Cool. I might watch it now lol. Getting confirmation by a showrunner that a series will get to complete the overarching story they had planned is like a huge green light for me to check out a show I missed the train on earlier.
Turned into a sitcom with how they kept coming up with excuses to not kill off key characters each season. Only thing keeping it from seeming generic was the gore to make it seem more "mature and edgy".
Well, any time a show deviates from the original source as big and as soon as they did with this one, it's going to end up being written by people that don't really understand what made the show worth trying to make in the first place.
They essentially destroyed the character arcs at the end of season one.
So, you now have the second season being made with a totally different set of minds steering the story. Now, if they'd scrapped the original personalities, motivations, and arcs early in the first season, then done their own thing, the shift in all of that wouldn't have been as jarring. I'm fine with deviating from source in theory, it's about how well that's done.
The boys did it very poorly, and it shows the most during the transition, which was around the middle of season two, which is when you mentioned. Frankly, the writers and producers didn't know what they had. It made what was an amazing cast struggle to find their pace and personas.
Yeah first couple seasons felt like there were actual stakes, but longer series went on more it became apparent that the writers weren't going to kill off certain characters and come up with reasons to have then avoid doing so. Last season was really bad in that department with the final episode.
Agree. First season was great, the rest was good but you could feel it lose the pacing and point as it moved further and further. Laughed my ass off at the Whale scene tho