Dark Winds
Where the law ends … vengeance begins
This psychological thriller follows two Navajo police officers, Leaphorn and Chee, in the 1970s Southwest as their search for clues in a grisly double murder case forces them to challenge their own spiritual beliefs and come to terms with the trauma of their pasts.
Wokeness: 60%
Overall Score: 20%
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User Submitted Reviews
Ryan Gen Z
Anti-U.S, anti-white, racially-focused, preachy
"Hollywood and its never ending propaganda. First three minutes of series were interesting but couldn't stomach the anti-government, anti-white bigotry. Somebody let Robert Redford know that he needs to move on; his anti-U.S. dogma is both irksome and tiresome." — Chuck H
"So, it took less than 13 minutes to get to the first racism comment. Only watched the pilot, but it's getting tiring to watch almost every TV show featuring anti white bigotry and racism in such a didactic over the top way, nailed onto every white character. It's a huge negative to sit thru and it doesn't even ring true. That aside, there's a few positives for those that want to stick around. The cast is good, acting seems good, and I like that the entire story is Indian centric. That's a good thing. But the racism under every rock and the negative race relations, tired of the lectures." — Anonymous
"...Wokism sadly does creep into the writing at times, and unsurprisingly leads to predictable and preachy endings." — DW
"Some shows have a great cast, are well-written, are entertaining, and don't get all PC. Too bad Dark Winds can't say the same — we get it... indigenous people are good and white people are bad. It's such a shame that a show can't have a mostly indigenous cast who get to stand out for their actual acting ability without being overshadowed by a script with the same, tired message. How great would that be? Aside from that, it's a mindnumbingly badly written and acted show. Jessica Matten should have her acting license revoked." — JB
Created: 08-13-2023