dnmnfd
ene 2022 se unió
Te damos la bienvenida a nuevo perfil
Nuestras actualizaciones aún están en desarrollo. Si bien la versión anterior de el perfil ya no está disponible, estamos trabajando activamente en mejoras, ¡y algunas de las funciones que faltan regresarán pronto! Mantente al tanto para su regreso. Mientras tanto, el análisis de calificaciones sigue disponible en nuestras aplicaciones para iOS y Android, en la página de perfil. Para ver la distribución de tus calificaciones por año y género, consulta nuestra nueva Guía de ayuda.
Distintivos2
Para saber cómo ganar distintivos, ve a página de ayuda de distintivos.
Reseñas9
Clasificación de dnmnfd
There is some very striking imagery in this episode as always, but also some borderline nonsense.
I suspect the writers originally planned to wrap up Severance in two seasons, with the two Marks integrating to save Gemma. Plus Helly (and maybe Helena) sacrificing herself in a tragic and satisfying redemption arc for that character.
I found it very hard to sit through the two Marks sending each other childish Mini DV messages.
Maybe they rewrote some scenes so that Mark's integration failed. Without it, what I saw seemed confused and loose. If you split your protagonist in half and give each half contradictory values and objectives, it's interesting, but you basically have a story that can't be resolved. Cliffhangers, like the ending of this episode, become a necessity because really, the writers don't know where any of this is going.
So Mark was working on 25 consciousnesses for Gemma. Okay, but why? And what were his three colleagues working on? The writers will figure it out for season three I suppose. Or enough to keep the wheels spinning.
Is there no government or police force in this world? Lumon is breaking laws and could be raided by any of a number of three letter agencies to free Gemma. No character thinks of this.
And the marching band? Come on. Fifty severed musicians. What do they do all day?
Overall I thought this episode was a mess, with more questions than answers, and a very solid rescue sequence towards the end that has fooled people into giving very positive reviews.
I personally think Severance should have had the confidence to tie up its loose ends and finish here, on a high. I don't think it has anywhere interesting to go after this, and will end up being remembered as more of a Westworld than a Breaking Bad.
We will see.
I suspect the writers originally planned to wrap up Severance in two seasons, with the two Marks integrating to save Gemma. Plus Helly (and maybe Helena) sacrificing herself in a tragic and satisfying redemption arc for that character.
I found it very hard to sit through the two Marks sending each other childish Mini DV messages.
Maybe they rewrote some scenes so that Mark's integration failed. Without it, what I saw seemed confused and loose. If you split your protagonist in half and give each half contradictory values and objectives, it's interesting, but you basically have a story that can't be resolved. Cliffhangers, like the ending of this episode, become a necessity because really, the writers don't know where any of this is going.
So Mark was working on 25 consciousnesses for Gemma. Okay, but why? And what were his three colleagues working on? The writers will figure it out for season three I suppose. Or enough to keep the wheels spinning.
Is there no government or police force in this world? Lumon is breaking laws and could be raided by any of a number of three letter agencies to free Gemma. No character thinks of this.
And the marching band? Come on. Fifty severed musicians. What do they do all day?
Overall I thought this episode was a mess, with more questions than answers, and a very solid rescue sequence towards the end that has fooled people into giving very positive reviews.
I personally think Severance should have had the confidence to tie up its loose ends and finish here, on a high. I don't think it has anywhere interesting to go after this, and will end up being remembered as more of a Westworld than a Breaking Bad.
We will see.
Surprisingly strong ending to a surprisingly strong show.
Very relieved they stuck the landing. After the hot mess endings of season 8 and New Blood, I was half expecting something equally r*tarded from these writers, like Dexter killing Harry.
The stuff with Brian Moser was particurlarly well cast and executed, although it's hard to see them taking it much further in a second season without major retcons.
Hope they do a similarly good job with Resurrection and finally give Dexter a proper send off. I don't think fans will mind if he dies, we just need it to be well written and true to character. Fingers crossed.
Very relieved they stuck the landing. After the hot mess endings of season 8 and New Blood, I was half expecting something equally r*tarded from these writers, like Dexter killing Harry.
The stuff with Brian Moser was particurlarly well cast and executed, although it's hard to see them taking it much further in a second season without major retcons.
Hope they do a similarly good job with Resurrection and finally give Dexter a proper send off. I don't think fans will mind if he dies, we just need it to be well written and true to character. Fingers crossed.
This is very strong first episode and much better than I was expecting. Predictably the 'woke' and 'anti-woke' crowds are doing their usual review extremism, so just ignore them.
Sure, some of the dragon CGI is strangely bad, and there were some plot and casting decisions that smelled a little too politically correct, but the good outweighs the bad, by a lot. For most of its runtime this feels like a good ol' GoT episode. More narrowly focused perhaps, but it was actually nice to spend a full hour getting to know the new characters.
Sure, some of the dragon CGI is strangely bad, and there were some plot and casting decisions that smelled a little too politically correct, but the good outweighs the bad, by a lot. For most of its runtime this feels like a good ol' GoT episode. More narrowly focused perhaps, but it was actually nice to spend a full hour getting to know the new characters.