

Open your third eye.
08/02/2017
Overview
David Haller, AKA Legion, is a troubled young man who may be more than human. Diagnosed as schizophrenic, David has been in and out of psychiatric hospitals for years. But after a strange encounter with a fellow patient, he’s confronted with the possibility that the voices he hears and the visions he sees might be real.
Status: Ended
Rating: 75%
Original language: EN
First Air Date: 08/02/2017
Last Air Date: 12/08/2019
Official website:
http://www.fxnetworks.com/shows/legion
Status: Ended
First Air Date: 08/02/2017
Last Air Date: 12/08/2019
Number of season: 3
Number of episodes: 27
IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5114356
Wikipedia: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q24279305
Facebook: https://facebook.com/legionfx
Instagram: https://instagram.com/legion_fx
Review by: slimmybim
Written by: slimmybim on 2019-07-23T17:33:26.732Z
BORING.
Review by: misubisu
Written by: misubisu on 2025-10-12T09:48:54.405Z
Before Legion, the landscape of superhero television was largely predictable. We knew the heroes, their origins, and the beats of their stories. Then, along came this audacious, mind-bending series from Noah Hawley (Fargo) that took the X-Men mythology, threw it in a kaleidoscope, and dared to ask: What if a superhero show wasn't about saving the world, but about saving a mind?
Legion is not a show you simply watch; it's a show you experience. From its very first frame, it establishes itself as an outlier, a work of art that is as much about style and sensory overload as it is about narrative.
The series follows David Haller (a mesmerizing Dan Stevens), a man diagnosed with schizophrenia who has been in and out of psychiatric institutions for most of his life. The central question the first season masterfully explores is: Is David truly mentally ill, or are the voices in his head and the powers he manifests the signs of the world's most powerful mutant? This ambiguity is the show's greatest strength. We are trapped in David's perspective, and like him, we cannot trust what we see, hear, or remember.
When he meets the seemingly serene Syd Barrett (Rachel Keller), a fellow patient with a unique power of her own, David is introduced to a group of mutants who believe his chaos is not illness, but immense power. This sets him on a collision course with the sinister government agency Division 3 and its most terrifying weapon: The Shadow King.
To call Legion visually inventive is an understatement. It is a relentless barrage of style:
Dan Stevens delivers a career-defining performance. He seamlessly shifts from vulnerable and broken to charismatic and terrifying, often within the same scene. He is the perfect anchor for the show's madness. Aubrey Plaza, as David's friend Lenny, is an absolute revelation. She chews the scenery with delicious, chaotic energy, and her role evolves in shocking and brilliant ways throughout the series, showcasing a range few knew she possessed. The supporting cast, including Jean Smart, Jeremie Harris, and Bill Irwin, are all phenomenal, providing both heart and a necessary grounding to the surreal events.
Legion is a masterpiece, but not a perfect one. The third and final season, while still visually stunning and thematically rich, struggles to tie its profoundly complex mythology into a completely satisfying conclusion. Some viewers may find the abstract nature of the ending frustrating. The show is demanding; it requires your full attention and a willingness to be confused. It prioritizes theme and character psychology over straightforward plotting, which won't be for everyone.
4 out of 5 Stars
Legion is a triumph. It is a bold, brilliant, and unapologetically weird deconstruction of the superhero genre, mental illness, and the nature of reality itself. It proves that comic book adaptations can be high art—challenging, emotionally resonant, and visually unparalleled.
Who will love it? Fans of psychological thrillers, surrealist art, David Lynch, and those hungry for television that dares to be different. Who should skip it? Viewers looking for a straightforward superhero action series or a simple, easy-to-follow plot.
Legion didn't just tell a story about a mutant; it invited us into his magnificent, terrifying, and beautiful mind. For that, it remains one of the most unforgettable television experiences of the last decade.