The Gifted - Season 1 ⚡
On the other side is the , a radical splinter group led by the enigmatic, time-manipulating Reeva Payge (Grace Byers). The Inner Circle believes the Underground’s pacifism is suicide. They advocate for a mutant ethno-state, using terrorism and calculated strikes to force humanity’s hand.
The show’s genius move was making its protagonists not the mutants themselves, but the Strucker family. The Gifted - Season 1
Caught in the middle is (Emma Dumont), the magnetic, green-haired daughter of Magneto. Lorna is the emotional heart of the season. Pregnant with Eclipse’s child, she wrestles with her father’s violent legacy. Her arc—from Underground ally to reluctant Inner Circle member—is tragic and compelling. Dumont’s performance captures both the manic energy of inherited trauma and the fierce protectiveness of a mother-to-be. The Real Villain: The Purifiers and The Cuckoo While Reeva Payge lurks in the shadows, the immediate antagonists are more terrifying because they are familiar: The Purifiers . A human extremist group led by the charismatic and monstrous Jace Turner (Coby Bell), the Purifiers are not cartoon villains. Turner is a former Sentinel Services agent whose daughter was killed in a mutant attack. His grief has curdled into genocidal rage. He believes he is saving humanity. The show’s most chilling scenes are not laser fights, but Turner calmly explaining to a jury why rounding up mutant children is a public safety measure. On the other side is the , a
Created by Matt Nix ( Burn Notice ) and executive produced by Bryan Singer (for better or worse, given his later controversies), Season 1 of The Gifted didn’t try to be a superhero spectacle. Instead, it became a tense, paranoid thriller about persecution, moral compromise, and the desperate fight for survival. Unlike the grand, globe-trotting adventures of the X-Men films, The Gifted is intensely local. The setting is Atlanta, Georgia, but the tone is pure Eastern European noir—bleak, rainy, and claustrophobic. There are no yellow spandex, no psychic jets, and no Professor X in a wheelchair. The X-Men and the Brotherhood are mentioned only as ghosts; they vanished a year prior to the series’ start, leaving a power vacuum and a terrified mutant population at the mercy of Sentinel Services. The show’s genius move was making its protagonists
