Technology

Netflix’s Masterpiece Sci-Fi Series Is Basically ’Black Mirror’s Game-Changing Twin

2025-11-27 14:22
400 views
Netflix’s Masterpiece Sci-Fi Series Is Basically ’Black Mirror’s Game-Changing Twin

Near-future Paris meets tech and love: A dating app reads minds to find your soulmate, but at what cost?

Netflix’s Masterpiece Sci-Fi Series Is Basically ’Black Mirror’s Game-Changing Twin Shot from an episode of Black Mirror Shot from an episode of Black MirrorImage via Netflix 4 By  Amanda M. Castro Published 1 minute ago

Amanda M. Castro is a Network TV writer at Collider and a journalist based in New York. Born and raised in Puerto Rico, Amanda is a bilingual Latina who graduated from the University of New Haven with a degree in Communication, Film, and Media Studies. She covers the world of network television, focusing on sharp, thoughtful analysis of the shows and characters that keep audiences tuning in week after week. At Collider, Amanda dives into the evolving landscape of network TV — from long-running procedural favorites to ambitious new dramas — exploring why these stories matter and how they connect with viewers on a cultural level.

Sign in to your Collider account Summary Generate a summary of this story follow Follow followed Followed Like Like Thread Log in Here is a fact-based summary of the story contents: Try something different: Show me the facts Explain it like I’m 5 Give me a lighthearted recap

Osmosis arrived on Netflix quietly in 2019, but the French sci-fi drama has everything viewers expect from the streamer’s best genre work: Sleek world-building, ethical minefields, and a premise sharp enough to hook you in seconds. Created by Audrey Fouché, the series imagines a near-future Paris where a new dating technology promises something far more potent than perfectly filtered profile pictures. Instead of swiping, users swallow a tiny implant packed with nanotech that can map the brain’s most private data. The device doesn’t guess — you’re told exactly who your “true” partner is, down to their face and where to find them.

The show centers on siblings Paul (Hugo Becker) and Esther Vanhove (Agathe Bonitzer), the minds behind the startup Osmosis, who believe unlocking the brain’s pathways can solve the chaos of modern romance. But, naturally, the deeper their invention digs, the more tangled the consequences become. As Paul pushes ahead with public rollout and Esther wrestles with the line between innovation and violation, their creation begins to expose secrets no one is prepared to face. The series takes a familiar sci-fi question—“Should technology make choices for us?” — and gives it an unsettlingly intimate spin.

A Perfect Match for Fans of Black Mirror’s Most Human Episodes

Esther (Agathe Bonitzer) in 'Osmosis.' Esther (Agathe Bonitzer) in 'Osmosis.'Image via Netflix

Anyone who loved the emotional undercurrent of Black Mirror’s “Hang the DJ” will immediately recognize Osmosis’ sweet spot: A story perched at the intersection of high-concept tech and raw human longing. Osmosis, however, quickly becomes its own entity. Whereas many of Black Mirror's episodes seem to build toward greater horror, Osmosis takes the opposite approach, focusing more on character development (the hopes, wounds, and blind spots that render individuals vulnerable to the idea of finding a "soulmate").

In addition to the futuristic technologies, the pilot episode also features Virtual Reality Lounges (VR lounges), Memory Devices, AI Assistants, and Implants. But the show never treats these as flashy props. Instead, the technology functions like another character—one with the power to comfort, manipulate, and betray. The sci-fi elements are dense, yet the drama hinges on very grounded conflicts. Esther, the quiet genius behind the tech, sees the app as a path to authentic connection. Paul, its more brazen counterpart, is convinced that pushing boundaries is worth the price. Their rift drives the entire season, turning a story about algorithms into a charged family drama.

The test subjects enrolled in the beta program add even more emotional weight. Each volunteer arrives hoping the implant will fix something in their lives — loneliness, heartbreak, self-doubt — and the show never mocks their desperation. Instead, it asks what happens when a device knows you better than you know yourself. Osmosis doesn’t rely on jump scares or shock twists; its unease comes from the creeping realization that surrendering your mind for the promise of love might feel disturbingly reasonable.

Why Osmosis Deserves a Second Look From Sci-Fi Fans

Esther (Agathe Bonitzer) using a virtual headset to glimpse Paul's (Hugo Becker) memories in 'Osmosis.' Esther (Agathe Bonitzer) using a virtual headset to glimpse Paul's (Hugo Becker) memories in 'Osmosis.'Image via Netflix

Despite a strong critical reception, Osmosis slipped under the mainstream's radar and was canceled after one season. But its limited run works surprisingly well. The eight episodes move at a tight pace, blending techno-thriller energy with introspective character work. Every subplot feeds into the central question of whether technology can enhance human connection or only mimic it.

The show also stands out in the current sci-fi landscape for its tone. Many near-future dramas lean into apocalypse, corporate domination, or violent revolution. Osmosis instead gives viewers a world that feels polished, functional, and strangely hopeful—until you start noticing the cracks. People zip around Paris on bikes or in sleek cars, VR worlds offer escape on demand, and digital life appears seamless. Underneath that shine, however, the pursuit of emotional perfection becomes the series’ quiet horror. Its ethical dilemmas aren’t hypothetical—they’re built from pressures that already exist in modern dating culture, just stretched a step into tomorrow.

Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Mackenzie Davis in Black Mirror's Related I Don't Care If You Hate Sci-Fi, This Dystopian Netflix Series Will Change Your Mind

It'll make you question everything.

Posts 4 By  Jen Vestuto Oct 24, 2025

The romance is complicated, the power plays are subtle, and the moral lines blur fast. And unlike so many shows where tech is a metaphor for evil, Osmosis treats its device as something far trickier: a shortcut that works a little too well. When the characters finally meet the person the implant claims is their ideal match, the moment is both thrilling and unnerving. Is this destiny or a kind of emotional programming? The series never offers easy answers, and that ambiguity gives it staying power.

For viewers hungry for speculative storytelling that balances style with substance, Osmosis is an overlooked triumph. It captures everything compelling about Netflix’s best sci-fi offerings — intelligent futurism, moral tension, and a willingness to poke at uncomfortable truths. What makes the series memorable isn’t just its gadgets or dystopian hints, but the way it treats love as something both universal and dangerously quantifiable. When a machine claims to decode your heart, how much of yourself do you give it?

Osmosis may have flown under the radar, but it remains one of Netflix’s most thoughtful looks at technology’s promise and peril. For fans of Black Mirror, Sense8, The OA, or anyone fascinated by the idea of perfect love engineered through science, this short-lived series is more than worth the dive.

03159510_poster_w780.jpg Osmosis TV-MA Drama Romance Science Fiction Release Date 2019 - 2019 Network Netflix Directors Pierre Aknine, Mona Achache

Genres Drama, Romance, Science Fiction Powered by ScreenRant logo Expand Collapse Follow Followed Like Share Facebook X WhatsApp Threads Bluesky LinkedIn Reddit Flipboard Copy link Email Close Thread Sign in to your Collider account

We want to hear from you! Share your opinions in the thread below and remember to keep it respectful.

Be the first to post Images Attachment(s) Please respect our community guidelines. No links, inappropriate language, or spam.

Your comment has not been saved

Send confirmation email

This thread is open for discussion.

Be the first to post your thoughts.

  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Feedback
Recommended Lea Seydoux as Zoe in the 2018 film, 'Zoe'. Aug 14, 2023

Love ’Black Mirror’s Romantic Episodes? Check Out This 2018 AI Romance

Tim Rozon and Melanie Scrofano as Doc Holliday and Wynonna Earp on 'Wynonna Earp' 14 hours ago

After ‘Battlestar Galactica,’ This Western Fantasy Series Became a Cult Favorite for SYFY, but Now You Can Stream It in a New Home

The Untamed protagonists posing at the ready for battle. 14 hours ago

If You Love K-Dramas, You Should Check Out These 10 Chinese Dramas on Netflix

Deleila Piasko as Lisa Fittko, Ralph Amoussou as Paul Kandjo, Lucas Englander as Albert Hirschmann, Gillian Jacobs as Mary-Jayne Gold, Cory Michael Smith as Varian Fry and Amit Rahav as Thomas Lovegrove in Transatlantic 15 hours ago

10 Forgotten War TV Shows Worth Rewatching Today

More from our brands

MovieWeb logo

37 Shows on Netflix That Couples Can Binge-Watch Together

GameRant logo

The Greatest Isekai Anime Of All Time (April 2025)

GameRant logo

Movies To Watch If You Like 365 Days

GameRant logo

The Best Isekai Harem Anime, Ranked

CASSANDRA, Lavinia Wilson, (Season 1, aired Feb. 6, 2025)

MovieWeb logo

10 Underrated Sci-Fi Shows on Netflix

Apple TV+'s Severance series

MakeUseOf logo

If you miss Black Mirror, these 5 shows will ruin your brain just as well

Split screen of: We Happy Few, Remember Me, Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots, Black Mirror, Watch Dogs, SOMA and The Sims 4.

TheGamer logo

8 Games That Could Easily Be Black Mirror Episodes

What To Watch

 Rumi (Arden Cho), Mira (May Hong), and Zoey (Ji-young Yoo) posing in KPop Demon Hunters. July 20, 2025 The 72 Best Movies on Netflix Right Now Trending Now Ramon Rodriguez, Aaron Paul, and Rami Malek in Need for Speed Remember When Aaron Paul and Rami Malek Tried to One-Up the Fast and Furious Franchise With Their Own Racing Movie? Sam Reid as Lestat and Jacob Anderson as Louis in Interview with the Vampire. Another ‘Interview With the Vampire’ Spin-Off Just Got Way Easier To Binge — But There’s a Catch Batman riding the Batpod in The Dark Knight The 10 Greatest Superhero Movies Released Since 'The Dark Knight'