I was totally lost watching this show so I considered it a waste of time and never bothered to watch the 2nd season.
But to get technical, From Hell can be enjoyed as a possible solution to a known mystery. To people unacquanted with the Jack the Ripper case, it may even be convincing. (I've only seen the movie.)
Any movie/tv show you watch you can be 99% sure the "good guys" are going to win, regardless of the setting.^^^Well, yes, knowing the good guys are going to win does rather decrease the excitement. Movies like Raiders or Star Wars don't get people invested by their suspense over the ending---they get them hooked by the plausibility of the FX or by nostalgia or by being wildly imaginative or by making the morality of the story a recreationally easy black and white.
OK, maybe I should have said 99% of shows, rather than implying you only have a 1% chance of not being sure of how the show will end.^^ Currently watching the final season of The Shield, and I honestly haven't got a clue how that's going to pan out!
There are always ways around predictable outcomes anyway. Enterprise and The Sarah Connor Chronicles are two examples of shows where we already know the future history, yet both came up with ways to circumvent that knowledge.
I don't think that this affected Carnivale too much to be honest. Certainly not from my perspective. Yes, I was sure that the apocalypse would be averted, but I had no idea how.
^I know, but reading back what I said I realised that I didn't exactly say what I meant.
But I agree with what you were saying, I don't think knowing something will happen is all that important when you don't know how and why it will unfold that way.
Who says just because you avert "the apocalypse" you have a happy ending? You might have an ending that doesn't destroy the world, or an entire way of life, but that doesn't necessarily mean it's happy for the people involved, nor does it necessarily mean the outcome is still a "good" one. I mean if averting the apocalypse means dropping a nuclear bomb on another country and killing thousands of innocent people is that a happy ending?^I know, but reading back what I said I realised that I didn't exactly say what I meant.
But I agree with what you were saying, I don't think knowing something will happen is all that important when you don't know how and why it will unfold that way.
Knowing there will be a happy ending does take away a dramatic element.
It's true that it's not the only dramatic element and it's quite possible to enjoy something where you know the outcome. It's possible to enjoy historical fiction and drama, after all. But there's a reason historical fiction and drama are not that popular. Hollywood's commitment to the happy ending does tend to detract from the product. The old stereotype that European movies was partly based in the perception that unhappy endings were more acceptable.
there's a reason historical fiction and drama are not that popular.
Plus Band of Brothers and all the other war movies and TV shows, From Earth to the Moon, Apollo 13, all the political movies and biopics... yeah, I see what he means, not popular at all.there's a reason historical fiction and drama are not that popular.
Dunno, just in recent memory, Rome and The Tudors have done quite well. Not to mention the plethora of historical dramas that the BBC have pumped out over the last couple of decades.....
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