WTF was that someone explain it to me..Who and where were those people coming from?
Overall a great series.
Overall a great series.
THIS. Very similar thing happened with Lost.BenTheGoodAg said:
It's almost like they wrote themselves into a corner and didn't know how to finish it.
Personally, I thought a series based on what the world would possibly look like had we lost the war and the resistance movement within the US, without all the Sci-Fi portals, alternate dimensions, etc. would have been really interesting.TriAg2010 said:
The ending was a major WTF. I liked the series and thought it was pretty good overall. Interesting premise and it started strong. There were some really great story lines and tension-building, but I don't think all of the story lines carried meaningful weight or connected in a sensible way. It felt like it didn't equal the sum of its parts.
agree. i thought that's what it was when i started it.htxag09 said:Personally, I thought a series based on what the world would possibly look like had we lost the war and the resistance movement within the US, without all the Sci-Fi portals, alternate dimensions, etc. would have been really interesting.TriAg2010 said:
The ending was a major WTF. I liked the series and thought it was pretty good overall. Interesting premise and it started strong. There were some really great story lines and tension-building, but I don't think all of the story lines carried meaningful weight or connected in a sensible way. It felt like it didn't equal the sum of its parts.
Canyon99 said:
The ****ty last few episodes ruined the entire thing for me. One of my most hated series that I've completed.
YouBet said:
I never really understood the hate the finale got. John could have gone one of two directions at the end: redemption or double-down and he chose the latter. Was hoping for the former because it always felt like he was on the verge and just couldn't do it. However, I thought him sticking to his evil path was more real-life than redemption.
Madmarttigan said:
I don't think people hated his character arc. They were baffled by the last scenes.
Here's the showrunners being interviewed prior to the final season..YouBet said:Madmarttigan said:
I don't think people hated his character arc. They were baffled by the last scenes.
Buy why? I'm admittedly a little hazy at this point but it was basically a gradually then suddenly ending that is reminiscent of many regimes failing and ending.
Shaking in fear of Donald Trump. Not surprising how the season turned out.Quote:
DEADLINE: In the time since High Castle's debut in 2015, there has been a wide spread political shift in the West with the election of Donald Trump and right-wing populism parties rising up all over Europe. As the series now moves into its final season, I wanted to get a sense of, as much as you can, how you feel that the series has mirrored the time in which it has existed?
ZUCKER: I think it's been obviously disturbing to varying degrees for everybody involved with the series that there is a more sort of literal experience that can be drawn from much of what exists in the stories that we told, that we're telling in the world that, we're looking at outside of our own window.
And it's not just today.
One can look at A Night at the Garden, the Oscar nominated short documentary, where one can literally look at actual footage in 1939 of what transpired in this country. If certain things hadn't taken the course that they did during that era in history, who knows how that organization may have prevailed in mid-century America, and to what degree, you know, is that sort of informing some of the debates that are transpiring today?
DEADLINE: How much does that inform the show, especially going into the final season?
ZUCKER: As inescapable as that question is for us, in some ways it isn't the question that we have undertaken in terms of our sort of fictionalized world. But there's no questioning the deep unease that I think we all feel in the fact that this show has become more fiction-less, if that's not an awful expression to put forward.
HACKETT: I think of all times to be dramatizing this novel, there may have been no better than now, this anti-fascist tale, and so I think during this fraught time, I think that it has been not lost on anyone on this show that this is a particularly important time to be, you know, having this discourse about the dangers of fascism.