Ernest P Shackleton
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,248
- Location
- Midwest
I've enjoyed this series a lot. I feel the final handful of episodes were dropped down a gear or two, from roaring down a country road at good speed to a slow roll around town, much like the settings from city to college town. They were good at capturing vibes like that. I think that when it is looked back as a whole, now that we see the final destination, it will be less specific to that generation. With that ending, it is less unique and entirely universal, if not downright trite. A classic story of growth and ending up where many have and many more will be. There's probably a name for this, but I don't know it.The series finale of Girls.
I know there's a lot of hate for this show, but I enjoyed the entire run: I thought it improved steadily every season, becoming more sharply observed and fearless, tackling a widening group of characters and issues. It's unfortunate that the series positioned itself as being the voice of a generation ("... or at least, a voice of a generation") and became a lightning rod for social commentary from all sides, because the shouting tended to obscure how well it told the story of its extremely specific, spoiled, slowly-maturing characters. (I always thought that the too-generic title was a big part of the problem: shouldn't it have at least been Brooklyn Girls?!?)
As a 62-year-old male living far north of Brooklyn, I was always WAY off the show's target demographic. But well-observed comedy/drama is universal.
I have to admit I was a little bit underwhelmed by the ending. I'm looking forward to reading some reviews. Certainly not a bad end at all, but lower energy than maybe I was expecting. Expectations. Rarely a good thing.