![]() Player is a mix of Lex from Jurassic Park and Matthew Broderick from War Games - he’s the lonely little hacker who seemingly has nothing to do other than sending “Red” on her adventures. It is hard to really feel for Carmen though, as too often she’s the one having to be told information, usually by her Guy Friday, Player (Stranger Things’ Finn Wolfhard). ![]() ![]() In the early episodes she does come off as reading from a script, but around episode four, “The Fishy Doubloon Caper,” Rodriguez allows herself to relax in the role. Gina Rodriguez, long beloved for her work on Jane the Virgin is solid as the new Carmen. Carmen Sandiego ends up in a sticky situation of its own, not necessarily a show you can watch out of order, but one that doesn’t keep the main plot moving fluidly. It isn’t until the season’s final episode - “The French Connection Caper” - that the elements established in the first two episodes come to a head, and even then, if you’ve watched any spy shows recently, the season’s conclusion is fairly predictable. The transition between the two halves of the series is just as jarring as the titles segueing from “Becoming Carmen Sandiego” to “The Sticky Rice Caper.” Each standalone story sees Carmen and her crew engaged in a range of adventures from the acquisition of Vermeer paintings to stopping a rocket scientist from subliminally launching a rocket. Desperate to find more about her own past and stop V.I.L.E., Carmen leaves the island which segues the show into a caper of the day series of episodes. She believes the group of shadowy figures deals in stolen “valuable imports lavish exports” but comes to discover they’re really part of the Villians’ International League of Evil - though it’s never definitively stated how Carmen is okay with thieving in one sense and not the other. The first two episodes, titled “Becoming Carmen Sandiego,” lay out the character’s newly minted backstory, detailing Carmen’s abandonment and adolescence on the Isle of V.I.L.E. Though Dora may have come after Carmen, they’re close cousins now and it’ll be hard for older fans to really crack into a series that seems aimed at younger viewers. She’s tasked with a series of missions that are usually underscored by one V.I.L.E. Their physical similarities notwithstanding, Carmen also has a series of traveling sidekicks in the Boston-inflected Zach and Ivy, as well as a young hacker friend named Player. Almost immediately, it seems like Netflix is mirroring Nickelodeon’s development strategy, with Carmen acting as an older version of Dora the Explorer.
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