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Hava

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Posts posted by Hava

  1. Did anyone else think that, despite being in their early 30s, the Oxford 5 felt like they were starring in a teen or YA drama? Their part of the story didn't feel sophisticated or adult at all. 

    I wish the series had instead focused on Clarence investigating the scientists' suicides, which was the most intriguing plot point in the first episode that quickly dissipated with the reveal of the aliens.

    • Like 6
  2. On 11/1/2015 at 11:50 AM, DisneyBoy said:

    I really liked her with Mike after the flash forward and thought Susan's relationship with the young painter made a lot of sense given her interests...but then, the writers had to go and try and force Susan and Mike back together.

    I completely agree with this. Susan and Mike's relationship really lost its charm after season 1. I started to prefer Susan with her other boyfriends--Dr. Ron, Ian, and, especially, Jackson. I didn't care for Mike and Susan, so I never got into the whole "they were meant to be" thing the show kept pushing.

  3. On 8/30/2023 at 4:51 AM, chediavolo said:

    There is no way he would be attracted to her physically

    And why is that? 

    On 9/7/2023 at 3:45 PM, SeanBug said:

    not Raylan's type at all

    Raylan is a fictional character. His type is basically whoever the writers decide is his type. Raylan never came out and said that he is only attracted to a certain type of woman. Even if you were to say that he only hooked up with skinny, white, blondes during Justified, you still don't know his history of the types of women he hooked up with previously. Also, people change--there are 10 years between the end of Justified and this. 

    Sorry, I just think the fixation that some viewers have on Raylan's type and how Carolyn doesn't fit it is beyond weird and questionable.

    • Applause 1
  4. I just finished watching The Shield for the first time after hearing such rave reviews, and I didn't really like it as a whole. It started off strong, but, by season 4, it really started to drag for me. I didn't care about any of the characters, other than Claudette. 

    • Like 1
  5. It seems to be unpopular among fans, but I loved season 5. I really liked how Michael and Fiona moving in together was not a throwaway shipper moment, but something that actually had plot significance because it upped the stakes for Michael.  I also actually enjoyed watching Michael being selfish and willing to cross moral lines to save Fiona--I think it was an interesting development because, up to that point, he was such a Boy Scout that it became kind of boring for me. 

    I also really enjoyed how Jesse was finally fully integrated into the cast, and he became one of my favorites this season. 

    • Like 1
  6. I was mistaken. They didn't cite "creative differences" but "creative reasons" for letting Donovan go. Meaning, Donovan wasn't the one who had a disagreement about something, but the producers had a reason (creative or otherwise) for letting him go. I think that may be a small but important difference. 

    • Useful 4
  7. 6 hours ago, andromeda331 said:

    I agree. You don't go from willing to die with someone to angry and ready to move on so quickly. I don't know why she was so mad. It was to save the rest of them from going to jail.

    I would love to interview the writers to ask them what the hell they were thinking in the writing of Fiona in season 7. It makes absolutely no sense, and I've tried really hard to make sense of it!

    • Like 1
  8. Burn Notice

    A lot of the criticism of the final season focuses on the season's darker tone and more serialized storytelling. For me, that wasn't the issue. I actually welcomed the change because, while I very much enjoyed the more lighthearted fare and fun in the earlier seasons, I wanted to see a more serious version of the show. My problem with the final season was with the story and the execution of it.   

    My understanding is that the writers wanted the final season to be more about Michael vs. Michael instead of Michael and the gang vs. [insert enemy here]. So, in order to achieve that, Michael needed to be physically and emotionally isolated from his friends and family. The problem is, the show couldn't fully commit to this conceit because the other characters/actors still needed to be a part of the season and, due to budgetary reasons, the show had to be filmed in Miami. So, while the show is telling us that Michael is all alone, we're watching something completely opposite to that--not only is he back home, but he has Sam, Jesse, and his mom there for him.

    Another consequence of this conceit was breaking up Michael and Fiona since, I guess, the audience wouldn't buy Michael "losing himself" if he had Fiona to go home to every night. Fine. But in order to achieve this, the show ruined its lead female character by making her irrational and angry, which left a bad taste in my mouth. 

    Then, after a season of grittiness and angst and darkness, the show tried to go back somewhat to its roots in the final episode. But it just felt rushed and unearned.

    • Like 7
    • Useful 1
  9. On 5/4/2019 at 1:02 AM, andromeda331 said:

    In the first episode of season two when they break up. Michael doesn't act or give any sign that he just broke up with someone he loves after Fiona says her stuff he just says that was what he had been trying to say before. That's what he says to someone he's suppose to be in love with? There's just never any sign that he is. No emotion, nothing.

    To be fair, in that episode where Fiona breaks it off, Michael has a voiceover where he basically states that he misses her scent when she leaves the room. And when they hook up in season 2 (after Michael thinks she may have died in the fire), he's the one who wants something more and Fiona is giving him the cold shoulder.

    Although I was a huge fan of Michael and Fiona, I will agree that Michael was a terrible boyfriend. I kept waiting for Fiona to break up with him in season 5 when it became clear that he wouldn't put the work in to spend quality time with her outside of jobs and life/death situations. But she just kept sticking around.

    Also, season 7 pretty much wrecked their relationship and the final episode couldn't really salvage it. 

    • Like 1
  10. I just binged Burn Notice, and I am now obsessed. What a fantastic show. I wonder why they haven't had any follow-up movies like Monk or Psych. 

    While there were a few episodes I enjoyed in the final season and while I appreciated the show's ambition in going for a darker and more serialized final season, on the whole, I don't think it was successful. For one thing, the pacing was off for the story they were trying to tell--Michael's turn and then sudden reversal were too rushed to be believable. 

    For another thing, this season ruined Fiona's character. I know that Fiona is not too popular of a character, but since she was one of my favorites in the first 5 seasons, the writing for her in the final season was really disappointing. Her actions made absolutely no sense. Why was she angry with Michael--he didn't choose to work with the CIA again, he had to do it as part of a deal to keep everyone out of prison? How the heck did she move on so quickly from Michael--you're telling me that the woman who was willing to die by Michael's side in the season 4 finale is now able to fall in love and move in with somebody else after only 9 months? Even if she was able to inexplicably move on, why was she acting like an unsympathetic asshole to Michael, who it was clear to anyone was really struggling with this mission and needed support?

     

    • Like 3
  11. I wonder why Cornelia didn't live out the rest of her life with Eli? Even if they couldn't be intimate, why not just be with him? HIs character didn't seem to be the type to abandon her at her worst.

    • Like 4
  12. On 11/17/2022 at 3:09 PM, magdalene said:

    Am I the only one genuinely upset Eli and Cordelia couldn't have a happy ending?

    Same here. I was devastated and heartbroken by their ending. I found their romance so beautiful and so magical that it seemed unfair to end it there. 

    Despite some flaws pointed out here (like the scenery-chewing of Melmont), the story between Cornelia and Eli was enough to elevate these show to one of my favorite ever. I was thoroughly captivated and enthralled.

    Can someone tell me if syphillis can be contracted through kissing?

    • Love 1
  13. Quote

    And what did the the druggie woman with her cocaine boyfriend have to do anything? Or just a coinkidink? Did I miss anything? Was there another kitchen sink they forgot to throw in there?

    Oh man! You're right. I totally forgot about them! Wasn't there going to be a big reveal about who the guy was working for?? I thought it was going to lead to the big bad.

    On 6/13/2022 at 9:22 PM, Andyourlittledog2 said:

    I've been watching a lot of British detective shows lately and in absolutely all of them I see them suspecting someone, arresting them immediately, questioning them without an attorney usually (although they are told their rights etc) and even if they have an attorney the attorney never seems to say or do anything but take notes.

    I am so glad you said this because it is something I have noticed with British shows, as well, and it is so baffling to me. Suspects being interrogated while their attorney doesn't say one word. Suspects never asking to leave or stop the questioning.

    Luckily, it's easier to suspend my belief since I'm not familiar with British criminal law, so I just chalk it up to differences between the US and the UK.

    • Like 1
  14. This episode cemented for me why I dislike the storyline involving the Traveling Symphony--its members don't feel like real people. I don't know if it's the acting or the writing, but something about them seems off (more off than would be expected from people who survived an extinction event, I mean). They all seem overly spacey and detached from the world, if that makes sense. Especially in the scene where they "leave" for the Museum of Civilization. I genuinely could not tell in that scene if they were only going because there was a gun pointed at them or because they genuinely needed a new place to stay. It was so, so weird. I don't get them at all. 

  15. I watched this series after watching Keep Sweet. Surprisingly, I am less interested in the extremist factions of Mormonism, and more interested in learning more about mainstream Mormonism. I think I get what the extremists believe (as much as someone can get things like that), but I am having a really hard time wrapping my head around the mainstream beliefs. Like, I really don't get it. It seems like they are a part of mainstream American society, but also not. And they are a part of mainstream Christianity, but also not. 

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