Episode 12 was decent, though it was very contrived that Two's creator waited to lure her into a trap until immediately after the crew learned her secret. What are the odds of that? Wil Wheaton was pretty good, though, playing a different character from the smug and obnoxious jerks that have become his specialty.
I didn't care for episode 13 much, though. Most of it was just tedious searching through the ship, a lot of padding and plot mechanics instead of the actual answers and resolution I was hoping for. I hate it when a season-long mystery or suspense arc ends with a cliffhanger that leaves things just as unresolved as they've been all season. It's redundant to end on a cliffhanger when the whole thing has essentially been a cliffhanger. And I think it's lazy writing when a show constantly uses teases and cliffhangers in place of actual endings. Stories like this are only satisfying if they have forward movement, if we actually get answers to reward our patience with the endless questions.
Basically, this was half a story dragged out to fill a whole hour, filled in with tons of searching and a lot of repetitive scenes of One mistrusting Three, Three mistrusting One, and Five mistrusting Two. It was just the same beats over and over again. And why did the One-Three rivalry suddenly reset itself to where it was before the past few episodes where they've bonded more? Why was Three suddenly so stupidly convinced about One being the traitor despite the total lack of evidence? I mean, seriously -- Three was keeping vigil on One's quarters when Six was (allegedly) attacked. He should've been the only one who could be certain that One wasn't the culprit. So having him continue his vendetta against One made no sense at all. It was really, really bad characterization.
And one more failure to advance the storyline -- they brought the One-Three conflict back to the fore but did not have One confront Three about the killing of Derrick's wife. This was the perfect time to bring that out into the open, to give us some real advancement of that story thread. There were so many conversations we could've been seeing instead of a bunch of searching corridors and crawling through vents and rehashing the same two damn conversations three or four times apiece.
We didn't even get a meaningful resolution for the season-long mystery of the memory wipe. We learn that Five did it, but we don't know how or why, and nobody but Six learns about it, so there's no resolution. Unless Six was lying and he was the one behind it, which I suppose is possible.
I'm not happy with Six turning out to be the traitor, but I don't know how to react to it in the absence of context, because we were given so very little to go on. Does this tie into the memory wipe, or is his betrayal some unrelated thing pertaining to his search for the General? If he was lying to Five and is actually the one behind the memory wipe, we have to wait until next season to find out, and that's unsatisfying. A seasonal arc should have a resolution, not just come to a sudden halt and make us wait nine months for more.
I mean, the Killjoys finale last week had its share of cliffhanger elements, but it also had a lot of major things happening, arcs reaching climaxes, old status quos ending. There was a real sense of closure alongside the dangling threads. And it packed at least two episodes' worth of stuff into one, rather than the kind of homeopathic storytelling we got here. That was a good season finale. This one pretty much sucked.
I didn't care for episode 13 much, though. Most of it was just tedious searching through the ship, a lot of padding and plot mechanics instead of the actual answers and resolution I was hoping for. I hate it when a season-long mystery or suspense arc ends with a cliffhanger that leaves things just as unresolved as they've been all season. It's redundant to end on a cliffhanger when the whole thing has essentially been a cliffhanger. And I think it's lazy writing when a show constantly uses teases and cliffhangers in place of actual endings. Stories like this are only satisfying if they have forward movement, if we actually get answers to reward our patience with the endless questions.
Basically, this was half a story dragged out to fill a whole hour, filled in with tons of searching and a lot of repetitive scenes of One mistrusting Three, Three mistrusting One, and Five mistrusting Two. It was just the same beats over and over again. And why did the One-Three rivalry suddenly reset itself to where it was before the past few episodes where they've bonded more? Why was Three suddenly so stupidly convinced about One being the traitor despite the total lack of evidence? I mean, seriously -- Three was keeping vigil on One's quarters when Six was (allegedly) attacked. He should've been the only one who could be certain that One wasn't the culprit. So having him continue his vendetta against One made no sense at all. It was really, really bad characterization.
And one more failure to advance the storyline -- they brought the One-Three conflict back to the fore but did not have One confront Three about the killing of Derrick's wife. This was the perfect time to bring that out into the open, to give us some real advancement of that story thread. There were so many conversations we could've been seeing instead of a bunch of searching corridors and crawling through vents and rehashing the same two damn conversations three or four times apiece.
We didn't even get a meaningful resolution for the season-long mystery of the memory wipe. We learn that Five did it, but we don't know how or why, and nobody but Six learns about it, so there's no resolution. Unless Six was lying and he was the one behind it, which I suppose is possible.
I'm not happy with Six turning out to be the traitor, but I don't know how to react to it in the absence of context, because we were given so very little to go on. Does this tie into the memory wipe, or is his betrayal some unrelated thing pertaining to his search for the General? If he was lying to Five and is actually the one behind the memory wipe, we have to wait until next season to find out, and that's unsatisfying. A seasonal arc should have a resolution, not just come to a sudden halt and make us wait nine months for more.
I mean, the Killjoys finale last week had its share of cliffhanger elements, but it also had a lot of major things happening, arcs reaching climaxes, old status quos ending. There was a real sense of closure alongside the dangling threads. And it packed at least two episodes' worth of stuff into one, rather than the kind of homeopathic storytelling we got here. That was a good season finale. This one pretty much sucked.