Podchaser Logo
Home
The Technomancy Project

The Technomancy Project

The Technomancy Project

 7 people rated this podcast
The Technomancy Project

The Technomancy Project

The Technomancy Project

Reviews
The Technomancy Project

The Technomancy Project

The Technomancy Project

 7 people rated this podcast
Rate Podcast

Popular Reviews of The Technomancy Project

Search Reviews...
RATING
Minimal on sound design and score but benefiting from a great cast, distinct characters and slow but intriguing world-building, The Technomancy Project operates on surface level like an X-Files monster of the week show. However, It's the underlying connected mystery, which continually deepens our character understanding via each reveal, that was most compelling. The chemistry between the main trio is the show's strongest point. The characters's development is done steadily at times comically but not over-played. It make for an easy to digest mix of humour with a tinge of pathos that grounds it all.
The Technomancy Unit is an X-Files-like team of investigators/responders. Elijah is the trigger-happy sorcerer who takes the lead on all magic work. Allie is the genius scientist. Both of them are amoral narcissists who treat their co-workers with contempt. Enter Jason, a hapless congenial everyman, whom they rescue and then also proceed to treat with contempt.Every inch of the Technomancy Project is solid and it makes for a very satisfying listen. There’s a nice variety to the monster-of-the-week plots: haunted house, aliens, demon possession, workplace audit, etc. and the show is adept at bringing in the humor and the horror when it is called for. Also, the little bits of continuity from episode to episode snowball into an intriguing season ending.The character dynamics are stellar. Elijah and Allie are both tunnel visioned egotists who don’t need much excuse to destroy a person’s soul or gamble with their colleagues’ lives. Given the stakes, they’re not being completely callous, but neither person would weep over collateral damage. So, it is so important that Jason, with his conscience and his empathy, calls them out. I like that the script doesn’t try and oversell the character growth in this trifecta. If Elijah is convinced to be less trigger happy, it’s not because he wants to be a better person, but because he can concede that not every problem is a nail in need of a hammer. If Allie learns to see her colleagues as more than just a means to an end, it’s because she and Jason develop a rapport through playing pranks on others. By season’s end, the show has earned the emotional glue between these three workplace proximity associates.
add a review
Rate

Join Podchaser to...

  • Rate podcasts and episodes
  • Follow podcasts and creators
  • Create podcast and episode lists
  • & much more

Unlock more with Podchaser Pro

  • Audience Insights
  • Contact Information
  • Demographics
  • Charts
  • Sponsor History
  • and More!
Pro Features