^We're writers. We're poor. 

Or should I just delete this semi-weak series from my tivo's season pass manager now?
Cool, I hope that happens. I hate when they end a series on a cliffhanger, then never return to it.It got canceled after the third season right?
Yep. But a movie is supposedly being planned, so Primeval isn't quite done yet.
Actually, the professor is on a permanent sabatical.
I hate when a network ends a show without resolving at least some of the storylines.... Yes Primeval took care of the major storyline but they left our team in a very difficult situation.
Maybe the American team will help them out.
Does anyone know what network will be airing the US show?
I just don't comprehend the "oh, so-and-so character got killed off so I'm never watching the show again!" people.
In a place like the ARC, people are going to die/quit/burnout and move on. That's just the way operations like that go. And, like, hello? You're dealing with ancient creatures, some of which could swallow you in one gulp and barely belch here. The turnover was actually quite believable, IMO.
And the third season takes an interesting direction, with the input of Sarah Page. The anomalies can't have been a current event. How long have they been happening for, and what did those cultures do with them? That's an interesting thought.
Yes, I know, people are just going to whinge on my affinity for Connor, but I'm very much there for the entire crew, even Sarah Page and Becker. Lester is brilliant. Danny was just coming into his own in a "Cutter-meets-Han Solo" kind of way. "Amusing mayhem" was how I describe it to people. And it was.
I just don't comprehend the "oh, so-and-so character got killed off so I'm never watching the show again!" people.
I've got no problem with cast changes or character deaths as a general practice. However, in this case,killing off Nick Cutter and writing out Jenny Lewis left the show without any characters who were connected to Helen Cutter on any personal level. As a result, Helen completely disappeared for most of the season, along with the core mythology arc of the series, and when it came back, it just felt disconnected. Without that emotional stake, it just wasn't as interesting.
There doesn't have to be a name for every creature, does there? I mean, it's not an educational documentary. It's an adventure drama.And my main objections aren't to the cast changes, but to the deterioration in the intelligence of the series. The creatures started out being scientifically credible, or at least grounded in real biology, allowing for some poetic license. And I can't tell you how refreshing it was to see a show built around extinct animals other than the usual dinosaurs or Pleistocene megafauna. But the third season ignored the science more and more, introducing more fanciful future creatures and giving less explanation about the prehistoric creatures (for instance, in the episode with the phorusrhacid "terror birds," the birds were never even identified by name onscreen). The lowest ebb was the episode with the fungus men.
I'm going to take a guess that this is where your hard SF background and my distaste for hard SF is showing. I have the feeling you were looking for things that were never there to begin with.And that's just one of the ways in which the storytelling became less intelligent in S3. Absurd plot contrivances, nonsensical character actions, gross failures of logic, you name it.
Seriously, if you're trying to trap an animal, you don't come at it with 800 threatening people. That's going to scare it off immediately. And that's the last thing you want to do if you're trying to coax it back through an anomaly. Keep backup at a reasonable distance in case of danger, and don't send in too many people at first. Makes perfect sense.Which is all entirely true, and which is why it was totally unbelievable that, in S2-3, the main four or five characters always went into danger without any significant military backup.In a place like the ARC, people are going to die/quit/burnout and move on. That's just the way operations like that go. And, like, hello? You're dealing with ancient creatures, some of which could swallow you in one gulp and barely belch here. The turnover was actually quite believable, IMO.
We don't know how it might have gone down the line. That's the unfortunate nature of 10 episodes of storytelling time, the events that happened, and the overarcing story being told in those 10 hours. You can't get everything done. 20% of the episodes were devoted to the ancient mythology concept as it was.I agree completely. Which is why it's a shame that said concept was never significantly followed up on after Sarah was introduced. Aside from the episode with the medieval knight and the "dragon," the whole idea of anomalies and creatures being the basis of ancient mythology was ignored after Sarah's debut episode.And the third season takes an interesting direction, with the input of Sarah Page. The anomalies can't have been a current event. How long have they been happening for, and what did those cultures do with them? That's an interesting thought.
OMG, that was comedy gold. Lester was turning into the General Hammond of the group. Granted, a better dressed and exponentially more snarky General Hammond, but a Hammond nonetheless. Expanding his role by involving one of the four central characters was an amusing way to go, IMO. We got him on the spot more, and got a lot of insight into the character with how he dealt withI like the characters fine, though I can take or leave Connor and Abby. They just didn't have good material to work with. Lester became a favorite of mine about the time he fought off Leek's attack at the end of S2, but saddling him withYes, I know, people are just going to whinge on my affinity for Connor, but I'm very much there for the entire crew, even Sarah Page and Becker. Lester is brilliant. Danny was just coming into his own in a "Cutter-meets-Han Solo" kind of way. "Amusing mayhem" was how I describe it to people. And it was.was just a waste of his character.an Odd Couple routine with Connor as his roommate.rooming with Connor
There was a sense of the absurd to the whole thing, and, frankly, they never took themselves too seriously. Even though they took what they did VERY seriously. I know a few people like that.
Okay, what? I can give you the first, but how, exactly, was Jenny connected to Helen on a personal level moreso than Connor or Abby?
Helen was most certainly connected to Connor and Abby, just not on the same level that she was connected to Nick and Steven.
There doesn't have to be a name for every creature, does there? I mean, it's not an educational documentary. It's an adventure drama.
And the fungus men had to be straight out of at least one comic book. Usually, when they're scraping comic book territory I run away very fast. That? Not so much. Life on Earth can and has taken some truly bizarre shapes. Can you say for sure that there was never, in the history of time, a fungus capable of manipulating the DNA of a host to reproduce?
This was never a hard science show. If it were, nobody would have left anything in the past. But, that kind of got blown out in the first episode.
I'm going to take a guess that this is where your hard SF background and my distaste for hard SF is showing. I have the feeling you were looking for things that were never there to begin with.
Seriously, if you're trying to trap an animal, you don't come at it with 800 threatening people. That's going to scare it off immediately. And that's the last thing you want to do if you're trying to coax it back through an anomaly. Keep backup at a reasonable distance in case of danger, and don't send in too many people at first. Makes perfect sense.
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