• Latest
  • Trending
Revival Review

Revival Review: Wausau’s Walking Dead Offer More Than Brains

Happy Gilmore 2

Happy Gilmore 2 Swings for July 25 Debut With Full Original Trio

12 minutes ago
Tracker Season 2 Review

Tracker Season 3 Sets July Cameras, 2026-27 TV Return

31 minutes ago
Jurassic World Rebirth Review

Spielberg’s Notes Fuel ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ as Box Office Ignites

39 minutes ago
Dakota Johnson

Dakota Johnson to Helm Autism Drama After Cannes Reveal

52 minutes ago
KPop Demon Hunters Review

Animated Hit ‘K-Pop: Demon Hunters’ Sets Spotify, Billboard Milestones

1 hour ago
Puyo Puyo Tetris 2S Review

Puyo Puyo Tetris 2S Review: When Two Worlds Collide on Switch 2

Dora and the Search for Sol Dorado Review

Dora and the Search for Sol Dorado Review: A Surprisingly Profound Journey Into Lost Innocence

All the Sharks Review

All the Sharks Review: A Refreshing Dive into a New Kind of Reality TV

Brick Review

Brick Review: When the Walls Are Within

The Sandman Season 2 Review

The Sandman Season 2 Review: Portrait of a Ponderous God

Elio Review

Military Advisers Helped “Elio” Get Space Right—Here’s How

2 days ago
Sinners

Producer Reveals “Sinners” Bought Costumes From Stalled “Blade” Reboot

2 days ago
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Sunday, July 6, 2025
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Happy Gilmore 2

    Happy Gilmore 2 Swings for July 25 Debut With Full Original Trio

    Tracker Season 2 Review

    Tracker Season 3 Sets July Cameras, 2026-27 TV Return

    Jurassic World Rebirth Review

    Spielberg’s Notes Fuel ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ as Box Office Ignites

    Dakota Johnson

    Dakota Johnson to Helm Autism Drama After Cannes Reveal

    KPop Demon Hunters Review

    Animated Hit ‘K-Pop: Demon Hunters’ Sets Spotify, Billboard Milestones

    Elio Review

    Military Advisers Helped “Elio” Get Space Right—Here’s How

    Sinners

    Producer Reveals “Sinners” Bought Costumes From Stalled “Blade” Reboot

    Jurassic World Rebirth

    ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ Devours $137 M Holiday Debut Without IMAX Screens

    One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest

    Cuckoo’s Nest Sequel Series Targets 2025 Anniversary

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Dora and the Search for Sol Dorado Review

    Dora and the Search for Sol Dorado Review: A Surprisingly Profound Journey Into Lost Innocence

    All the Sharks Review

    All the Sharks Review: A Refreshing Dive into a New Kind of Reality TV

    Brick Review

    Brick Review: When the Walls Are Within

    The Sandman Season 2 Review

    The Sandman Season 2 Review: Portrait of a Ponderous God

    Nyaight of the Living Cat Review

    Nyaight of the Living Cat Review: Resisting the Urge to Pet

    Maa Review

    Maa Review: Kajol Shines, But the Horror Flatlines

    Pretty Thing Review

    Pretty Thing Review: A Stylish Thriller Without the Thrills

    Trainwreck: The Cult of American Apparel Review

    Trainwreck: The Cult of American Apparel Review: The Sleazy Underside of a Fashion Empire

    An Eye for an Eye Review

    An Eye for an Eye Review: When Justice is a Family’s Choice

  • Game Reviews
    Puyo Puyo Tetris 2S Review

    Puyo Puyo Tetris 2S Review: When Two Worlds Collide on Switch 2

    Camper Van: Make it Home Review

    Camper Van: Make it Home Review: Designing Tranquility

    Dragon is Dead Review

    Dragon is Dead Review: Forging a God from Spare Parts

    Tamagotchi Plaza Review

    Tamagotchi Plaza Review: Nostalgia Isn’t Enough

    Ruffy and the Riverside Review

    Ruffy and the Riverside Review: Swapping Style for Substance

    Rise of Industry 2 Review

    Rise of Industry 2 Review: Capitalism with Consequences

    Survival Kids Review

    Survival Kids Review: Fun with Friends, A Chore Alone

    Ashwood Valley Review

    Ashwood Valley Review: Pretty Pixels, Poor Play

    Cattle Country Review

    Cattle Country Review: Forging a Life on the Pixelated Frontier

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Happy Gilmore 2

    Happy Gilmore 2 Swings for July 25 Debut With Full Original Trio

    Tracker Season 2 Review

    Tracker Season 3 Sets July Cameras, 2026-27 TV Return

    Jurassic World Rebirth Review

    Spielberg’s Notes Fuel ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ as Box Office Ignites

    Dakota Johnson

    Dakota Johnson to Helm Autism Drama After Cannes Reveal

    KPop Demon Hunters Review

    Animated Hit ‘K-Pop: Demon Hunters’ Sets Spotify, Billboard Milestones

    Elio Review

    Military Advisers Helped “Elio” Get Space Right—Here’s How

    Sinners

    Producer Reveals “Sinners” Bought Costumes From Stalled “Blade” Reboot

    Jurassic World Rebirth

    ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ Devours $137 M Holiday Debut Without IMAX Screens

    One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest

    Cuckoo’s Nest Sequel Series Targets 2025 Anniversary

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Dora and the Search for Sol Dorado Review

    Dora and the Search for Sol Dorado Review: A Surprisingly Profound Journey Into Lost Innocence

    All the Sharks Review

    All the Sharks Review: A Refreshing Dive into a New Kind of Reality TV

    Brick Review

    Brick Review: When the Walls Are Within

    The Sandman Season 2 Review

    The Sandman Season 2 Review: Portrait of a Ponderous God

    Nyaight of the Living Cat Review

    Nyaight of the Living Cat Review: Resisting the Urge to Pet

    Maa Review

    Maa Review: Kajol Shines, But the Horror Flatlines

    Pretty Thing Review

    Pretty Thing Review: A Stylish Thriller Without the Thrills

    Trainwreck: The Cult of American Apparel Review

    Trainwreck: The Cult of American Apparel Review: The Sleazy Underside of a Fashion Empire

    An Eye for an Eye Review

    An Eye for an Eye Review: When Justice is a Family’s Choice

  • Game Reviews
    Puyo Puyo Tetris 2S Review

    Puyo Puyo Tetris 2S Review: When Two Worlds Collide on Switch 2

    Camper Van: Make it Home Review

    Camper Van: Make it Home Review: Designing Tranquility

    Dragon is Dead Review

    Dragon is Dead Review: Forging a God from Spare Parts

    Tamagotchi Plaza Review

    Tamagotchi Plaza Review: Nostalgia Isn’t Enough

    Ruffy and the Riverside Review

    Ruffy and the Riverside Review: Swapping Style for Substance

    Rise of Industry 2 Review

    Rise of Industry 2 Review: Capitalism with Consequences

    Survival Kids Review

    Survival Kids Review: Fun with Friends, A Chore Alone

    Ashwood Valley Review

    Ashwood Valley Review: Pretty Pixels, Poor Play

    Cattle Country Review

    Cattle Country Review: Forging a Life on the Pixelated Frontier

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Revival Review

The Buccaneers Season 2 Review: All Dressed Up With Nowhere to Go

The Boys’ Erin Moriarty Reveals Graves’ Disease, Says Treatment ‘Turned the Light Back On

Home Entertainment

Revival Review: Wausau’s Walking Dead Offer More Than Brains

Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi by Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi
3 weeks ago
in Entertainment, Reviews, TV Shows
Reading Time: 8 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on Telegram

In the unassuming Midwestern town of Wausau, Wisconsin, the fundamental laws of existence have fractured. The dead have begun to return. This is not the familiar, groaning apocalypse of shuffling corpses or the frenetic terror of a viral plague; it is something quieter, more unnervingly intimate.

The event, quickly named “Revival Day,” reintroduces the recently deceased to their old lives, their memories and personalities seemingly untouched. These “revivers,” as they come to be known, are not monsters hungry for flesh but people hungry for normalcy, bearing one unsettling distinction: they are now functionally immortal, their bodies capable of regenerating from any new injury. They are, quite simply, themselves—only now, they cannot die.

At the center of this quiet upheaval is Officer Dana Cypress, a single mother whose plans to escape the town’s gravitational pull are abruptly cancelled. The government-mandated quarantine traps her, forcing her back into the uniform she was ready to discard and into a web of strange occurrences.

The resulting conflict is not one of survival against a horde, but of a community forced to look at itself when the line between life and death has been irrevocably blurred. For Dana, the town’s mystery becomes deeply personal, threatening to unravel not just its fragile peace but her own family.

The Mundane Miraculous

The series establishes its unique catastrophe with an almost bureaucratic specificity. The miracle, or curse, is not universal; it is confined to Wausau and restricted to those who perished within a narrow two-week window. The resurrected return with a potent healing factor, rendering them impervious to new harm, though the injuries that first killed them can remain as grim souvenirs. It is a selective, localized rewriting of natural law.

A more telling creative decision is the narrative leap forward by 35 days, bypassing the initial panic to deposit the viewer directly into the unsettling quiet of the aftermath. This choice sidesteps the spectacle of discovery for the far more textured drama of adjustment, focusing on a world where the impossible has already happened and now must simply be lived with.

This new reality unfolds within a community under federal quarantine. The town is a sealed terrarium, with CDC scientists acting as both researchers and reluctant wardens. The atmosphere is thick with a tension born not of immediate danger, but of profound social awkwardness and simmering resentment.

The living and the once-dead attempt a fragile coexistence, navigating the minefield of daily life. Children sit beside reviver classmates, families attend funerals for people who refuse to stay buried, and the entire social fabric is rewoven with threads of fear and confusion. This is where the apocalypse reveals its true nature: not as a violent end, but as a slow, bewildering transformation of the everyday into something deeply strange.

Wausau’s Living Ghosts

The narrative is anchored by Dana Cypress, a character brought to life with a compelling blend of wit and weariness by Melanie Scrofano. She is the reluctant fulcrum of the story, a competent officer whose professional duties are hopelessly tangled with her personal history. Through her, we navigate the town’s escalating strangeness; her blend of no-nonsense capability and raw vulnerability makes her a grounded guide in a world that has lost its footing.

Revival Review
REVIVAL — “Don’t Tell Dad” Episode 101 — Pictured: Melanie Scrofano as Dana Cypress — (Photo by: Mathieu Savidant/Lavivier Productions/SYFY)

Her gravitational center is complicated by her family, particularly her younger sister, Em. Positioned as the troubled black sheep grappling with addiction, Em embodies a more immediate mystery: she is herself a reviver, yet possesses no memory of her own death, making her a walking, breathing enigma at the heart of the central plot.

Opposing them both in spirit is their father, Sheriff Wayne Cypress, a figure of rigid authority whose answer to the inexplicable is control. His push for registration and containment of the revivers is a clear allegory for fear-based governance, a man trying to impose old-world order on a phenomenon that defies it.

Beyond the Cypress family, the world is populated by figures who color the town’s response to its new reality. Dr. Ibrahim Ramin, the CDC scientist, serves as a necessary foil—a man of reason and process whose burgeoning, sweetly awkward chemistry with Dana provides a flicker of warmth amidst the encroaching darkness.

The broader community is a sketch of small-town archetypes thrown into chaos: quirky locals, a vicious family of drug dealers whose business is disrupted by the quarantine, and most ominously, the populist radio host Blaine Abel. He gathers a militia of the fearful, his rhetoric weaponizing the town’s anxiety and transforming the revivers from neighbors into demons, representing the inevitable slide from confusion into organized hatred.

Noir, Wit, and Lens Flare

To label Revival a simple horror series would be a disservice to its curious and shifting identity. It operates as a hybrid, weaving together the investigative threads of a rural noir with the fraught dynamics of a family drama, all under a constant canopy of supernatural suspense.

Revival Review

The primary engine is not a fight for survival but a search for answers; the central mystery of the revivers’ origin and purpose drives the plot forward more than any immediate physical threat. This focus on sleuthing over screaming gives the series a texture that is more intellectually engaging than viscerally frightening.

What truly prevents the premise from collapsing under its own grim weight is a surprising and deftly handled sense of humor. This levity is not broad or farcical but stems organically from the characters, particularly Dana Cypress, whose wry, sarcastic wit serves as a necessary defense mechanism against the sheer absurdity of her reality.

Her humor is a shield against the encroaching strangeness, a way of maintaining sanity. The series cleverly weaponizes this comedic tone, using moments of lightheartedness to disarm the viewer, which makes the sudden, sharp punctuation of a jump scare all the more effective. It is a dynamic rhythm of laughter and fear.

Visually, the series aspires to a cinematic polish, employing stylistic flourishes like lens flares to add a layer of sheen to its small-town setting. Yet, this ambition is often counteracted by a familiar dimness, a washed-out and murky lighting palette common in modern television that can obscure detail and mute the intended atmosphere rather than enhance it. The look is one of polished grit, caught between a desire for aesthetic flair and the constraints of its medium.

Echoes of the Other

Beneath its supernatural surface, the series is a potent allegory for social division. The reviver becomes the quintessential “Other,” a canvas onto which the living project their deepest anxieties. The fear of the unknown quickly curdles into discrimination, as the resurrected are transformed from neighbors into a category, a problem to be managed. This exploration of bigotry is not subtle, but its power lies in its familiarity.

Revival Review

The rhetoric of suspicion, the calls for registration, the casual cruelty of schoolyard bullies—all are recognizable echoes of historical and contemporary prejudice. The show uses its fantastical premise to hold a mirror to the mundane mechanisms of marginalization, showing how easily a community can turn on its own when confronted with something it does not understand.

This central conflict plays out on both an institutional and personal level. The ideological battle is personified in the clash between Sheriff Wayne’s iron-fisted desire for control and Dr. Ramin’s appeal to science and reason. One sees a threat to be contained; the other, a phenomenon to be understood. This official debate refracts through the intimate, painful questions faced by the town’s citizens.

The premise unearths profound philosophical quandaries: What is the emotional toll on a widow whose husband died one day too late to be returned? Does a criminal who has technically “died” owe any further debt to society? The series is at its most compelling when it explores these smaller, more intimate fissures in the social contract, where the grand, supernatural event becomes a deeply personal crisis of faith, grief, and justice.

A Restless Narrative

The show’s storytelling engine is one of relentless forward motion. It is a multi-threaded narrative that continuously spins out new subplots—from Dana’s core criminal investigation to Em’s personal quest for memory, to the rise of a nascent doomsday cult. This constant churn keeps the plot from ever feeling static, zipping past its weaker points on the way to the next cliffhanger.

Revival Review
REVIVAL — “Don’t Tell Dad” Episode 101 — Pictured: Melanie Scrofano as Dana Cypress — (Photo by: Mathieu Savidant/Lavivier Productions/SYFY)

Yet, this narrative velocity comes at a price. The sheer volume of mysteries and characters means that few are afforded the space to develop significant depth. Plot threads are introduced and then left to dangle, and character motivations can feel more beholden to narrative necessity than to organic emotional growth, resulting in a watch that is broad but often superficial.

This feeling is compounded by foundational structural choices that raise more questions than they answer. The decision to leap 35 days past the initial event creates a world where much of the immediate, raw drama has happened off-screen, leaving the viewer to piece together the rules of this new society.

Those rules themselves are sometimes vaguely defined, particularly concerning the revivers’ abilities, leading to minor but noticeable inconsistencies in the world-building. For every compelling question the series poses, others are simply hand-waved away, leaving a structure that feels both intriguing and slightly unsteady.

Revival is a supernatural horror‑noir TV series based on the Image Comics graphic novel by Tim Seeley and Mike Norton. It premiered on June 12, 2025 on Syfy in the U.S. and CTV Sci‑Fi Channel in Canada, with episodes released weekly on Thursdays and available on streaming platforms Peacock (U.S.) and Crave (Canada) one week after airing . You can watch it live on Syfy or stream it on Peacock, Crave, or via the CTV app.

Full Credits

Director(s): Amanda Row

Writers: Aaron B. Koontz, Luke Boyce, Michael Moreci

Producers: Evan Ottoni, Szonja Jakovits, Ryan Plachcinski

Executive Producers: Amanda Row, Melanie Scrofano, Stephen Foster, Greg Hemmings, Daniel March, Daniel Iron, Neil Tabatznik, Samantha Levine, Lance Samuels, Luke Boyce, Aaron B. Koontz

Cast: Melanie Scrofano, Romy Weltman, David James Elliott, Andy McQueen, Hudson Wurster, Gianpaolo Venuta, Maia Jae, Mark Little, Glen Gould, Nathan Dales, Lenore Zann, Katharine King So, Nicky Guadagni, Graeme Barrett, Derek McGrath, Nora McLellan, Conrad Coates, Peter Millard, Brandon Oakes, Josh Cruddas, Karen Knox, Steven Ogg, CM Punk, Gia Sandhu, Lara Jean Chorostecki

Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Justin Black, Martin Wojtunik

Editors: Mark Hussey, Curt Lobb

Composer(s): Lydia Ainsworth, Alex Cuervo

The Review

Revival

7.5 Score

Revival thrives on a clever premise and a magnetic lead performance from Melanie Scrofano. Its fusion of rural noir, sharp humor, and timely social commentary creates an engaging genre piece. While its breakneck pace keeps the story moving, it comes at the cost of depth, leaving many intriguing subplots feeling superficial. The result is a witty and entertaining series that, despite some structural inconsistencies, offers a refreshing take on the undead, even if it doesn't fully explore the rich territory it maps out.

PROS

  • A compelling and charismatic lead performance from Melanie Scrofano.
  • An intelligent premise that subverts standard zombie tropes.
  • Effective blend of mystery, dark humor, and family drama.
  • Thought-provoking social commentary on prejudice and fear.

CONS

  • A restless, fast-paced plot that leaves many subplots underdeveloped.
  • Character arcs can feel secondary to narrative momentum.
  • Inconsistent world-building with sometimes vaguely defined rules.
  • A familiar, often dim, visual style common to modern television.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Aaron B. KoontzAndy McQueenCM PunkDavid James ElliottDramaFeaturedFlora McInroyGia SandhuHorror noirLuke BoyceMelanie ScrofanoMysteryRevival (2025)Romy WeltmanSteven OggSupernaturalSyfyTop Pick
Previous Post

The Buccaneers Season 2 Review: All Dressed Up With Nowhere to Go

Next Post

The Boys’ Erin Moriarty Reveals Graves’ Disease, Says Treatment ‘Turned the Light Back On

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Ice Road Vengeance Review

    Ice Road: Vengeance Review – Liam Neeson’s Diminishing Returns Continue

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Stand Your Ground Review: All Action, No Substance

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mix Tape Review: A Story Told on Two Sides of a Cassette

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Sound Review: A Long Way Down

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Heads of State Review: Elba and Cena Carry the Ticket

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Pretty Thing Review: A Stylish Thriller Without the Thrills

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Love Island USA Season 7 Review: Summer’s Hottest Guilty Pleasure Returns

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Dora and the Search for Sol Dorado Review
Entertainment

Dora and the Search for Sol Dorado Review: A Surprisingly Profound Journey Into Lost Innocence

13 hours ago
The Sandman Season 2 Review
Entertainment

The Sandman Season 2 Review: Portrait of a Ponderous God

21 hours ago
Maa Review
Movies

Maa Review: Kajol Shines, But the Horror Flatlines

3 days ago
The Old Guard 2 Review
Movies

The Old Guard 2 Review: Hits of Brilliance in a Muddled War

4 days ago
Sitaare Zameen Par Review
Movies

Sitaare Zameen Par Review: The Real Stars Shine the Brightest

4 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Who is the best director in the horror thriller genre?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

Go to mobile version