It’s always an exciting day for fans of an IP when a sequel series gets announced. Any opportunity to delve further into the lore of a beloved world — especially when it’s science fiction or fantasy — is a boon for longtime fans who usually sate that need via pages and pages of fanfiction or hours scrolling on Tumblr. So naturally, whenOrphan Black: Echoeswas first announced in 2022, the two-year wait about what to expect from the new project starringKrysten RitterandKeeley Haweswas near-excruciating.

The premise is simple for anyone familiar withOrphan Black:Ritter’s Lucy wakes up with no memories at all, unable to ascertain where she’s come from. In reality, she didn’t exist before that moment — she’s a print-out, created by Hawes’ Kira Manning, the daughter ofTatiana Maslany’s original clone Sarah Manning. But Lucy doesn’t know that and embarks on a quest to figure out exactly who she is and why she’s been created, a feat that becomes all the more difficult when she discovers other print-out versions of herself.

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Initially,Echoeshas all the hallmarks of what fans would want from anOrphan Blacksequel series: a further exploration of the ethics behind human cloning, and a direct connection to Sarah’s story from the original series. It sets itself up for a slam-dunk into the hearts of avid fans and seems like it’ll go down in sci-fi history…until the end of the first episode, when things take a sharp turn.

Orphan Black: Echoes

Orphan Black: Echoes delves into a new chapter of the Orphan Black universe, exploring the lives of a fresh set of clones. Set in a near-future society, the series follows a group of women who discover they are part of a vast and complex cloning experiment. As they uncover their origins and grapple with their identities, they must navigate dangerous conspiracies and powerful enemies determined to control their fates.

‘Orphan Black: Echoes’ Does a Disservice to Its Leads

Perhaps the most egregious problem ofEchoesis thatRitter’s Lucy has none of the charm of Maslany’s various clonesfrom the original. This is less the fault of the actress herself and more of the writing, which is nearly a carbon copy of the original series with all its zing and interest surgically removed. It’s Scientific Ethics for Dummies, talking down to the viewer about why everything going on in the show is wrong despite trying to make you root for some of the people who committed those atrocities in the first place. It doesn’t help thatRya KihlstedtandAmanda Fix, who play the younger and older versions of the same print-out character, seem like they’re letting Ritter do all the work for them, reading their lines with what feels like complete and utter disinterest in the show they’re starring in.

Hawes is really the only thing that makesEchoesworth watching, but I could’ve told you that without watching a single episode. From kicking ass and taking names inAshes to AshesandSpooksto her more recent, nuanced work in projects likeIt’s a SinandStonehouse, Hawes has always been one to watch, and it’s a shame thatEchoesreduces her to a waif-like plot driver, forcing an American accent on her that, while believable, only makes her exposition-dumping dialogue seem all the more stilted and unnatural. I’d be hard-pressed to say that she’sbadas Kira Manning, considering she and Ritter are carrying the entire series on their own, butanyone would struggle with the materialEchoesprovides, which coasts by entirely on the reputation of the original series and nothing more. (This is also proven by a brief appearance from original starJordan Gavaris, playing Hawes’ uncle despite being thirteen years her junior and wearing what can only be described as a comically bad fake beard.)

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‘Echoes’ Is a Cheap Imitation of What ‘Orphan Black’ Achieved

It’s been seven years sinceOrphan Blackwent off the air, and yetEchoesdoesn’t offer up a single idea that expands upon the ethics of human cloning in a meaningful way.Echoesitself feels like a clone in the same way that Lucy is without any of her host mother’s original memories — a hollow print-out, a copy that forged all the structural basics with none of the flair or creativity. It feels less like a sequel to the original, continuing its ideas in a new format, andmore like a cheap remake; change a few names, and it could be a completely different project, with almost no throughline to the original beyond Kira’s name.

Echoesalso featuresa heavy reliance on flashbacks, as though it can’t trust the viewer to infer things for themselves and must walk them, baby step by baby step, through each plot point. When the A plot is about as interesting as watching paint dry, it might help to spice things up a bit by mixing up the timelines, but the flashbacks (one of which lasts an entire episode) do nothing but dump more exposition on the viewer.Echoesdoesn’t trust its audience for a second, which might explain why it’s about as fun to watch as one of those instructional training videos every job puts you through —it wants to ensure you don’t miss a damn thing, to its own detriment, rather than letting the viewer interpret its art through a personal lens.

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As a result, getting throughEchoes’ten episodes —it’s the rare show that gets more than an eight-episode season order — is a feeling akin towading through mud, with the end ultimately lacking what should feel like a satisfying conclusion. It’s a tragedy, considering how much Ritter and Hawes can knock you on your ass when they’re given the right material to work with, but it’s also unsurprising, given the landscape we live in, of IPs flogged until every last bit of money’s been stripped from them.Echoesis nothing more than a dead horse being beaten repeatedly in the hope that someone, somewhere, will mistake it for the (much better) original.

Despite great leads, Orphan Black: Echoes fails to hit its mark and doesn’t live up to the original series.

Orphan Black: Echoes

Orphan Black: Echoespremieres June 23 on AMC, AMC+, and BBC America.

Watch on AMC+