Agreed. I actually do own season one, but I'm not gonna buy a season that ends in an unresolved cliff-hanger.Guess what is now cancelled...
My plans for eventually buying past seasons.
Agreed. I actually do own season one, but I'm not gonna buy a season that ends in an unresolved cliff-hanger.
They won't do more episodes because they have a full order, but the question is whether they'll have a large gap or if they'll mix in breaks throughout.I'm curious what AoS will do, will they make more episodes or will there just be a gap like first season?
But there are still the unresolved threads of the Council itself and Dottie Underwood being in the wind. YMMV, but those are deal-breakers to me.Except it doesn't. It resolves all of its own major plotlines; it just has one cliffhanger element to set up a next season. And it doesn't really have to be seen as a cliffhanger.I think that works well enough as an ending. Not perfectly, but well enough that it's hardly sufficient reason to deprive yourself of owning it.Jack's murder can just be seen as a tragic coda, a retaliation for his betrayal of the Council. A lot of standalone movies or books end with that kind of a tragic beat -- the heroes succeed, but at a cost. The story of Whitney Frost and Zero Matter is over, but we know that Peggy still has enemies and there's still evil to fight.
Most likely it was accurate right up until the "you know what's about to happen" line. That line itself is somewhat meaningless unless everything prior to that didn't play out as it did in reality. Or at least the version of reality that is Tony's memory.
TV giveth and TV taketh away.
I know it won't happen, but I'm still hoping for a Marvel Team Up/Marvel Two-in-One type show where it features a different MCU character every episode.
But what about the setting? In the comic it's the pool but in the movie it's the living room. And in the movie, it seems to be around Christmas, not really pool weather, particularly in New York.
I don't know what kind of time travel shenanigans would be required to make it happen, but I would love to see a team up between Agent Carter & Black Widow!
But there are still the unresolved threads of the Council itself and Dottie Underwood being in the wind. YMMV, but those are deal-breakers to me.
But what about the setting? In the comic it's the pool but in the movie it's the living room. And in the movie, it seems to be around Christmas, not really pool weather, particularly in New York.
It's been a rough year for me. I lost Agent Carter, Community, Downton Abbey, & Lost Girl.
In a general thematic sense, of course. But more specifically, I think it's quite obvious in context of also watching this season of Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. that they are part of the American branch of Hydra whose story is continued there.Well, of course the Council was going to be unresolved. It symbolized the rich white patriarchy that controlled all the institutions of society in 1947, and hey, news flash, the rich white patriarchy still controls much of society today. So it's a given that they weren't going anywhere.
If you ask me, we lost Lost Girl a couple of years ago. It's been a shadow of its former self and I'm glad it was finally put out of its misery.
"Mission Report: December 16, 1991."
^ Unfortunately, soon after the events of S2, Sousa fell into a deep coma that paused his aging. He was cured in the early 2000s, and became an NYC cop.![]()
You may have a point. Season 3 was probably the last good season. Season 4 was a massive clusterfuck but at least it still had a few good episodes, mostly the ones focusing on Kenzi. Unfortunately, Kenzi left in early Season 5. And while I've only seen the first half of Season 5, it seems like all of the episodes equal the quality of the 4th season finale (i.e. lame & incomprehensible). It may be the worst single season of TV that I've ever seen, and I sat through the entire 5th season of Earth: Final Conflict!But losing a show still hurts, particularly since I've always been an incurable optimist that it could get better. On the plus side, I get to meet Kenzi at Phoenix Comicon next month!
I agree about Lost Girl season 4, but season 5 actually wasn't nearly as bad. It wasn't good, but it was nowhere near as incoherent as season 4.
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