Westworld was my #1 for so many years until Foundation pipped it.
I actually find it difficult to recommend it anymore because of how complex the plot got in later seasons. You need to be very familiar with every sci-fi concept to even stand a chance of keeping up with what’s going on.
Producers don’t sign checks for shows that expensive without knowing what they’re signing up for.
I’d also say the regardless of debates on the quality (seems like audiences split pretty hard after S1), the general direction of the story was extremely clear and the entire inversion arc was almost complete. Anyway, regardless of if it were good or not, being robbed of a conclusion of any kind is infuriating.
I think people didn’t like how season 2 was filmed. It was non linear. Which was intentional because it’s like it was from Bernard’s perspective and he had brain damage and couldn’t remember or experience things linearly.
I also think a lot of people did not understand this. Even at the end of the season.
It was really a season that had to be watched twice.
I quite liked this artistic approach. But it did not sit well with most people.
I also thought the themes of Westworld are very interesting. It’s basically about what counts as autonomy. Are humans programmed ? What counts as a life. And the last season is about what happens if we destroy ourselves. And also delvs into the concept of copies of ones self and what that means.
I would argue that season 1 was so well crafted because it follows in the footsteps of the original feature film. From the start it had a clear destination, with the real story being “how in the world did we get here?” Constraints make good art and all that.
What I like is that there’s a reason for the surrealist vibe. Often surreal stuff is the way it is because that’s just how the director likes to make things.
Absolutely, they do an excellent job of “blurring the line” motivated by the plot and working well with the source material. Really pushing the envelope of tv as a medium imo
Yeah. I knew the character from the comics, but I didn’t know how they were going to tell that story in a TV medium. What they came up with was unexpected but great.
Some I’ve hardly seen mentioned here
Season 1 True Detective is peak tv
Season 1 Westworld
FX’s Legion- the story is a bit disjointed between the season but the effects are top notch
Westworld was my #1 for so many years until Foundation pipped it.
I actually find it difficult to recommend it anymore because of how complex the plot got in later seasons. You need to be very familiar with every sci-fi concept to even stand a chance of keeping up with what’s going on.
And the fact that HBO canceled it one measly season away from being about to finish the story. I’ll never pay a cent for HBO again.
The cancelled because the writers had no idea how to finish the story.
These series do not have a set path from day one.
The showrunners had said from the very beginning they had the outline and knew how long it would go. (Also the end of this interview more recently.)
Producers don’t sign checks for shows that expensive without knowing what they’re signing up for.
I’d also say the regardless of debates on the quality (seems like audiences split pretty hard after S1), the general direction of the story was extremely clear and the entire inversion arc was almost complete. Anyway, regardless of if it were good or not, being robbed of a conclusion of any kind is infuriating.
I think people didn’t like how season 2 was filmed. It was non linear. Which was intentional because it’s like it was from Bernard’s perspective and he had brain damage and couldn’t remember or experience things linearly.
I also think a lot of people did not understand this. Even at the end of the season.
It was really a season that had to be watched twice.
I quite liked this artistic approach. But it did not sit well with most people.
I also thought the themes of Westworld are very interesting. It’s basically about what counts as autonomy. Are humans programmed ? What counts as a life. And the last season is about what happens if we destroy ourselves. And also delvs into the concept of copies of ones self and what that means.
A lot of philosophy in that show.
I would argue that season 1 was so well crafted because it follows in the footsteps of the original feature film. From the start it had a clear destination, with the real story being “how in the world did we get here?” Constraints make good art and all that.
It turned to pure shit by the third season.
Legion is amazing. There’s really nothing else like it. It’s a bit Twin Peaksish I guess?
They really nail the surrealist vibe.
What I like is that there’s a reason for the surrealist vibe. Often surreal stuff is the way it is because that’s just how the director likes to make things.
Absolutely, they do an excellent job of “blurring the line” motivated by the plot and working well with the source material. Really pushing the envelope of tv as a medium imo
Yeah. I knew the character from the comics, but I didn’t know how they were going to tell that story in a TV medium. What they came up with was unexpected but great.