A Song for the End of Everything
- El episodio se transmitió el 11 jul 2025
- TV-MA
- 51min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.0/10
1.6 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Un nuevo y misterioso pirata con habilidades aterradoras, conocido como la Mula, llama la atención de la Fundación y el Imperio.Un nuevo y misterioso pirata con habilidades aterradoras, conocido como la Mula, llama la atención de la Fundación y el Imperio.Un nuevo y misterioso pirata con habilidades aterradoras, conocido como la Mula, llama la atención de la Fundación y el Imperio.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Opiniones destacadas
I have watched every episode at least two times and several three times. I am familiar with Asimov's Foundation books and I accept that this is different, but it is still compelling television.
Season three opens up with quite different versions of Brothers Dawn, Day, and Dusk, which takes awhile to get used to, but it is one of the aspects of this series that I love. Each incarnation of the Cleons is unique. Though they are alike genetically, their personalities are distinctive. I love this hippie, nature loving version of Brother Day, while Dawn is more assertive and confident.
I understand there are people who being loyal to Asimov's books are very critical of the television series, but what I don't understand is why after 20+ episodes they are STILL watching the show and complaining. One viewer gave every episode they reviewed 1 star. I can't imagine watching anything I disliked so much for over two seasons.
Season three opens up with quite different versions of Brothers Dawn, Day, and Dusk, which takes awhile to get used to, but it is one of the aspects of this series that I love. Each incarnation of the Cleons is unique. Though they are alike genetically, their personalities are distinctive. I love this hippie, nature loving version of Brother Day, while Dawn is more assertive and confident.
I understand there are people who being loyal to Asimov's books are very critical of the television series, but what I don't understand is why after 20+ episodes they are STILL watching the show and complaining. One viewer gave every episode they reviewed 1 star. I can't imagine watching anything I disliked so much for over two seasons.
I understand why some may reel at the inflection incurred, but, there's no denying this is good Sci-Fi.
From the stunning visuals, solid acting and galaxy spanning opera this is the kinda story I dream about.
This opening episodes purpose was to set the stage, and it achieved that - I'm hopeful this talented team can continue their success and deliver another phenomenal season.
From the stunning visuals, solid acting and galaxy spanning opera this is the kinda story I dream about.
This opening episodes purpose was to set the stage, and it achieved that - I'm hopeful this talented team can continue their success and deliver another phenomenal season.
...the single most important line in the entire episode, right at the start and so throwaway that even us avid book readers could have missed it.
The Empire in decay, the hierarchy of Foundation in complacent "yeah, yeah, Hari's got a plan" mode, Demerzel's very *very* long game gets lampshaded (*that* law!).
It's almost as if the producers and writers have read and studied the books in detail and know what they are doing...
The look is outrageously beautiful, literally everybody is trying to out-snark everyone else and,..,.oh, yeah - the human race might be trundling towards its end.
And there is one last shocker to come for those who don't know the books. I sort of envy them.
The Empire in decay, the hierarchy of Foundation in complacent "yeah, yeah, Hari's got a plan" mode, Demerzel's very *very* long game gets lampshaded (*that* law!).
It's almost as if the producers and writers have read and studied the books in detail and know what they are doing...
The look is outrageously beautiful, literally everybody is trying to out-snark everyone else and,..,.oh, yeah - the human race might be trundling towards its end.
And there is one last shocker to come for those who don't know the books. I sort of envy them.
As a fan of Asimov's Foundation series, I have to state from the outset that this show gave up any pretence of caring about the source material from the very first episode. In this regard, it suffers from the same narcissistic writer brain rot that so many Hollywood products do today: talentless nepo babies who think they can write better than Tolkien and Asimov. Of course they can't. Not even close. This show has been mired by strange casting decisions, awful dialog, terrible acting, bad pacing, and some odd set design.
That said, this episode is surprisingly fun science fiction. Very creative. Great CGI. They leaned into the Emperor plot line, which is easily the one redeeming character arc in this series. One might be so hopeful as to believe they listened to viewer feedback. Let us hope we see as little of Lou Llobell's atrocious acting as possible.
That said, this episode is surprisingly fun science fiction. Very creative. Great CGI. They leaned into the Emperor plot line, which is easily the one redeeming character arc in this series. One might be so hopeful as to believe they listened to viewer feedback. Let us hope we see as little of Lou Llobell's atrocious acting as possible.
Despite the well-known challenges of adapting Asimov's Foundation for the screen, this episode feels hampered by a lack of effort to translate the story's core concepts into a visual language suited for film and television. Narration can be a powerful storytelling tool, but here it feels like a crutch, as if the writers struggled to convey the narrative through the medium's visual strengths and leaned too heavily on exposition.
The portrayal of the Mule, a pivotal character, also misses the mark. By a country mile. Rather than capturing the sophisticated and nuanced figure from Asimov's novels, this version comes across as a sadistic thug. In the source material, the Mule is a complex antagonist whose power lies in psychological manipulation and emotional control, not a placeholder for willy-nilly violence or gore. His depiction here is a major departure from the original, and I dare say a great vulgarisation as well. That being said, I am sure that there are ways to bring the thread back to the true importance of this character as the outlier that messes up the otherwise perfect system of psychohistory and the vindication of the latter, albeit after some rough patches for the entire Foundation project.
The portrayal of the Mule, a pivotal character, also misses the mark. By a country mile. Rather than capturing the sophisticated and nuanced figure from Asimov's novels, this version comes across as a sadistic thug. In the source material, the Mule is a complex antagonist whose power lies in psychological manipulation and emotional control, not a placeholder for willy-nilly violence or gore. His depiction here is a major departure from the original, and I dare say a great vulgarisation as well. That being said, I am sure that there are ways to bring the thread back to the true importance of this character as the outlier that messes up the otherwise perfect system of psychohistory and the vindication of the latter, albeit after some rough patches for the entire Foundation project.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaTodas las entradas contienen spoilers
- Citas
Gaal Dornick: The Mule is here. We're out of time.
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Locaciones de filmación
- Varsovia, Mazovia, Polonia(Temple of Divine Providence)
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 51min
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