Underhated TV finales - What ending you were the only one dissapointed at?

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I'm not quite sure it belongs in this thread, but here's an example of a show that radically morphed into something many people hated - Space 1999.

The first season was a bit of a slow burn, with introspective stories, a few of which stirred some pretty hellacious existential horror for the viewer. It had an expansiveness that was fairly rare for a TV series entirely reliant on sets, the most impressive of which being the cavernous Main Mission.

And the effects were incredible, most of which were done in-camera via superb model work and a love of pyrotechnics, many of which hold up today. The Eagle remains an icon of spaceship design (and probably one of the most abused due to how many were destroyed during the course of the series).

However, TPTB including its stars, Martin Landau and Barbara Bain, ordered a DRASTIC reworking for series 2. Fred Freiberger, who some may recognize from Star Trek, was brought onboard to jazz-up affairs as producer and scriptwriter. Gone was Main Mission, as it was now renamed Command Centre and looked like it could comfortably fit inside a middle-class living room. Several season 1 regulars were jettisoned, including Barry Morse's Victor Bergman who wanted nothing to do with this "bold new show direction". Several new characters were introduced as replacements, the most memorable being the bombshell Catherine Schell as the shapeshifting Maya.

Maya could - and I'm not kidding - transform into virtually anything organic, including PLANTS, in the span of a second or two. This gave the writers a Chekhov's Gun that had infinite ammo, as it was only a matter of time before Maya transformed into a tiger, vine, cockroach, or the galactic version of Bigfoot, which she often did multiple times per episode. Schell was actually featured in the last episode of season 1 as a totally different character and made such an impact that she was offered the role of Maya as a main actress, sometimes even eclipsing Landau and Bain.

So, season 2 became the archetypical monster-of-the-week show. Gone were cosmic consternations and considerations. Instead, it was a race for who could design the coolest or most disgusting space critter to appear in each episode. Some installments of season 2 were highly praised, like the Lovecraftian Dragon's Domain, but even it featured a gory space octopus/squid hybrid as the monster antagonist.

Reportedly, the showrunners had such faith in season 2's more "audience-appealing" direction that season 3 was on the drawing board. However, 1999's primary viewing demographic who carried the flame for the more muted and brainy first season wanted none of it, so the show was canceled without even a series finale story.

Watching season 1 and 2 back-to-back is a real Jekyll and Hyde whiplash experience, as almost everything was changed for the worse in an effort to make the show more breezy and action-oriented. Even the title sequence was altered with a completely new opening score which made it clear that this was NOT your father's Space 1999. In that, it (unfortunately) wildly succeeded.

To give credit where it's due, the effects remained top-notch throughout and the rejiggered season 2 score had several standouts. Schell was actually a really good actress and her exoticness was tremendously captivating. It's really a shame, as the ingredients for a successful show were still there, just botched in execution.

As is usually the case in these situations, a remake is in constant development hell, with too many names and production companies to count at this point. Perhaps such conceptual gridlock is a mercy, though, as a "modernized" revamp might make season 2 look ike Shakespeare.
 
Gurren Lagann, absolutely no reason to be that depressing, for what is supposed to be a "reconstruction" of the mecha genre, after the endless deconstructions like Evangelion. At least Samurai Jack kind of retconned its shitty ending, albeit in an obscure spinoff game.
 
I recall the TTGL ending getting pretty decent amounts of hate? I didn't have a problem with it but I def remember a lot of noise about it when it happened.
as for Transformers iirc the story continues for a few more seasons in Japan, but I don't recall if it has a Big Ending or if it's just like "let's got have adventures in next seaso- ah, shit. oh well the end. Go buy Braves toys!"
 
Star vs. the Forces of Evil had a pretty weird ending with all the implied genocide.
That show really started falling apart the longer it went on. Plot elements were getting introduced one episode only to be resolved or completely abandoned the next.

Got way too caught up in shipping crap.
 
Deep Space 9: If Sisko is supposed to be some sorta wormhole god now, what the fuck is this "I'll be back... but I don't know when" shit? Buddy you're outside of linear time, take as long as you need to finish up your prophet business and come right back to when you left off. You could be back yesterday if you wanted, it's within your power.

My Name is Earl ended with the most batshit final episode about secret agents and all kinds of weird shit, and I think they just knew they were cancelled so they made a retarded cliff hanger thing for the last episode lmao
The secret agent stuff and reveals with crab man's witness protection took up a solid chunk of the last season but not the finale.
That was the Norm MacDonald cameo episode where it's revealed that Joy's first kid was Earl's all along (but the second, darker kid is not Darnell's).
The showrunners claim in later interviews that they had a plan for that last reveal and had an intended finale written up (where Earl finds his last list items unsolvable, gives up in frustration before being visited by someone with a list of their own claiming he inspired them). They fully expected to get another season and only found out it wasn't happening when they were getting ready to start shooting.
 
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Whatever the fuck was going on with Wisteria Lane in Desperate Housewives. Susan being the focal character was quite possibly the worst aspect.

The Golden Girls. Its obvious Bea wanted out, and originally the sixth season was to be her last but they convinced her to stay. Why on earth Dorothy Zbornak would fall instantly in love with Blanche's uncle of all people.....
 
The live action Animal Farm redo ends stupidly.

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The limousine liberals just couldn't help their damn selves.
 
Tengen Toppa Gurren Laggan.
See, you say a lot of cool opinions.
And then you write this retarded shit.

I always hate shows that kill the heroine for edge points, and after the protagonists break every physical law to save the heroine, having her die with some bullshit "I can't exist because you killed the big bad" is horseshit.
She can't exist because she was a byproduct of the hivemind they literally just fucking destroyed.
But it gets worse because the epilogue has the two surviving protagonists live in misery while seemingly everyone else move on. Yet people like it because the final battle was EPPPIIICCCC!
What protagonists are miserable?
Rossiu just seems tired because he spent the last twenty years singlehandedly creating universal peace.
Simon says "I guess I'm nothing" because he's accepted that his time has come and gone and that other generations will pick up and continue drilling into a better tomorrow. He's traveling around with his pigmole pal. He doesn't need to show anyone he's him because he has the self confidence he spent the entire series building towards.
Simon doesn't need anyone because he's accepted himself. He misses his friends but he has faith in the future.
The entire show isn't about measuring your dick. It's about having enough faith in yourself and the world that will eventually move on without you.

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Reportedly, the showrunners had such faith in season 2's more "audience-appealing" direction that season 3 was on the drawing board. However, 1999's primary viewing demographic who carried the flame for the more muted and brainy first season wanted none of it, so the show was canceled without even a series finale story.
Sounds almost exactly like what happened with SeaQuest DS.

Concerning shitty endings, I don't know if anyone here remembers the Pretender?

The show ended on a massive cliffhanger - the protagonist and the female agent that was chasing the protagonist are near a bomb when it explodes and that's it, the camera cuts to the explosion and that's how the show ended. I didn't find out there had been a continuation movie that resolved the cliffhanger until years later.

Battlestar Galactica was another one with a dogshit ending, but that was basically the cheery on top of a shit souffle, the show having hit rock bottom long before we reached the retarded epilogue.
 
Gurren Lagann, absolutely no reason to be that depressing, for what is supposed to be a "reconstruction" of the mecha genre, after the endless deconstructions like Evangelion. At least Samurai Jack kind of retconned its shitty ending, albeit in an obscure spinoff game.
One of the worst endings in all of media, not just anime. People try to justify it so hard as being deep, justified or unavoidable. It made no sense in any context.
A least this latest complete version had an ending, that ending made some sense, and it gave the poor cast a justified peaceful non tragic or bittersweet ending. It only took him what? 3 or 4 tries? lol
Why are you all such fucking niggers?
 
The Man in the High Castle should've ended with season 2. It seems the writers and producers didn't expect the show to get greenlight for another two seasons and had to come up with something. Honestly it's kinda hard to believe that Amazon even allowed season 2 to happen. For those who don't know the show, season 2 portrays Hitler being sick as a bad thing and no one wants him to die. The portrayal of life under national socialism was surprisingly decent. It also includes one of the most epic nazi speeches ever put to screen. People being able to jump between 2 timelines was already weird and felt really out of place in the first two seasons but the show really jumped the shark when the Germans started to build portals to conquer the other timelines, as if they were in a Rick and Morty episode. Himmler going full Mao Zedong and destroying american culture made zero sense. Then they badly copied the plot of another show involving timelines and have John Smith trying to kidnap his own son from another timeline, ruining both characters at once. The final season ends with the Japanese just leaving after black commies blow up some stuff and the United States getting restored out of nowhere with neither the Japanese or the Germans trying to get it back.
 
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She can't exist because she was a byproduct of the hivemind they literally just fucking destroyed.
I get why she can't exist, it's still bullshit after all the insane shit that happens beforehand like using galaxies to fire an attack.
What protagonists are miserable?
Rossiu just seems tired because he spent the last twenty years singlehandedly creating universal peace.
Simon says "I guess I'm nothing" because he's accepted that his time has come and gone and that other generations will pick up and continue drilling into a better tomorrow. He's traveling around with his pigmole pal. He doesn't need to show anyone he's him because he has the self confidence he spent the entire series building towards.
Simon doesn't need anyone because he's accepted himself. He misses his friends but he has faith in the future.
The entire show isn't about measuring your dick. It's about having enough faith in yourself and the world that will eventually move on without you.
Simon and Yoko live alone which is just depressing. At least have them move on with their life in the epilogue.

And most importantly, Nia's death doesn't really add anything to the story rather than be a tear jerker.
 
Sounds almost exactly like what happened with SeaQuest DS.

Concerning shitty endings, I don't know if anyone here remembers the Pretender?

The show ended on a massive cliffhanger - the protagonist and the female agent that was chasing the protagonist are near a bomb when it explodes and that's it, the camera cuts to the explosion and that's how the show ended. I didn't find out there had been a continuation movie that resolved the cliffhanger until years later.
Another series the Glades had done something similar except the main character is shot and falls down to the floor. In what was supposed to be the cliffhanger for the next season but it also got canceled. Yet due to do how the series was structured, having the protagonist getting killed at the end didn't hurt the series. Granted the Glades was already borked when the network executives wanted the female demographic to watched it. So they inserted female protagonist love interest and romance drama midway through the series.
 
I keep seeing people saying the final episode of Star Trek TNG was some kind of uplifting profound classic must-see TV triumph but I thought it it was just a bunch of wanky disconnected fanservice. Just lame rah rah we're so special frippery. The notorious Battlestar Galactica finale that everyone seems to hate OTOH was a bit wobbly but packed full of awesome and meaningful moments.
 
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