Gaming & Live Streaming

Orphan Black is waiting to be rediscovered on Netflix

Orphan Black is one of the best biopunk TV shows, exploring the lives of clones and a corporation's pursuit of them

AAdmin
June 27, 2026
3 min read
Orphan Black is waiting to be rediscovered on Netflix

By Maria Loreto Published Jun 27, 2026, 7:00 PM EDT What to Watch It’s been over a decade, and the show remains a rare example of biopunk TV

Brad Bird is begging Netflix to let you see his new movie on the biggest screen possible There’s a new Tekken cartoon coming that probably doesn’t look like what you’re expecting Warner Bros. is developing a show that looks a lot like Team America The best biopunk sci-fi show of the century is waiting to be rediscovered on Netflix Image: Temple Street Productions Orphan Black Sign in to your Polygon.com account Biopunk is a genre that we desperately need more of. Like cyberpunk ’s interest in dystopia and characters who live life on the margins of society, biopunk is all about the effects of technology on the body, and the repercussions it might have on society. Shows and movies tackling these subjects make for thoughtful if squeamish experiences, asking some great questions about humans, their purpose, and the roles of corporations who have access to our genetic information. Despite how relevant these topics are in the modern era, biopunk stories remain incredibly rare.

One of the great examples of biopunk television is Orphan Black (2013), which is streaming in full on Netflix. Underneath a complicated conspiracy plot that involves scary corporations, mad scientists, awful tests on human subjects, and dozens of clones, the series features one of the best performances of all time. Through her years in the show, Tatiana Maslany went from an unknown Canadian actress to Emmy winner, playing 17 distinct clones across five seasons. More than a decade later, while some of the series’ special effects have aged, the scenes of Maslany’s clones speaking, yelling, hugging, and dancing with each other feel as magical and unique as they did when they first aired, luring you into believing that there really are multiple women onscreen.

Created by John Fawcett and Graeme Manson, Orphan Black follows a group of clones whose lives are constantly monitored by a biotech corporation called the Dyad Institute and the scientists that made them. While Fawcett and Manson have been involved in other shows and films — including the all-time great werewolf horror movie Ginger Snaps , Amazon's dystopian alt-history series The Man in the High Castle , and cult classic sci-fi thriller Cube — no project encapsulates their interest in horror, dystopia, and science more than this small BBC America series. In the case of Maslany, who’s since led her own Marvel show and has starred in numerous movies and shows, no project better understood her skills as a performer than Orphan Black.

While the series features an ensemble cast, the story has a clear point of view, centered on one of the clones. Sarah Manning (Maslany) is a British con artist that we meet in the show’s opening scene as she’s returning to Canada, where she was raised. Sarah is on a train, looking hungover and sleepless. As she steps out, she sees a woman acting suspicious, dropping her purse on the dirty floor of the station and taking her heels off, hovering over the edge of the train tracks. The woman turns and the two look at each other. They're identical.

The mystery woman then jumps in front of the train. Sarah panics and takes her doppleganger's purse, adopting the woman's identity before she can question her own motives. It's an exciting entry point, teasing the show's central mystery and establishing Sarah as a unique protagonist.

Image: BBC America Thro…