I like season long arcs, going back to episodic stories would be a mistake and regressive.
The trouble with serialization is that whole thing of 'escalation'. There has to be a continuing wtf factor, moments that take a previous high and smash it. Unfortunately, in many cases that ends up becoming a millstone in itself. If everything has to keep getting bigger and bigger, then it risks going completely over the edge into melodrama. Certainly I believe that is what happened with Buffy. Ironically, in hindsight, for a show that many claim exemplifies how to do serialized story telling right, the seasons that are more fondly remembered are 1 to 4, when the show much more distinctly straddled a line between episodic and serial elements, rather than the serial-heavy later seasons that became more and more ridiculous as they went along.
I believe every episode this season (and last), has had a complete and self contained story with a beginning, middle and end, including the most recent two parter. Doesn't really matter that the show has been presented in serialized format, it is pretty much a TV storytelling fundamental.
Which episodes do you not think fit this description?
I like season long arcs, going back to episodic stories would be a mistake and regressive.
I would say that's a pretty reductive claim.
First of all, season 1 and season 4 are, in my experience, pretty much near the bottom of the barrel in terms of being fondly remembered. Secondly, season six very deliberately didn't go bigger at all, it went smaller, and it worked quite well as a storyline, though it's not a very popular one on account of the incredibly depressing subject matter.
I'd also argue that season 2 is somewhat overrated by many people, I suspect out of nostalgia, in that it was the moment when the show first clicked for them. And in any case, when I hear people talk about season 2, they're usually talking about the serialized parts, anyway (Angelus).
Meanwhile, season 5 has been rather underrated, I've always suspected because a lot of people simply didn't like the presentation of Glory and her minions, but it undeniably has several of the greatest episodes of the show, most of which don't actually require you to understand the season arc to appreciate them. And I would honestly put it out there as one of the greatest season long arcs I've ever seen on television.
Season 7 is down at the bottom of the list with 1 and 4, but that's not because it's serialized. It's because the season long arc just wasn't well planned out, so there's a huge slump in the middle of the season until the writers just handwave a bunch of stuff so they can finally get to the good stuff in the last four or five episodes.
Which brings me incidentally to the thread topic, because DSC's season 1 arc made Buffy season 7 look like a masterpiece and unfortunately the Red Angel storyline is losing stock with me every week at this point, so I fear more and more that this show really just doesn't have the talent for season long arcs to begin with. My preferred method in general would be mini-arcs mixed with single episodes that all add up to an overarching season arc (or even larger arc like GoT). But unless season 2's storyline has a massive turnaround that suddenly makes this whole thing feel a lot more interesting, I've pretty much lost faith in DSC's ability to pull off anything bigger than a 3-parter and I wish they'd stop trying.
They're stories. They should fill up the amount of episode(s) needed to tell them. I'm not exactly sure how episodic is "regressive"? It is a valid form of storytelling.
I can't wait for the new version of The Twilight Zone on Monday.
Novels superseded short stories because they could give readers many things short form story telling was not capable of.
To be fair, Season 5 was (aside from the 1992 movie) my first introduction to Buffy, and hooked me enough to want to go back and check out the rest, but as time has gone on I've found myself definitely closer to the line that the show did have diminishing returns.
Is Season 6 smaller? I do grant you the idea of the villains being three schmucks living in mom's basement is certainly a step down, but we all know that the trio are really the season's bait-and-switch, and that the real big bad... is arguably the biggest twist to date. And her descent into badness was seeded throughout the season in subtle ways, while we were all distracted by the trio.
I guess my point is really that in a serialized show there always has to be escalation. On some levels, S6 can't top a literal evil goddess like Glory, but the personal connection that the viewers would have had with the ultimate big bad of S6 means that she's certainly a step up drama wise.Unfortunately, that 'serial escalation' has a habit of taking drama into melodrama and driving it completely off a cliff.
(Disclaimer: IMHO. Individual milage may vary.Take only as prescribed. If pain persists, see an EMH.
)
There's something intrinsically more compelling about a series of chapters that actually leads somewhere, as opposed to a set of random stories that are only connected by the fact they feature the same characters but can be watched in any order.
I find something intrinsically compelling about a good story. Whether it is told in 45 or 450 minutes. YMMV.
I've found more compelling drama in "The Doomsday Machine", "Balance of Terror" or "Q, Who" than I've found so far in Discovery.
Good for you. Doesn't change the fact that once long for story telling on TV as happened with fiction was introduced, people wanted more. And like novels, long for story telling is now dominant on Television. This is not random. Novels can include the things short stories embody. The reverse is not the same.
I have watched eps in Discovery which I consider the equal of the best of episodic Trek, and they are further enriched, IMO, by being part of a continuing story and the deepening of character and ongoing narrative that this allows as well as functioning as discrete narratives as well.
IMO, a short story can't embody a novel, but a novel can contain anything that a short story can and a whole lot more.
To be fair, Season 5 was (aside from the 1992 movie) my first introduction to Buffy, and hooked me enough to want to go back and check out the rest, but as time has gone on I've found myself definitely closer to the line that the show did have diminishing returns.
Is Season 6 smaller? I do grant you the idea of the villains being three schmucks living in mom's basement is certainly a step down, but we all know that the trio are really the season's bait-and-switch, and that the real big bad... is arguably the biggest twist to date. And her descent into badness was seeded throughout the season in subtle ways, while we were all distracted by the trio.
I guess my point is really that in a serialized show there always has to be escalation. On some levels, S6 can't top a literal evil goddess like Glory, but the personal connection that the viewers would have had with the ultimate big bad of S6 means that she's certainly a step up drama wise.Unfortunately, that 'serial escalation' has a habit of taking drama into melodrama and driving it completely off a cliff.
(Disclaimer: IMHO. Individual milage may vary.Take only as prescribed. If pain persists, see an EMH.
)
Novels superseded short stories because they could give readers many things short form story telling was not capable of.
I'm sorry, but this is a damn, damn ignorant claim.
It is true that novels sell better than short stories. Particularly for genre fiction like sci-fi, the death of sales for short stories has been a big issue for new writers trying to break into the industry. And even if you do get published in one of the few magazines still published, like Analog, you'll only get a pittance.
That said, commercial viability is not the same thing as artistic merit. Poetry, for example, is a notoriously low-selling area of writing. It's often joked that more people write poetry than read poetry. But no one would claim it's a form which is universally of lower artistic quality than say 800-page fantasy doorstoppers.
In addition, it's basically false to claim that novels supplanted short stories in any real way. Until the modern era there was little distinction between the two. One can argue the modern novel actually appeared earlier than the modern short story, with the earliest modern novels dating roughly to the Enlightenment, while the modern short story is a 19th century invention. Really after the rise of the printing press and mass literacy, the novel took off as a format, but only later, when things like print magazines and literary journals took off, was there a strong market demand for short fiction.
As Billj said, a story needs only to be as long as needed for the dramatic or narrative intent.
As an example, when I was younger I read a short story where a company introduced a technology which allowed children to be placed in suspended animation and be educated at the same time. Seen through the lens of one overworked set of parents looking to have a kid, it was seen as a godsend. No need for school, no need for babysitters, just thaw out the kids for a few hours between getting home from work and going to bed. And as a plus, your kids age more slowly, so you get to enjoy every moment of their youth stretched out over the rest of your life. In reality it was deeply chilling, because it reduces childhood to a consumer good for the parents, and the kids into simple objects. It got to something interesting in how a fraction of people treat parenthood though. There would be absolutely no point in making this into a longer-form fiction form, because the story already had dramatic impact.
That's a passionate defense of short fiction, but it doesn't actually disprove anything I said on the subject.
Again, novels didn't supersede short fiction, because short fiction as we understand it developed after the modern novel. At best you can argue they developed concurrently.
It's also worth noting serialized storytelling isn't a new thing. It first developed with serialized novels in magazines and journals and the like in the 19th century. During the "radio drama" period of the early 20th century, serialized storytelling was highly common. However, it came to be seen as lowbrow and vulgar by the 1950s, while the episodic anthology was considered to be a higher, more rarefied form of art. This is part of the reason why TOS had the structure it did - it was basically an anthology show with a core cast from week to week.
Once again in the modern era, serialization is hot, but there's no reason to think it will last forever. Indeed, one can point to the success of Black Mirror as perhaps a harbinger that we're a bit too over-saturated on serialized drama, and there's a yearning for more self-contained stories which explore a single theme per episode.
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