mirmurati
oct 2023 se unió
Te damos la bienvenida a nuevo perfil
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Distintivos2
Para saber cómo ganar distintivos, ve a página de ayuda de distintivos.
Reseñas2
Clasificación de mirmurati
If you have a story to tell, I'd assume that you would want to get to the point fairly quikly.
This episode however is completly devoid of any actual plot. It introduces us to some exposition, telling more than it shows, but that could've been explained in a few minutes. Instead, we get 40 minutes of chasing. Loki and his companion, Mobius search for one person, then they search for that person, then they chase a little more and that's basicall all that happens.
Little of the previous conflicts were resolved, the plot ended where it began. Instead of actually following some linear progression, the writers just introduce one random problem after the other. The plot is approaching some real end, but it never reaches it.
To be honest, i can't even remember what it was that they were trying to solve in the first place. The end of the first season suggested that someone else took over the TVA. Then Loki switched timelines within the TVA (for some reason, they never said why), then they needed to restart their time-power-generator. I don't think the writers themselves knew where to go with this.
What is this mess? Well, i'm not going to figure out. This show has made it clear that it does not value my time and doesn't expect me to remember anything for more than 20 minutes.
This episode however is completly devoid of any actual plot. It introduces us to some exposition, telling more than it shows, but that could've been explained in a few minutes. Instead, we get 40 minutes of chasing. Loki and his companion, Mobius search for one person, then they search for that person, then they chase a little more and that's basicall all that happens.
Little of the previous conflicts were resolved, the plot ended where it began. Instead of actually following some linear progression, the writers just introduce one random problem after the other. The plot is approaching some real end, but it never reaches it.
To be honest, i can't even remember what it was that they were trying to solve in the first place. The end of the first season suggested that someone else took over the TVA. Then Loki switched timelines within the TVA (for some reason, they never said why), then they needed to restart their time-power-generator. I don't think the writers themselves knew where to go with this.
What is this mess? Well, i'm not going to figure out. This show has made it clear that it does not value my time and doesn't expect me to remember anything for more than 20 minutes.
The show made me think that this would be a show about the grande sheme of things. An intergalactic empire, predicted to collapse with 100% certainty. That's what the first episode introduced me to. So i foolishly thought that i'd see some intergalactic politics, sophisticated dialogue and great ideas that would unfold as time went on.
Instead, we get a show, 10 hours long for the first season, filled with irrelevancies and characters tripping over themselves in the face of their own irrationality and stupidity. It feels like the show devolved into a sopa opera by the end of the first season. This simply undermindes every other geat aspect.
The visuals are stunning and the world felt grandiose. I also really appreciate the many new concepts that were introduced to the show, that feel like Asimov himself could've come up with. But it doesn't matter because they don't go anywhere with it. It all feels like a five star desert that was served after a plain cheeseburger.
For some reasons the writers thought it was a good idea to introduce supernatural concepts to the show. Why? Why would you do that? Isaac Asimov wrote hard sci-fi, establishing a world that adheres to limits of science, not because he was some stupid nerd, but because he had a point to make about the development of human society. He actually knew something, he could make a point.
After starting the second season, i realised the mediocracy of it all. I couldn't even remember half the plot of the previous season (which indicates that it was irrelevant). I stopped watching it any further. The Foundation Trilogy was supposed to be the best sci-fi story after all. And now i can say without a doubt that the book offers the better story. I don't want to compare the two, because they tell a very different story, i just enjoyed the novel much more.
Isaac Asimov had a point to make, the writers of this show don't. It ultimately suffers from the many plagues of cinema today. They have to believe that their audience does not like to think or pay attention. The show just doesn't dare to be demanding. But i'm not sure if it's because they couldn't or didn't want to. Either way, the story stays mediacore because of it.
In short: I hate soap operas. If you're a sci-fi fan like me and enjoyed any amount of shows like Star Trek The next Generation, you're most likely not going to enjoy this show. Just read the original book, you'll love it.
But if you like to scroll on your phone while watching something in the background, then you have found something worthwhile to play in the background.
Instead, we get a show, 10 hours long for the first season, filled with irrelevancies and characters tripping over themselves in the face of their own irrationality and stupidity. It feels like the show devolved into a sopa opera by the end of the first season. This simply undermindes every other geat aspect.
The visuals are stunning and the world felt grandiose. I also really appreciate the many new concepts that were introduced to the show, that feel like Asimov himself could've come up with. But it doesn't matter because they don't go anywhere with it. It all feels like a five star desert that was served after a plain cheeseburger.
For some reasons the writers thought it was a good idea to introduce supernatural concepts to the show. Why? Why would you do that? Isaac Asimov wrote hard sci-fi, establishing a world that adheres to limits of science, not because he was some stupid nerd, but because he had a point to make about the development of human society. He actually knew something, he could make a point.
After starting the second season, i realised the mediocracy of it all. I couldn't even remember half the plot of the previous season (which indicates that it was irrelevant). I stopped watching it any further. The Foundation Trilogy was supposed to be the best sci-fi story after all. And now i can say without a doubt that the book offers the better story. I don't want to compare the two, because they tell a very different story, i just enjoyed the novel much more.
Isaac Asimov had a point to make, the writers of this show don't. It ultimately suffers from the many plagues of cinema today. They have to believe that their audience does not like to think or pay attention. The show just doesn't dare to be demanding. But i'm not sure if it's because they couldn't or didn't want to. Either way, the story stays mediacore because of it.
In short: I hate soap operas. If you're a sci-fi fan like me and enjoyed any amount of shows like Star Trek The next Generation, you're most likely not going to enjoy this show. Just read the original book, you'll love it.
But if you like to scroll on your phone while watching something in the background, then you have found something worthwhile to play in the background.