Re: Stranger Things [SPOILERS]
Posted: 17 Aug 2016, 3:19pm
¡CUBA!
Hell no. Look at how godawful S2 of True Detective was. I'm sick to death of dumb anthologies.Kory wrote:http://www.highsnobiety.com/2016/07/27/ ... -season-2/
Bit of a bummer for me, here. I was hoping they'd do a completely different story.
I'm pretty sick of producers thinking I need all the answers spoonfed to me. I like loose ends. My other idea (my favorite) would be that they do five seasons of the show with all the same characters and setting but no mention of the previous seasons. Just a new stranger thing to deal with each time. Then in the fifth season they start catching on that they've been through something like this before. And the whole season is them trying to close the weird time loop.eumaas wrote:Hell no. Look at how godawful S2 of True Detective was. I'm sick to death of dumb anthologies.Kory wrote:http://www.highsnobiety.com/2016/07/27/ ... -season-2/
Bit of a bummer for me, here. I was hoping they'd do a completely different story.
This was my original favorite, but then somebody made fun of me. I think it was either Marky or revbob. I wasn't paying attention.Flex wrote:Also, you could just have one good season of something and then just fucking leave it alone.
That said, I have no issues with a second season here.
Sure, but it's just a bigger version of something like The Twilight Zone or (in a more modern setting) Black Mirror. It can certainly be done, it just has to have the right minds behind it.Flex wrote:The problem with True Detective was that it confirmed the creators of the show had no idea what made people enjoy the first season in the first place. I think anthology series expose that possibility more than regular shows, since the showrunners have to recreate the things the viewer loved about the show from an entirely new sandbox. If you don't have a pretty solid idea of what the show is, and what it is to its audience, you're opening yourself up to a lot of potential backlash.
Well, those are both episodic, right? It gets easier to establish a show's identity over different stories when you get a new chance every week. True Detective fucked up because they did one story for a whole season, went into a sophomore slump in season two, and that was the end of that.Kory wrote:Sure, but it's just a bigger version of something like The Twilight Zone or (in a more modern setting) Black Mirror. It can certainly be done, it just has to have the right minds behind it.
Well, Fargo shows that an entirely new cast and story can work.eumaas wrote:Hell no. Look at how godawful S2 of True Detective was. I'm sick to death of dumb anthologies.Kory wrote:http://www.highsnobiety.com/2016/07/27/ ... -season-2/
Bit of a bummer for me, here. I was hoping they'd do a completely different story.
But there was still a bit of a connection between the two, tenuous as it was. Maybe that made the difference? Because as amazing as the first season was, the second was even better.Dr. Medulla wrote:Well, Fargo shows that an entirely new cast and story can work.eumaas wrote:Hell no. Look at how godawful S2 of True Detective was. I'm sick to death of dumb anthologies.Kory wrote:http://www.highsnobiety.com/2016/07/27/ ... -season-2/
Bit of a bummer for me, here. I was hoping they'd do a completely different story.
Certainly, just as the first season had a connection to the movie, but crucially, I think, neither requires that kind of pre-knowledge to watch either season. Being versed is like a bonus.JennyB wrote:But there was still a bit of a connection between the two, tenuous as it was. Maybe that made the difference? Because as amazing as the first season was, the second was even better.Dr. Medulla wrote:Well, Fargo shows that an entirely new cast and story can work.eumaas wrote:Hell no. Look at how godawful S2 of True Detective was. I'm sick to death of dumb anthologies.Kory wrote:http://www.highsnobiety.com/2016/07/27/ ... -season-2/
Bit of a bummer for me, here. I was hoping they'd do a completely different story.
I've never seen it, but I'm told that Fargo fits that bill. I'll have to take a look.Flex wrote:How many successful season-long story anthology shows are out there? Genuine question, the only two I'm at all familiar with are American Horror Story and True Detective. The latter of which wasn't actually successful when it tried to commit to the format.