On 1/22/2021 at 10:57 PM, HappyDaze said:I imagine that taking that path with significantly hurt the show's reception. People may have found the Mandalorian culture stuff interesting, but that's largely not what many viewers were tuning into the show to see. It needs to pull something big to keep its momentum.
Perhaps so, it's hard to judge those kind of things. Just there's no harm in disconnecting and watching something else. To me the Mandolorian was always about the harsh landscape and the gunslinger and the child was his charge. The way it has written itself it has no choice but to become something other then that; otherwise the S2 finite will have no meaningful impact. I don't doubt that Goygu will appear again but his time as a reoccurring character is probably over, for the better really as it was a story that never outstayed it's welcome and closed in a timely and satisfying manner rather then stringing it out across further seasons.
So the real question is whether Din, who is now a considerably more expressive character then he started out with, can carry the show alone. Or will it changed to be more typical of a star treckian styled drama with a more stable cast of characters? That will be interesting to see how the show will morph to accommodate that change in direction that it must accomplish.
My only real concern is that if anything S2 was a bit too tame as no one of consequence really died, Gideon, Bo'Katan despite being shot point blank with a heavy rifle. Part of what made the show interesting to me was that anyone of the supporting cast could conceivably die in this harsh landscape. That illusion has been broken for me especially with the last episode's lack of drama outside of that amazing closing scene. You can't just shoot someone point blank like that without it meaning *something*. Perhaps it's because they were looking to strongly set up book of Boba and therefore limited it's expendables potential considerably, since they couldn't meaningfully be hurt and the commando basically has plot armour at this point, and Bo-Katan is very clearly a potential future antagonist toward Din so that killing her off didn't mean anything. Which leaves the acrobatic Mando as bait that they seem to be saving for something? Basically, they had a team of people that they for one reason or another, couldn't kill and nothing kills my immersion more then character's with very obvious plot armour. I know Din has literal, indestructible armour and as the protagonist will likely never be killed, but someone has to bare that cost to make this incredibly savage world of gunslingers and space imperialists seem dangerous. Watching the supporting cast clean up stormtroopers without meaningful incident like the other 4 or so episodes that featured a more or less re-flavoured version of that "running down a corridor shooting people" isn't exciting drama to me.
That last concern might be just me being overly critical, but I feel it might become a real potential problem going forward now that the Child has reached it's destination.