EPISODE
SCHEDULE
An adventurous-exciting series that follows ten people who are about to live such a hard time. One day, they wake up finding themselves on an island and they don't know how they came here. Meanwhile, they have to face a chain of dangers and challenges about this mysterious island.
30 July 1957, Youngstown, Ohio, USA
1 June 1984, Santa Barbara, California, USA
3 August 1984, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada
19 July 1983, West Virginia, USA
26 May 1958, Brooklyn, New York, USA
12 July 1984, Miami, Florida, USA
12 November 1982, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
29 June 1957, Cienfuegos, Cuba
September 17, 2019
It's one of the worst shows I've ever seen and, in that, one of the most fascinating.
September 21, 2019
The series bravely explores concepts and genres which are at least interesting, but once the interest leaves we're given a melodramatic series that does little to offer excitement from the streaming giant.
September 17, 2019
Over the course of its seven-episodes, The I-Land toggles the line between ridiculous parody and laughable drama.
September 16, 2019
A bafflingly horrible sci-fi show, the kind of project that leaves your jaw on the floor, not unlike the first time you saw Tommy Wiseau's The Room.
September 17, 2019
"Things are going to get worse before they start getting better," says one character. As the series progresses, it is painfully clear that the character is right. [Full Review in Spanish]
September 12, 2019
This is sci-fi without a vision, a genre piece that doesn't know how its own genre works. The I-Land is begging to be forgotten.
September 14, 2019
Quite possibly the worst TV show of 2019.
September 16, 2019
I guess mystery box isn't an apt description for this indisputable disaster, as mysteries come with some intrigue to see them solved and boxes are actually useful.
September 25, 2019
The series is like a lot of other shows you've seen before, but that doesn't mean it's absolutely horrible.
September 25, 2019
It's insanely structured and at times off-putting. But maybe it's not a near-disaster and it's actually an off-the-wall experiment that doesn't quite click.

