Raising Dion -2019-2019 š¢ š«
Alongside her is Pat (Jason Ritter), Markās best friend and Dionās godfather. Pat steps in as a surrogate father figure and scientific guide, helping Nicole understand the source of Dionās powers. However, viewers of the first season will note a creeping unease in Ritterās performanceāa warmth that feels just slightly too perfect, hinting at a darkness that pays off in the seasonās final, shocking reveal. Released in October 2019, Raising Dion arrived without the blockbuster budget of The Umbrella Academy or Stranger Things . The visual effects are modest but effective. Dionās powers glow with a purple, nebulous energy, and the action is kept mostly to backyards, school halls, and a single climactic battle in a storm-drenched park.
The show wisely prioritizes character over spectacle. The central conflict is not about saving the world from an alien invasion, but about saving a childās innocence. The villaināknown as The Crooked Man (a terrifying motion-capture performance by Sammi Haney)āis a stormy, shadowy entity born from the same energy as Dionās powers. Itās a brilliant metaphor for grief and trauma: the idea that loss can literally manifest as a monster trying to consume the light left behind. Although Raising Dion ās first season aired in late 2019ājust months before the world shut downāit struck a chord with audiences hungry for hopeful, diverse storytelling. The show features a Black single mother and a biracial son as leads in a genre that rarely centers such perspectives without tragedy being their sole identity. Nicole is strong because she is vulnerable, not because she can punch through walls.
ā ā ā ā ā (4/5) ā A heartfelt, visually charming debut that proves the best superhero origin is often a parenting story. Raising Dion -2019-2019
JaāSiah Young, as Dion, is a revelation. Child actors often struggle with the weight of supernatural dialogue, but Young imbues Dion with authentic wonder, fear, and mischief. He makes you believe that a kid would absolutely try to use telekinesis to sneak a cookie before dinner. Raising Dion was initially listed as ā2019-2019ā because it took three years for Netflix to renew it for a second season (which debuted in 2022). For many, that gap solidified the first season as a self-contained gem. It ends on a bittersweet, hopeful note: Nicole choosing to stop running and start fighting, and Dion realizing that being a hero means being kind first.
In an era of grimdark reboots and convoluted multiverses, Raising Dion (2019) remains a refreshing anomaly. Itās a superhero story about holding hands, not throwing punches. Itās a reminder that the greatest power in any universe isn't flight or invisibilityāitās the fierce, unbreakable love between a parent and a child. Alongside her is Pat (Jason Ritter), Markās best
The sci-fi twist arrives gently. Dion begins to manifest incredible abilities: telekinesis, energy projection, and weather manipulation. But unlike Tony Stark or Clark Kent, Dion is a sweet, imaginative, easily distracted 8-year-old who just wants to play with action figures. The showās genius lies in grounding cosmic power in suburban realityāDionās powers flare up when he sneezes, gets angry about homework, or feels lonely.
In the modern golden age of superhero entertainmentādominated by the Marvel Cinematic Universe and the gritty reboots of DCāit takes a unique angle to stand out. Netflixās Raising Dion did exactly that in 2019. Though its original run spanned only two years (2019-2019 for the first season, with a second season following in 2022), the showās debut season remains a landmark in family-oriented genre storytelling. It asked a simple, profound question: What happens when a superhero origin story is seen not through the eyes of the hero, but through the terrified, loving eyes of a single mother? The Premise: Grief Meets Galaxies The series, created by Carol Barbee and based on the 2015 comic book by Dennis Liu, begins with a tragedy. Nicole Reese (Alisha Wainwright) is a widow struggling to raise her young son, Dion (newcomer JaāSiah Young), after the mysterious death of her husband, Mark (Michael B. Jordan, who also serves as an executive producer). Released in October 2019, Raising Dion arrived without
If you missed it in 2019, Raising Dion is well worth revisiting. Just keep tissues nearby. And donāt watch the last episode alone in the darkāThe Crooked Man is genuinely haunting.
Wainwright delivers a grounded, vulnerable performance that anchors the fantastical elements. When Dion accidentally destroys a playground, Nicole doesn't lecture him about heroism; she holds him and whispers, "We're going to figure this out together." That quiet intimacy is the show's secret weapon.
Nicoleās journey becomes the emotional spine of the show. She isn't a trained S.H.I.E.L.D. agent or a billionaire with a suit. Sheās a grieving, working-class mother terrified that her son will be taken away by scientists, villains, or social services. Where Raising Dion truly excels is in its refusal to sideline the parent. In most superhero tales, parents are either dead, absent, or mentors. Here, Nicole is the protagonist. The series dedicates as much time to her navigating single motherhood, financial strain, and trust issues as it does to Dion learning to control his powers.