Hondo
One Too Many
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I agree and I also won't watching the last episode again, while the story played out, it did seem uneven, or disjointed as you say but over all i was overwhelmed at the end. All soldiers in all combat feel the same. The home coming, job search, who hasn't felt left alone after being a killing machine? I've seen good people, friends return from Vietnam and go crazy while home.
if there is a God, I hope & pray for our troops, a safe return.
if there is a God, I hope & pray for our troops, a safe return.
Doctor Strange said:I watched the series all the way through, but I was essentially underwhelmed: I will not be rewatching this every time I stumble on an episode while channel surfing like I do with BoB. While technically masterful, and with unbearably tense and hypnotic battle sequences, I thought the series' storytelling was disjointed and very weak on character. (E.g.: I couldn't recall who many of the men summed up in the postscript what-happened-to-them sequence were.)
The series partially redeemed itself for me in the finale, which was completely character-driven, and featured many extremely moving scenes. (Some owing an awful lot to The Best Years of Our Lives, but if you're going to borrow, you might as well borrow from the best!)
It was fascinating seeing Leckie readjusting to civilian life, Lena and the mourning Basilone family, and especially Sledge - whose character arc finally fulfilled what seemed like a draggy set-up in the earlier episodes, with his doctor father fearful that, like the Great War vets he'd known, Eugene would return emotionally damaged. Hell, yeah.
It was a strong ending to what - for me, anyway - was a largely disappointing series.