dolorosa_12: (amelie wondering)
a million times a trillion more ([personal profile] dolorosa_12) wrote2024-01-19 05:39 pm

Friday open thread: 5+1

Until [community profile] snowflake_challenge is over, I'm going to piggyback on their prompts and use them for my own each Friday. Today's prompt is:

Choose Your Challenge: we will give you the challenge of making a list (who doesn't love lists?!?) and then you get to choose what list to make.

Five Things! The five things are totally up to you.


Snowflake Challenge promotional banner featuring  an image of a coffee cup and saucer on a sheet with a blanket and baby’s breath and a layer of snowflakes. Text: Snowflake Challenge January 1-31.

I can never resist making a 'five things' list into a 'five times she did, and one time she didn't' list, so that's what I've done here. Feel free to use my own list topic, or make your own 5 (+1) things list in the comments.



1. I always list Veronica Mars as the answer to this question. This show — a pastiche of noirish detective fiction, set in a California high school, with an emphasis on both class (and extreme inequalities), small town politics and classroom politics, with a generally excellent cast with excellent chemistry with one another, and fabulously quippy dialogue, executed flawlessly — is one of my very favourites: but with a catch. Its first season is one of my favourite pieces of TV storytelling — it's close to perfect (some early 2000s issues with race and gender aside), it's complete and self-contained — and subsequent seasons and a movie never really reach the same heights. There are moments that I enjoy in all of the later seasons, but the seasons themselves are ultimately unnecessary, and in many cases undermine what made the first season so magical to begin with.

2. The Musketeers (BBC), an extremely loose retelling of Dumas's novel. It's got a pretty cast, the first season is light-hearted, swashbuckling good fun, and Peter Capaldi is a fantastic scenery-chewing villain whose antagonism with our heroes works really well, because he's opposed to them personally, but all of them ultimately are working towards the same goal, and periodically have to work grudgingly together. And then Capaldi got cast as the Doctor, his replacement was awful, and it became a much, much darker show, instead of the silly, tropey action adventure of the first season.

3. Broadchurch. This British prestige crime drama was televisual gold — critically acclaimed, popular with viewers, and telling an interesting story that looked with fresh eyes at the old trope of a crime taking place in a picturesque, close-knit small town, and cracking the town's facade wide open in a way that exposes everyone's secrets and makes everyone culpable. The denouement was devastating, it completed the story perfectly, and nothing more really needed to be said ... and then the showrunners made two more seasons.

4. Being Human (British original version), a wonderful miniseries about a vampire, a werewolf, and a ghost living as housemates and muddling along with problems both supernatural and mundane, designed as a kind of metaphor for the trials and tribulations of life as a Millennial in the early 2000s. There were some dark moments, but it was a cosy kind of show, and although the characters had flaws, they felt like fundamentally decent people — or people who had the potential to be decent if they made an effort. After the first season, the show took a turn to the melodramatic, ramped up the angst, and made some characterisation decisions that fundamentally changed what the show was about ... which I hated.

5. Pretty Little Liars. This was another take on the 'picturesque small town is ruptured by the death/disappearance of a beautiful teenage girl, and this crime destabilises everything and somehow implicates everyone' subgenre, with Twin Peaks being its obvious ancestor. It did two things really well: it made this a story about the (then novel) digital lives of teenagers taking place largely outside of adult awareness (the quartet of teenage girl central characters are being harassed via text messages about their supposed involvement in their friend's disappearance by an unknown bully who knows all their secrets and vulnerabilities), and although it was incredibly soapy and melodramatic, it took seriously the lives, friendships and sexuality of teenage girls and made these the heart of the story. At its best, the show was extraordinary — a similar blend of complex, serialised television with long arcs with decent payoffs, good chemistry between most of the main cast, and an ability to mix humour, ridiculous situations, and heart-wrenching emotion to Buffy at its best. The first few seasons leading up to the reveal of the identity of the girls' digital bully are really accomplished writing, and among my favourite TV shows of all times. And then the show decided to keep going, introducing new antagonists and increasingly convoluted justifications for these new anonymous bullies to be bullying the four girls, ultimately degenerating into repellent transphobia such that I cannot recommend the show in its entirety.

And the one show that was cruelly cancelled too soon? Always, and forever Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, which was wonderful, and deserved so much more!

What about you?
nyctanthes: (Sharp Objects)

season, season, season ack...

[personal profile] nyctanthes 2024-01-19 06:45 pm (UTC)(link)
My one season and done (and thank goodness for that) show is Sharp Objects. When it was well-received, HBO wanted to renew it, but Amy Adams said no. Very glad for that.

Also! Cowboy Bebop (the original anime) was a single season, twenty-six eps. It's perfect.

For number three, while Amazon might renew Deadloch, the one season we've had is wonderful. I don't think I want more.

To round out the five things list (though these didn't stick to one season:)
American Vandal & Stranger Things





wearing_tearing: black and white icon of a person holding a wolf mask to their face. (Default)

[personal profile] wearing_tearing 2024-01-19 08:40 pm (UTC)(link)
I so agree with Veronica Mars! The other seasons didn't live up to season 1 in terms of mystery and character development and the movie just made me mad.

Re Broadchurch: I had lots of issues with what they did with season 2 as an aftermath of what happened in season 1 since it lessened some of the impact of the big reveal, but the crime investigation in season 3 was pretty good.
wearing_tearing: black and white icon of a person holding a wolf mask to their face. (Default)

[personal profile] wearing_tearing 2024-01-21 05:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I think sometimes networks and creators try to hold on to the magic that existed in the first season of a show and don't realize that the reason it was so good was because it was self-contained.
muccamukk: Milady with her chin on her hand, looking pensive. (Musketeers: Thinking)

[personal profile] muccamukk 2024-01-20 01:08 am (UTC)(link)
There were some good Milady bits in season two of The Musketeers, but that's all I've got on that one. I never did watch season three. *sighs* I used to be SO into that show.
skygiants: the princes from Into the Woods, singing (agony)

[personal profile] skygiants 2024-01-20 01:08 am (UTC)(link)
Terminator: SCC is also my top choice always for 'cancelled too soon!' I was so excited for whatever the third season was going to hold -- really cruel to open up such interesting storytelling possibilities and then yank it away.
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2024-01-20 10:06 am (UTC)(link)
I love your tags!

From what I remember, the choice was between Dollhouse and Sarah Connor Chronicles because the network could not take two shows with a female lead, and the network went with Dollhouse. That has to be one of the cruellest things done by TV executives ever.
thawrecka: (Default)

[personal profile] thawrecka 2024-01-21 06:09 am (UTC)(link)
That first season of VMars really is spectacular. I only watched s1, s2 and the movie, and I agree that the first season is the best and the rest really doesn't match up.
justanorthernlight: jolly roger pirate flag (Default)

[personal profile] justanorthernlight 2024-01-21 11:37 am (UTC)(link)
I've always resented Star Wars Rebels for basically becoming The Clone Wars 2.0 after the first season. The Clone Wars is okay as it's own thing, but Rebels s1 was a season-arc found family romp with an excellent villain (voiced by Jason Isaacs), and The Clone Wars was much looser tapestry of less-connected stories and I much preferred the Rebels arc format. Also, the introduction of TCW characters in Rebels really made the found family elements (and the characters I actually cared about) take a back seat.

I agree with you about The Three Musketeers. I actually refused to watch Capaldi's Doctor Who run because of it.
justanorthernlight: jolly roger pirate flag (Default)

[personal profile] justanorthernlight 2024-01-22 06:20 am (UTC)(link)
I was already a bit frustrated with Doctor Who by the end of Matt Smith's run, and I'm also in the US so my boycott was more no longer putting in the effort to pirate it, lol. I understand it was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for Capaldi, but taking the Cardinal out of a Musketeers adaptation just doesn't work! They would have been better off recasting the Cardinal and pretending like it was the same character all along.
charlottenewtons: (miss fisher)

[personal profile] charlottenewtons 2024-01-21 01:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Agreed with all of these (although I haven't seen Being Human). Veronica Mars never could quite hit the heights of season 1 again. The Musketeers had such a noticeable tonal shift that I never even bothered watching season 3. I liked season 3 of Broadchurch but it wasn't something essential. I think Pretty Little Liars is the one that frustrates me the most. The first 2 seasons were so enjoyable. Even the stuff I wasn't fond of - namely the Aria/Ezra relationship - at least had some kind of stakes.

My most recent cancelled too soon show would be Paper Girls. Amazon never even bothered to promote it, I only found it existed by accident.
charlottenewtons: (Default)

[personal profile] charlottenewtons 2024-01-21 03:14 pm (UTC)(link)
My objection to Aria/Ezra was less to do with the morality aspect, more that I just found them really dull. Their scenes always seemed totally separate from all the other plots and I never thought they really knew what to with Ezra. They were always trying to throw various things at him - he comes from a rich family! He has a secret child! - but nothing ever stuck. I totally agree about Spencer/Toby. They never worked for me after the A reveal and IMO the actor playing Toby wasn't very good either. You're absolutely right that the writing was driven by shipper preferences, coming back to Aria/Ezra, this was really shown when they decided to hint that Ezra was A (which would have made the most sense out of all of the love interests who were A suspects) and then walked back on it because they didn't want the Aria/Ezra shippers to stop watching the show. Which was a real shame because both the actors seemed so excited about it in the interviews I saw.
charlottenewtons: (audrey)

[personal profile] charlottenewtons 2024-01-21 05:26 pm (UTC)(link)
It was much more difficult to put Ezra in the same space as the other characters, experiencing the same things.

Very true and I remember the few times they did have him interact with the other love interests it just looked odd, like what is this grown man doing hanging out with a bunch of high schoolers?
lirazel: An outdoor scene from the film Picnic at Hanging Rock ([tv] shijie)

[personal profile] lirazel 2024-01-22 03:51 pm (UTC)(link)
This is really interesting. I think you're right about 1, 2, and 4, and yet I wouldn't give up season 2 of VMars (I'd give up the rest) or much of Musketeers or BH after season 1. It's complicated!

Totally agreed about Broadchurch, though!

For me, the answer is Killing Eve. I didn't watch after the first season, and I don't feel the need to. The first season just worked perfectly well.
lirazel: A woman collapsed on a green couch ([misc] languishing)

[personal profile] lirazel 2024-01-23 05:59 pm (UTC)(link)
Agreed that the retconning was a very bad idea. A very bad idea!

Well, I'm sorry you regret it, but it's nice to know I made the right decision.
scintilla10: Stevie, smirking (Schitt's Creek - Stevie)

[personal profile] scintilla10 2024-01-23 02:30 am (UTC)(link)
Veronica Mars is always one of my answers to this question, too! What a spectacular first season.

I also wish we got more T:TSCC.