missed the years that really shaped him as a song writer/performer. The film starts in 1961, with a then unknown, 19-year-old Bob Dylan (Timothée Chalamet) arriving in New York City with his guitar.  From there he forges relationships with musical icons on his meteoric rise, culminating in a groundbreaking performance that reverberates around the world. The problem being, according to this film, Dylan arrived in New York, for the most part, fully formed as a folk singer/song writer. In virtually no time he makes a very important connection that puts him on the trajectory of doing the work and becoming a name, before making his world changing performance. While there is some drama behind the scenes with his various relationships, none of it is particularly unique to any number of up and com...

TV Series Review: Humans (2015-2018, 3 Seasons) *No Spoilers*

Colin Morgan, Katherine Parkinson, Ivanno Jeremiah, Gemma Chan, and Emily Berrington in Humans (2015) W hile it may seem late to be reviewing Humans now, nearly seven years after the show wrapped, the only thing that's really aged about it is the opening titles... and even then, not that much. I think I caught the first season on Netflix back in 2015, and then kind of dropped off waiting for a new season to appear. As of writing this, all three seasons are on Amazon Prime. Humans is set in a parallel world that looks much like ours except humanoid robot helpers, that look just like real humans, called 'Synths', are now common place. Season one begins at the point where the first synths go from being subservient machines to gaining consciousness, and explores not only how humanity reacts to that but how the synths react to humanity's perceptions as well. Initially it follows a group of OG synths, already given consciousness by their creator, and just trying to survive i...

I'm Confused About Why People Prefer to Say Discombobulated?

D iscombobulated. Is a word that I think someone rediscovered about three or four years ago (maybe more because the pandemic years have thrown out my sense of time) and now I hear it a lot. It's not a new word by any means, but when I started hearing multiple celebrities using it in everyday sentences, I actively had to look up what it meant. Define it with as many synonyms as you like but essentially it's just another word meaning 'confused'. Seinfeld Quotes: Quotes.net The words are pretty much interchangeable. He was discombobulated by too many choices. He was confused by too many choices.  My confusion is the length of the word. It's unnecessarily long with too many syllables. There are many other words that mean confused, and therefore also mean discombobulated. Most of them are shorter and easier to say. So why not just say 'confused'? Perhaps discombobulated sounds more intelligent, maybe?  Hawaii Five-0 Quotes: Quotes.net I've noticed it gets us...

Australian Federal Election 2025 - World's Most Boring Government Re-elected by Landside - We're Even More Fine!

Anthony Albanese Victory by ChatGPT and TET. W hen I started writing about the 2025 Federal election the polls were suggesting the world's most boring government was crusing to a defeat . As it turns out, boring is good, and Australia wants more of it, handing the current government a landslide win with a majority vote. Anthony Albanese became the first PM since John Howard to win a consecutive term, and the first Labor PM since Bob Hawke to do so. Some of that comes down to the leadership revolving door both major parties had through the mid 2000s. Although Anthony is my preferred PM over Dutton the irony is Dutton sounds more like a leader with a fairly commanding voice and an ability to speak well, without sounding like he's waffling and dodging questions, even if he is. Anthony, on the other hand, does have the ability (and speech writer) to say a lot of inspiring things but it gets lost in the delivery. He doesn't seem to know when to emphasise a point for effect. In h...

Movie Review: Captain America: Brave New World (2025) *No Spoilers*

I  decided not see Captain America: Brave New World in a cinema because everything I heard about the film pointed to a disjointed mess, from testing poorly, to whole characters being added in during reshoots. The trailers looked okay but, since they featured Red Hulk, quite a bit, it felt like there wasn't much left as a drawcard for seeing the film in a cinema. Having now seen the film on Disney+ I feel it was a good decision. While the big budget effects no doubt would've looked better on a big screen, the story wasn't particularly complex or intriguing enough to make the film stand out. If anything, it's a straight forward action movie with a hero who is just kind of... there. The story revolves around a plot to kill the newly elected US President, former General Thaddeus Ross (Harrison Ford). Captain America (Anthony Mackie) must find who is the real mastermind in order to clear his friend and the original Super Solider, Isaiah Bradley's (Carl Lumbly), name. I...

Now More Than Ever It's Important Not To Take Things At Face Value - AI Scams Are Very Real

This image is a totally legit photo of me on the moon trying to sell you a bridge.* Photo by Artflow, Copilot, and TET  S cam's are nothing new but, as technology makes everything easier, it's also making it easier for you to be scammed by something that seems very legit. Things that used to indicate something was on the level can very easily be faked by generative AI in a practice known as 'deep faking'. Where a person's likeness (image and voice) is used to generate video of them doing or saying something they didn't. As one of the best examples of what's currently possible, YouTube Channel floydbishop , has made a PSA video titled,  Watch This Fake AI Video Scam — Then Show It to Your Parents , that is 100% AI generated... i.e. it's ALL fake. Not a single human appears on camera, and not a single human voice is heard. Watch the video below. If you watch closely, some scenes have small 'tells' that are common AI errors, such as items magically ...

Second Sunday Skateboard Session Episode 6, 7, and 8 - Shuv-its On Lock (Pretty Much)

TET - Heel Flip attempt Episode 8. A s I near the end of filming my ten part series, Second Sundy Skateboard Sessions, I'm feeling pretty good about my skating generally. Filming the series has given me a focus, schedule, and a goal, so that when I do skate I'm not randomly riding around doing not much... and getting bored, or just half arsing attempting to learn my tricks. If you're a solo skater like me - especially if you're learning or relearning - I'd recommend this approach. Even filming your progress. Though you don't have to publicly bore the internet like me if you've got the same 'resting lack of enthusiasm' demeanor I have. Just having the video footage to compare, and to watch in slow mo to see what you're doing wrong or right is useful.  If you're not familiar with me or my ten part series of Second Sunday Skateboard sessions , I'm attempting to master all seven basic skateboarding tricks in Braille Skateboarding's Skateb...