An interesting series of fiction, events begin. Through a woman who wakes up but finds herself lacking memory and does not know anything about herself other than her name. But the day of people to help her to remember. On the other side, a new, disastrous dream and a tense frenzy with Nancy and Abel affect organic farming. Steve finds his life in turmoil again.
I haven't seen anything quite like The OA, whose twists were gripping enough to keep me going even in some moments when I'd otherwise have been rolling my eyes.
What's most striking... is the richness of the story. It weaves in such a variety of textures and styles and allusions that it sometimes feels transparently absurd, but it's hard not to be drawn in given the wealth of different objects on offer.
Though it occasionally loses its grip on its lofty material, and skids a little in its narrative chicanes, The OA is quite something to behold: a strange and strangely beautiful thing.