1 of the most original tv shows since Lost. It feels like a kind of mix of 'Mr Robot' meets 'Wayne's World'. The creator of the mind machine had me laughing regularly. But there is a sadness underpinning it.
The idea is basically people with mental health problems and each going within their own minds, with scenarios created to make them tackle root causes of their condition. But the machine, as in Space 2000, becomes a danger as its own consciousness develops.
The comedy reaches its peak in terms of episodes, with Jonah Hill sporting a mullet (which suits him a little too well) as he assists Annie in a dark form of marital bliss that sees a shhot out over a lemur.
However whacky that sounds, the plot is coherent and develops well, intertwined with some brilliant slapstick humour and an undercurrent of questioning the mental health pandemic of the West and what it takes to deal with our past regrets.