RiverdaleTV-show · 2017

Okay, so you think you know Archie and the gang? Think again. Riverdale takes everything you thought about wholesome comics and throws it into a blender with dark mysteries, angsty teens, and absolutely wild plot twists. It's pure guilty pleasure vibes, serving up high school drama with a side of supernatural chaos and small town secrets that just won't quit. Plus, if you're not already obsessed with Cole Sprouse as Jughead or KJ Apa as Archie, get ready for that to change.
Riverdale reimagines the classic Archie comics characters like Archie Andrews, Betty Cooper, Veronica Lodge, and Jughead Jones in a modern, dark setting. The series explores the seemingly idyllic small town of Riverdale, uncovering the sinister secrets and crimes lurking beneath its wholesome facade. As a group of high school friends navigates typical teenage drama, they also find themselves embroiled in a series of increasingly bizarre and dangerous mysteries. It's a bold, subversive take that blends classic teen angst with a pervasive sense of dread and the surreal.
The seventh season of Riverdale goes where no season of Riverdale has dared to go before - the 1950s! Picking up where last season ended, Jughead Jones finds himself trapped in the 1950s. He has no idea how he got there, nor how to get back to the present. His friends are no help, as they are living seemingly authentic lives, similar to their classic Archie Comics counterparts, unaware that they've ever been anywhere but the 1950's. Archie Andrews is the classic all-American teen, coming of age, getting into trouble, and learning life-lessons; Betty Cooper is the girl next door, starting to question everything about her perfect life - including her controlling mother Alice; Veronica Lodge is a Hollywood starlet who moved to Riverdale under mysterious circumstances; Cheryl Blossom is the Queen Bee with a withering wit and a secret longing; Toni Topaz is an activist fighting for the Black students of recently integrated Riverdale High; Kevin Keller is a "square" crooner wrestling with his sexual identity; Reggie Mantle is a basketball star from farm country; and Fangs Fogarty is a greaser who's destined to be an Elvis-type star. It isn't until Jughead is visited by Tabitha Tate - Riverdale's Guardian Angel - that he learns the cosmic truth about their predicament. Will Jughead and the gang be able to return to the present? Or will our characters be trapped in the 1950's forever? And, if so... is that such a bad thing?





