Everything You Need To Know About Netflix's New Show "Sense8"


via BuzzFeed

BuzzFeed News can exclusively reveal the first trailer and photos from set of the highly anticipated series from Andy and Lana Wachowski and co-creator Joe Straczynski. Plus, Straczynski spoke with BuzzFeed News about the mysterious show, which explores sexuality, gender, and politics in today’s world.

Angel (Daryl Hannah)

Murray Close / Netflix

If Joe Straczynski had to describe his new Netflix show, Sense8, in one sentence, he would say, "It's a global story told on a planetary scale about human transcendence and what it ultimately means to be human in a contemporary society." But the upcoming series, which debuts on Netflix on June 5, is actually far more complex than that.

Sense8, which Straczynski co-created with Andy and Lana Wachowski, follows a group of eight strangers — Will (Brian J. Smith), Riley (Tuppence Middleton), Capheus (Aml Ameen), Sun (Bae Doona), Lito (Miguel Angel Silvestre), Kala (Tina Desai), Wolfgang (Max Riemelt), and Nomi (Jamie Clayton) — living in San Francisco, Chicago, Mexico City, London, Berlin, Iceland, Mumbai, Nairobi, and Seoul. In the first five minutes of the debut episode, they're connected by the death of a sensate, a member of a group of eight people who are linked through their personality, rather than beliefs. Thus the death of one sensate births an entirely new cluster.

At first, the eight people have no idea they're connected, but soon they being sharing sensations. One might be eating and another can taste the Indian food in their mouth. Or one might be DJ'ing and another can hear the music that's playing. "It starts off with sensory input then gradually, it becomes more and more literal where you're in a room by yourself, but there's somebody else there and you're in San Francisco, but that character is in Seoul," Straczynski told BuzzFeed News in a phone interview. "You see each other in the same room no one else can see, but you can see them and you have a conversation and that person knows parts of you and knows things about you."

As the eight strangers share experiences, they begin to realize what's going on, and after the first few minutes of the first episode, Sense8 is shot from the point of view of only the eight main characters. "Initially they don't know what the hell is going on, so as they begin to figure it out, we begin to figure it out," Straczynski said, admitting that "the first episode is a little bit confusing."

Riley (Tuppence Middleton), Will (Brian J. Smith), Lito (Miguel Angel Silvestre), Wolfgang (Max Riemelt), Sun (Bae Doona), and Capheus (Aml Ameen).

Murray Close / Netflix

"My notion is that there are five kinds of truths: the truth you tell to casual strangers and people you meet, the truth you tell to your friends and your family, the truth you tell to only a few people in your entire life, the one you tell yourself, and the truth you won't even admit to yourself. And that's the one that tends to decline us," Straczynski said. "And we thought, If we take these characters who suddenly have access to each other's thoughts, histories, their secrets, their personalities, it lets us take the global aspect of the show and bring it down to a very human level. You may not understand what it is to live in India or live in Iceland or live in Berlin, but we can identify with an abusive father, or a person who is hiding a part of their personality because they're afraid they'll never be accepted. I found the smaller you go with your truth, the more universal and global the story is. And so we wanted to sort of hinge off of that into making a larger statement."

The show, which Straczynski said is "an examination of politics, sexuality, gender identity" in today's society, features a closeted gay character, a character dealing with some hidden secrets, and a transgender character, who is played by a transgender actor. (Co-creator Lana Wachowski is also transgender). "It really is much more of a thematic thrill than what you would normally associate with science fiction because most science fiction shows that want to deal with questions of sexuality or gender or politics, they make it another world, they make it about the aliens in an alternate world," Straczynski said. "This is our world right now and we explore those issues."


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