


يتصادم السحر مع الشر في ظل مواكبة "سابرينا"، كنصف ساحرة ونصف إنسان، بين عالمين مختلفين: حياتها البشرية كمراهقة وإرث عائلتها: كنيسة "الظلمة".
Avis de la communauté (8)
I loved it overall but the hatred against men is annoying
The people whining about the feminism in this show is the same people that says "it's just fiction everyone is over sensitive!!!!" whenever a show has problematic stuff.
Really boring. So many Netflix shows recently feel like they've focused way top much on algorithm to make new shows. The show is a bit weak in not developing the characters of sabrina's friends or boyfriends so you really don't care about them or their grand plans for 'feminism' which feel like they've just been taken from a news story someone read and decided to add. One minute Sabrina is meeting the dark lord and the next her friend is all about complaining about banned books it just seems so ridiculous. Overall there is no real sense of where this show is going. It's pretty predictable and it's like they've taken elements of Riverdale, Bates Motel, AHS and Salem to try make a new popular show. It just doesn't work.
What I expected was a mature, gritty version of Sabrina The Teenage Witch. What I got was a very political, very Christian, horror-themed version of Sabrina that still seems targeted specifically at a teenage demographic. Is it just me, or was the original TV series accidentally progressive for showing an alternative non-Christian lifestyle in a positive light? This new series seems to undermine the progressiveness of its source material by re-imagining this non-Christian lifestyle as explicit devil-worshipping, where witches routinely commit murder and cannibalism. Sabrina's own aunt Zelda expresses disappointment about missing out on an opportunity to eat "long-pig". The story also seems to take a few pages from Harry Potter with Sabrina being persecuted by pure-blood witches for being half-Muggle and it even has its evil version of the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. It actually really feels like it is a knee-jerk reaction to the popularity of Harry Potter; a story with a protagonist whose challenge is to resist the temptation of evil witchcraft. Finally, why do they have to refer to everything as "dark"? When Sabrina tells [spoiler]Harvey[/spoiler] about her "dark baptism", maybe it would have sounded a lot less crazy if she'd just called it a "baptism"? It's like listening to Dr Evil (from Austin Powers) explain how he got his M.D. in "evil medical school". There's absolutely no subtlety to be had here.
























