As for "Disappointments"...
The X-Files. While there was some solid stuff here and there later on, they probably should have just ended the show gracefully a lot earlier than they did.
Also, Preacher.
I can't think of another instance where so much potential has be squandered so completely.
The actual shows that really disappointed me were the ones that I very much liked and I was pumped to see where they would go, only for them to be cancelled in their first season--and either quickly wrapped up in the last episode or leaving me hanging. Shows like AWAKE, FOREVER and NOW AND AGAIN
Last edited by Jim Kelly; 08-02-2018 at 05:34 AM.
I can understand where you are coming from on that as my own opinion of the last season of Wonder Woman has gone back and forth several times. I guess what bothers me the most is how Season 3 was stripping away all the main parts of Wonder Wonder and turning it into a generic 70's action show. And had that's especially telling with what they were planning for Season 4 with Diana moving to the California IDAC getting a "cute wise cracking kid" added to the cast.
Yeah, I loved that series, but the last season was literally unwatchable. I've never seen a show crash so hard so quickly. Andrew Marlowe left the show, Stana Katic semi left the show, and it just crashed and burned. The rumored behind-the-scenes drama between the two leads probably didn't help things either.
Pose - I posted this elsewhere, but to me it felt like this show lacked some kinda...oomph. I can’t fully describe it. It was well acted, and seemed like a true “reflection of the times” (no first-hand knowledge), but...idk. Watched the season finale without even knowing it was a season finale...then realized a week later that that was it.
Do certain seasons of American Horror Story count, given the format used?
The Battlestar Galactica reboot. That show was so good the first few season but then you started to see they had no long term end goal in sight. That last season was just them pulling dumb ideas out of their butts one after the other because they were just making it up as they went along. That finale was the worst. It was just so stupid on just about every level and them trying to force that "it will all happen again and again" message just fell so flat.
A few years ago, I binge watched the first season and part of the second season of "Lost" while I was on vacation. The problem was twofold. First, there were the flashbacks to establish that everybody in the regular cast was a basket case to the point of being numb and not caring at all the stuff. Secondly, there was the feeling that the whole thing was already so convoluted that there was going to be no way to explain how all of this was possible without falling back on some sort of cliche cheat non-explanation which is what I'm told happened. Or, putting it another way, I "Lost" interest.
"Buffy" also lost it for me during the last two seasons although it had some great individual episodes including the musical. I was watching "Hell's Bells" which was the one where Xander left Anya at the alter and, as he walked away and the episode was ending, I had this strange and unexpected reaction that certainly was not what the episode intended. I started laughing. I remember thinking, "Oh, okay, I see now what this is. Every single character in the entire show has to hit absolute bottom of the barrel and maybe beneath the bottom of the barrel. There cannot be so much as one character in the entire show that has anything working out right or being happy. It's descended into nothing but a cliche soap opera of the most obvious kind. In a way, it always was but it's pushed it to the melodramatic extremes."
Angel in it's last season had the same problems to a large degree. But Whedon always had that sanctimonious attitude that "I give people what they need, not what they want" as if he were a wise teacher/ philosopher and his audience were children. No Joss, you're a good action/ adventure/ soap opera/ comedy writer with occasional delusions of grandeur.
I would not say that "Xena" went south in the end although the more it deviated from it's premise and it's parent show, the less I cared for it.
But it's rather common for shows to deteriorate as they go on for too long. In the old days of episodic television, that often came from running out of ideas and repeating them. More recently, it can come from staying fresh but only by the show becoming drastically different from what made people love it to begin with or falling back onto more and more extreme soap opera tactics.
Power with Girl is better.
I remember the first season of WW when they had the alien Andros played with sophistication, subtlety and acting skill by Tim O'Connor. I thought a sad indication of what the modern version was going to be was shown when Andros returned but now he's a boring 20 something action hero and presented as if that's what he had always been.
Power with Girl is better.
I remember the first season of WW when they had the alien Andros played with sophistication, subtlety and acting skill by Tim O'Connor. I thought a sad indication of what the modern version was going to be was shown when Andros returned but now he's a boring 20 something action hero and presented as if that's what he had always been.
Power with Girl is better.
I also started out thinking of how much better it was than the original (or, perhaps, really equating "realism" as automatically being better than fun fantasy) and yet, after a couple of seasons, my interest in it faded and I never have watched all of it although I've seen all of the original and even *cringe* 1980.
Power with Girl is better.
I mean, season 6 and 7 turned the show into weird sci-fi nonsense. Cryyogenics, man-made flawless diamond, invisibility suit, telekenisis, time-travel, parallel universes?! I still can't believe someone in the creative room proposed these ideas and it boggles my mind that they allowed them to be aired.
It also became really silly in general. There was an episode with ninjas, like actual ninjas, with black attire and shurikens and all. There was an episode with a guy with fire-fetish and everyone's taking it way too seriously. It's unintentionally hilarious.
Last edited by SpiderClops; 08-02-2018 at 10:02 AM.
LOST -- Easily the biggest. The last season (esp. the last half of the last season where it became clear they weren't going to resolve anything) was trash. I'll never watch a Lindeloff/Cuse TV project ever again.
Walking Dead -- It suddenly got so slow and plodding. All the fan favorites are leaving/being killed off. Too dreary and dark with no happiness.
Sliders -- WTF it wasn't even the same show by the end. They should have just ended it when Jerry O'Connell didn't want to come back.
Small Disappointments: Supergirl, Arrow, Charmed, Agents of Shield, Battlestar Galactica
I can accept Arrow and Charmed more because of the longevity of the show.