Nevers — The
Most steampunk is about polished brass and whimsy. The Nevers is about rust, soot, and desperation. Penance builds sonar glasses and electric lanterns not for fun, but to give her found family a fighting chance. The gadgets feel lived-in—held together with prayer, solder, and sheer stubbornness.
Created by Joss Whedon (before his departure) and shepherded to the screen by Philippa Goslett, The Nevers arrived on HBO in 2021 with a bang—literally. An alien ship explodes over Victorian London, raining down shimmering spores that “Touched” certain people, granting them extraordinary powers. The result? A chaotic, corset-ripping, genre-bending masterpiece that felt like The X-Men crashed into a Jane Austen novel during a gaslight blackout. The Nevers
Even unfinished, The Nevers is a stunning artifact of what ambitious television can be. It’s a show about trauma, found family, and the radical act of refusing to be a monster just because society labels you one. The costumes are breathtaking, the performances (particularly Donnelly, Skelly, and Ben Chaplin as the weary detective Frank Mundi) are top-tier, and the central mystery of the Galanthi is genuinely moving. Most steampunk is about polished brass and whimsy
And then there’s the elephant in the ballroom: the behind-the-scenes turmoil. After Joss Whedon exited, the show pivoted. By the time the final episodes aired (produced by a new team, with a tighter focus), the cancellation axe had already fallen. The story ends on a cliffhanger that feels less like a season finale and more like a door slamming shut mid-sentence. Yes. Unequivocally. The result
And when you get to the end, join the rest of us in the sad, hopeful corner of the internet, still asking: What happens next? Have you seen The Nevers? Are you still angry it was cancelled? Let me know in the comments.