Thebestoftherest wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 3:47 am
can someone explain to me what is wrong with season 5?
Oh boy lets see what I can dredge from memory.
The show shifted focus from romping all over the galaxies to focusing on one confined mysterious hellhole system. The mystery, when revealed, had a few neat bits but was overall dumb and squandered a lot of different setting elements at once. I could elaborate if you'd like, but it'd be a long digression.
The season started with a timeskip that scattered the crew and screwed with them in general. This meant they had to take some time gathering everyone back together and they were sort of changed by the experiences in between. This was a waste of time at best and damaging to the characters and chemistry at worst, in my opinion.
In a lot of ways this setting shift was a retread of the early show in miniature. Dylan cast into a world ruled by petty despots, having to band a crew and ultimately the system together. That could have been an interesting exercise I suppose, but only if very well executed. In practice it felt very disjointed from everything that came before.
Lexa Doig, who played the ship's AI, was pregnant through most of the season. Besides whatever impact that might have had on her ability to be on set, justifying a pregnant hologram or gynoid was not a hill the writers were willing to climb. Probably for the best. So she was written out temporarily. But apparently there was a quota for hot gynoids, so Harper built another one between seasons. I didn't like her much.
The season was jam packed with revelations/retcons about the background or nature of characters and setting elements. I can't think of a single one that wasn't cliched, unwelcome, just pain bad, or in most cases all three.
Quite possibly fueled by everything else, but subjectively the episodes all felt uncomfortable and grimey to me. Just unpleasant to watch in ineffable ways.
And finally the series finale was just as nonsensical as everything leading up to it, and very rushed. It staggered from one inanity to another at breakneck pace. I honestly only remember a few specific moments of it,
for some reason I've not gone back to watch season 5 since it aired, but all the moments I do are memorable for all the wrong reasons. The last scene of the finale reinforced what was at the heart of the rest of the season: Dylan is the important one. Nobody else needs to be there. It's all about him.
That's all I can think of off the top of my head.