Webslinger wrote:Just keep in mind they can't give you everything you want in one episode, and considering this was the 2nd one they are proceeding at a nice steady pace. If they tossed in all the bells and whistles it would make for a very boring TV show... Look what Smallville gave us and I still watched that for 10 seasons, granted Smallville could have given us a little bit more but overall it was a fairly decent show. So I think Constantine will start to pull things together by the end of season one, all first seasons start off a little slow then build up the finale.
If this is a response to my post, you're misreading it. And everything I want
from one episode is good writing, good acting, good direction (it doesn't have to be by Neil Marshall every time) and with that a solid and appropriate atmosphere for the subject--none of this is too much to ask for, and a many shows do it consistently from week to week. I don't think anybody here is asking for the producers, writers, and directors to toss in "all the bells and whistles;" what does that even mean? (Yes, I know what it means, but I don't know what you mean by it here). Also I don't see anyone here asking for this show to get away with the kind of stuff The Walking Dead does, and last week proved that it doesn't need to do so.
There's also a difference between starting off a little slow, as most shows do, and being dull or "tame," as Princess Amethyst put it; I don't think you're talking about the same concept we are. The other problem I have, unfortunately with
slow or
tame or
dull is that can push away viewers. Constantine on NBC hit the ground running last week, and this week's episode felt pretty stagnant. A show like this can't afford to lose viewers, as its ratings are inherently so low, anyway, since it's put on Friday night. It'd be nice if it could be given time to find its footing (something that theoretically should be easy to do pretty early on given thousands of pages of source material to inspire and pull from and the fact that Goyer and Cerone know have produced and ran shows that in the past have done that almost right away), but that's not always something a television program can afford to have these days.