Sci-fi show The Miniature Wife underwhelms – despite the big names

New Scientist 

Miniature people have been a staple of science fiction and fantasy going all the way back to Jonathan Swift's, and shrunken characters have taken the spotlight in everything from classic Hollywood movies like and to family-friendly blockbusters like and . References to these movies and others are strewn throughout the new Peacock limited series, but the drawn-out, 10-episode show isn't a particularly worthwhile addition to the sci-fi shrinking canon. Taking only the title and basic premise from Manuel Gonzales's 2014 short story, stars Elizabeth Banks as Lindy Littlejohn, a once-prominent author who now works as a university professor and has been overshadowed by her scientist husband Les (Matthew Macfadyen). Lindy, you see, feels metaphorically small in both her personal and professional lives, and is about to become literally small following an accident - or it? The most pressing problem for Lindy is that Les has yet to develop a stable antidote to his formula, and everything that he has attempted to return to its original size thus far has almost immediately exploded.