Yknow what I'd like to see? Sarah just 'splain things to Chuck: they can't have a real relationship because of their situation. They can't have casual, no-strings sex because they are genuinely in love with each other (which I certainly hope they both know about themselves and about each other by now, or they are four-star lunkheads).
So what's left? Find random other people to have casual, no-strings sex with. Isn't that what Sarah's interest in Superspy boils down to? She's not going to fall in love with him, is she? If Chuck's her type, how could Superspy be? It would make just as much sense for her to fall in love with Casey.
The premise of the show is Chuck Loves Sarah. You can't get rid of a show's premise - everything else, yeah, but the premise is kinda it. On Smallville, the premise isn't really Clark Loves Lana, it's more like Superboy Has to Keep His Identity Secret. Which is why Lana becomes wonderfully disposable...
But evolve into what? The UST between Chuck and Sarah provides the conflict. Remove that and the only conflict left is the fact that Chuck will be killed when the Intersect is rebuilt.Fans are really tired of them dragging it out. They want the hook up over and done with so the show can evolve.
And guys, please use spoiler code when talking about future episodes (unless you're just speculating).
Urgh, don't remind me. *stupid-pointless-3D-episode*I don't know that this show is radical enough to even drop Buy More much less make more fundamental changes. They had a chance when Sarah shot the Fulcrum guy in cold blood, to make a fundamental change (driving a permanent wedge between Chuck and Sarah based on the fact that he can't accept her lifestyle/values) but then they just swept that under the rug, signalling that they want the show to be more fluffy and not the type of show that evolves beyond its core premise.
But evolve into what? The UST between Chuck and Sarah provides the conflict. Remove that and the only conflict left is the fact that Chuck will be killed when the Intersect is rebuilt.
Well there might be a season's worth of story there - when push comes to shove, Casey won't pull the trigger - then the three of them need to go into hiding, because what option do they have? That would be a major shift because Buy More would need to be dropped (Ellie and Awesome, too) and the focus becomes Chuck, Sarah and Casey as fugitives.
But after a season or so, that plotline wears out its welcome, too. Maybe that's all the time the show has on the meter. The show could get really radical and, say, continue with the Intersect out of Chuck's head and him playing a different sort of role.
I don't know that this show is radical enough to even drop Buy More much less make more fundamental changes. They had a chance when Sarah shot the Fulcrum guy in cold blood, to make a fundamental change (driving a permanent wedge between Chuck and Sarah based on the fact that he can't accept her lifestyle/values) but then they just swept that under the rug, signalling that they want the show to be more fluffy and not the type of show that evolves beyond its core premise.
Well the creators have said next season is going to be radically different and a huge departure from the first two seasons. So we might just get alot of that.
Well the creators have said next season is going to be radically different and a huge departure from the first two seasons. So we might just get alot of that.
I could see some ways for that to work. Maybe have Sarah and Chuck move in together, but also with Morgan and Anna. They get a deal on a big house (with secret NSA base underneath), so the two couples go in on the deal together.
But that's such a crucial appeal of the show - that he is *not* a trained agent.
A trained Chuck on real spy assignments would just make it into any other spy show. No thanks.
Well the creators have said next season is going to be radically different and a huge departure from the first two seasons. So we might just get alot of that.
I could see some ways for that to work. Maybe have Sarah and Chuck move in together, but also with Morgan and Anna. They get a deal on a big house (with secret NSA base underneath), so the two couples go in on the deal together.
Not conflicty enough either. Who cares if Chuck is working for Sarah and Casey? Then it's just defeat-the-baddie-of-the-week, and that's the least interesting part of the show.Another idea someone suggested is that Sarah and Casey are put in charge of the LA Anti-Fulcrum unit and Chuck is made one of their employees
Bingo. The core of the character is that Chuck is a nerd and when he triumphs in the end, as he must, it must be through his superior nerdiness. For him to drop that angle and adopt superspyness instead would be a severe betrayal of the character by the writers, and I think these writers have a good enough handle on their character that they would know not to do that. They aren't Heroes writers after all.But that's such a crucial appeal of the show - that he is *not* a trained agent.
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