trekprincess
Ensign
Zachary must be relieved that's he's not tied to the Heroes anchor anymore.
I do think there is a bit of a backlash towards serialization on TV right now among genre fandom. But it isn't because we hate or dislike serialization. I love it and prefer it far more than episodic television. But so much of serialization on TV is not planned out, not well written, and very often offers questions but no answers.
I think the end of BSG started the trend(although its dawn perhaps can be seen as far back as the end of the X-Files), with an end that not satisfying to many fans. If Lost's ending is not satisfying the trend will probably increase quite a bit.
Reading interviews from Ron Moore, and the Lost duo that basically come down to, "Forget the mythology and plot of the show, all that matters in the end is the characters." does not inspire confidence or respect.
Get JMS back on TV to show this generation of TV writers what well planned serialization looks like, because it appears that they have no clue.
Wonder why NBC didn't axe Heroes sooner if the quality and storylines declined well move on and do better and bigger tv shows I say.
Some fans-yes. But you can't blame Heroes decline and ultimate cancellation on fickle viewers--the problem was that the writing quality went down and the show came off the rails horribly over the last two seasons. You can't just expect viewers to just sit back and eat it up.I thought the show was fine, though the fact it was on borrowed time was pretty clear when it barely got renewed for a fourth season. By then it was running on fumes and SF/F fandom in general had abandoned it. Which is sad but fans are fickle.
They do want them. Or at least I do because episodic or procedural dramas just don't cut it anymore. LOST and shows like it have raised the bar in what I have come to expect from storytellers and I don't think now I can ever go back. They are the only shows these days that can surprise me or catch me off guard. I longed for the days of heavily serialization with no standalones mixed in.The impression I get from both the rejection of Heroes, and what appears to be a general "just end it already" attitude towards 24 and Lost is that people don't want serialized, complex storytelling anymore.
Yes, I never understood this. Thy have to know if you create a mythology that is going to interest the viewers then don't dismiss it so easily.Reading interviews from Ron Moore, and the Lost duo that basically come down to, "Forget the mythology and plot of the show, all that matters in the end is the characters." does not inspire confidence or respect.
I disagree. I don't care if something is planned out or last-minute just so long as it makes sense. The Final Five, for instance that you mention, was made up as they went along but I disagree with you that it didn't make sense. It worked perfectly, made so much sense and pulled together a great many of the series dangling disparate threads in such a cleverly unifying way that I can't help but be impressed.I love BSG but it's the show I always think about when it comes to the writers not thinking out the premise of the show. When you look back at a lot of the story developments, a lot of them don't make sense. The Final Five Cylons were literally decided as the episode was being written and when you think about it, the choices don't make a hell of a lot of sense.
The impression I get from both the rejection of Heroes, and what appears to be a general "just end it already" attitude towards 24 and Lost is that people don't want serialized, complex storytelling anymore.
I guess this means Hayden Panettiere is going to be doing more crappy teen movies.
I think the general rule for American TV should be this:
You want a show that runs for 7-10 years, make it episodic. And you can have 20-24 eps a year if you want. Popular characters are sacred and will be around as long as the actor is willing to stick with it.
Well that's a reasonable enough goal because few shows last five years anyway. I would feel very lucky to have a well executed five-season run of a serialized show. Even three good years is more than we generally get.But if you want to tell what is essentially one progressive story arc, you have to accept that it shouldn't go longer than 3-5 years (or maybe even less)
Watch the first season, it really is great. Then if you are in love, and I mean really in love, with the characters, you can check out the subsequent seasons. But man oh man, the writing goes in the toilet right away in S2 - I couldn't believe I was watching the work of the same writing staff - so you have to be in it for the characters.I have a confession to make:
I havent seen any episodes of this series
I know what is it about and so on..but I watch most of the stuff I watch from DVD these days.
Is it a good show? and should I pick it up on DVD?![]()
Oh definitely! BSG and Heroes are opposites.It's easy to see the wasted potential in this show when you realize BSG ran for four seasons, too. Regardless of opinions about the finale, that show went somewhere and generally didn't waste every episode on nonsense.
You can ignore that flaw when watching episodes; it's only afterwards that you start to get disgruntled. But if the execution is bad - you see characters doing stupid things, the dialogue is witless, good plotlines are dropped for no reason - you get immediately aggravated while watching the show. That is a lot harder to ignore.On The Plan DVD, they writers admit they never had a plan for the Cylons. They said the line "and they have a plan" was pretty much just thrown in there to add intrigue but never really planned out.
The new characters were largely a waste of space, but the real problems were far more basic: characters being written stupidly for the convenience of the plot; characters who are kept in the story, yet have no good purpose in the story; good plotlines dropped abruptly before any resolution; no overall point to anything going on.Problem was in the second year the show began to branch out and add new characters and do digressions and the like -- you know, the stuff Lost has been doing for years, but for whatever reason a lot of people thought Heroes shouldn't.
By then it was running on fumes and SF/F fandom in general had abandoned it. Which is sad but fans are fickle.
The thing with DH is that it really doesn't adhere to the traditional sense of season long arcs that are developed over a season and touched on in every episode like most primetime soaps used to do. DH does a little of this and a little of that--they'll have their Big Mystery then they'll do nothing with it for stretches and do just one hour sitcom material that is pretty much standalone or something that comes out of it spins off another tiny little two or three episode arc. It isn't all that well-plotted either and it seems like every character on there except for the four wives are just a means to an end.Desperate Housewives is faaaaaar too long. They cram really silly useless filler into their seasons, although only one is left so they won't stop with the formula.
As much as I've loooooooooved LOST and its unique brand of storytelling I need a break. It was an exhaustive 6 years as a viewer and I'd like next season for serialized dramas to get back to smaller ensembles where you can really develop the characters and not zig zag through every possible character pairing permutation imaginable. Also fewer plotlines that you can really develop and more traditional linear storytelling too. I enjoyed parsing scenes and looking for easter eggs and subtle clues but I'm ready for the days when I can just watch an episode and everything you need to catch is right there right out in the open.An ensemble cast is great, but it reaches a breaking point where you need to download a spreadsheet to keep it all together.
Heroes has been bad since S2. 24 has been bad since S6. Both deserve to die on the basis of poor quality.The impression I get from both the rejection of Heroes, and what appears to be a general "just end it already" attitude towards 24 and Lost is that people don't want serialized, complex storytelling anymore.
I'm not holding out too much hope for The Cape. It has a narrow and frankly mawkish premise. I'll go on record right now predicting that James Frain's supervillain character will steal the show and we'll all start bitching about how they should just turn the whole thing over to his character. Regardless, I'll check it out and if Frain is as good as I think he'll be, I'll keep watching it for him alone while slamming the show each week right here, same bat-time, same bat-channel.Looks like The Cape is probably going to go the same route - people will love it for the first while then when the show settles into having to fill 22-episode seasons with character pieces even Summer Glau's appeal won't be enough.
Reading interviews from Ron Moore, and the Lost duo that basically come down to, "Forget the mythology and plot of the show, all that matters in the end is the characters." does not inspire confidence or respect.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.