One thing I don't like is the idea that Sylar's murderous streak was caused strictly by his powers. That's too much of a cop-out.
It would be easier to swallow if they hadn't presented Sylar as being inherently murderous in S2. But I thought
that was a bad call because I was fully expecting them to keep Quinto at least till
Star Trek XI comes out, for the PR value, and probably beyond, and having him be inherently murderous gives them no place to go with the character that doesn't get repetitious. They wrote themselves into a corner and now they're trying to wiggle out of it. They could use some better advance planning on this show, that much is sure.[/quote]
You can't turn a villain good, it's that simple. That way equals shark jumping. Turn a villain, a truly evil, psychopathic villain good, and you just have bad writing.
Also, villains shouldn't remain, villains should DIE. Name the greatest villain of Spider-man. You know who everyone names if they don't know what happened in the last decade? The Green Goblin aka Norman Osborn. Why? Because he hurt Spider-man, killed his girlfriend, nearly killed Spider-man, and then DIED. There is always that nagging feeling; what if he got another shot? (Then of course, they resurrected both of them, shitting all over that legacy.)
Villains, however, that remain around, try again and again, and continuously get their asses kicked, lose their threat value. A hero growing stronger, better, and beating the same villain again and again. A villain without a threat value is a joke. That first time when it seemed he had a shot at defeating the hero, you now know, he never really had a chance.
Sylar should have been finished off at the end of S1. That, really, after all, was Hiro's journey. Save the world, and from his point of view that meant finishing off Sylar. He should have, and then he finds out it was Peter. Nathan comes, sends Peter up in the sky, and BOTH of THEM die in the explosion.
S2, is Hiro and the group taking on more threats to the world - most notably the company - with Hiro somewhat the leader and Noah a mentor figure, a teacher.
Wow, so am I the only person on here who actually still likes Heroes?
No, but it does just seem to be you and me.
And me!
I don't care how nonsensical etc etc etc it is. I'm along for the ride and it's intense this season. Plenty of WTF?! moments, some cool set-pieces and a core cast of likeable people. And nuts to you all Daphne is awesome
To me, the moment Sylar turned out to be good, there were no more good moments at all. The rest of the episode played like a bland pile of nothingness, that had no interested to me, while I went, "Why!? Why can they do this!? Why can they turn what used to be one of, if not THE best show I'd ever seen, in such a pile of junk! You can NOT make a villain like Sylar turn good, without the entire show smelling of that bad stink."