^Netflix tends to precede the first episode of a new season with an extended recap of events in the previous season. Do we know if they're doing that here?
They probably are but I often find those refreshers a little lacking. There are a lot of developments in the last two episodes (probably the one or two before those, too) which a minute or two aren't going to cover properly.^Netflix tends to precede the first episode of a new season with an extended recap of events in the previous season. Do we know if they're doing that here?
Who is Elfo's mother?
Who recovered his body on the beach?
Who kidnapped Luci?
What is the nature of the prophecy and how does it relate to Bean?
What are Dagmar's true motivations?
What were Oona and Odval plotting before Dagmar turned everyone into stone?
And most important of all, will Zøg be able to recover his lost crown, which he accidentally dropped into the moat?
That was awesome."Bite my shiny metal axe!"![]()
I loved the whole season (excuse me, part...what is it with Netflix and these "parts" they're insisting on for seasons a year apart?).
Ummm...what?The Godfather Part II came out 2 years after the original, Part III 16 years after that. Back to the Future Part II and Part III came out 4-5 years after the original BTTF. They're following the precedent of novels that are broken into "parts," or perhaps Shakespeare's history plays. It's done with film or TV series to suggest that the installments are segments of a single long story rather than separate stories, which is certainly true of Disenchantment, Groening's most serialized show to date.
I'm talking about multiple Netflix shows (this one, The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, I think another one but I'm blanking on it) that are being called parts of individual seasons. Netflix has referred to these groups of episodes as parts one and two of one season for those two parenthetical examples, not parts in lieu of seasons.
That's how the press for both of the shows have described the "parts."I don't see them listed as "Season 1, Part 2," merely as "Part 2." So it's unclear. We won't know until they get a third portion and we see how they label it.
However, if they are being referred to as parts of a season, that may be literally true. "Season" can mean a production block, not just a broadcast block. There are cases where something that is produced as a single season is aired in two separate halves; indeed, Netflix does that with a number of its animated shows, like Voltron and Dragons: Race for the Edge. Syfy did it with a couple of production seasons of Eureka, airing them in halves about a year apart.
That's how I felt, too. Not only does he not seem to understand the fundamental issues (or even the purpose of The Problem with Apu), he doesn't even seem to have any interest in understanding the issues.
Fortunately, as Christopher already covered, Groening doesn't have as much direct involvement with Futurama and Disenchantment beyond the initial development (not far from what J.J. Abrams does with live television). Futurama was essentially David X. Cohen and Ken Keeler's show and Disenchantment is essentially Josh Weinstein and Bill Oakley's show. Hell, if a quick look at IMDb is to believed, he hasn't even directly written that much of The Simpsons and not since 1996.
I wonder why people from Steamland want Zøg dead and I hope it's not something as mundane as forcing Dreamland out of ignorance and/or a simple power grab for Odval and the Arch Druidess
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