A fun season. Enough fun to make it enjoyable and to help me overlook some clunkiness about the season.
A fun season. Enough fun to make it enjoyable and to help me overlook some clunkiness about the season.
While not as good as the fantastic first season, this second season was still entertaining. The cameo by Amy Schumer was a complete misfire and a distraction that didn’t need to be in the season. The casting of Cara Delevingne was not the greatest either, she doesn’t fit in with the vibe of the show. Paul Rudd on the other hand was great. I look forward to next season.
Hey, it's Iron Chef and that's awesome.
Outside of a speed bump in the fifth episode, this was a fantastic season!
Please let this have been a mini-series and be done with it. After watching this season, it is clear this show was not necessary. Please Disney, don’t make a season two.
Started out strong, dragged on for a bit, had a great penultimate episode and then failed to stick the landing.
A long meandering and unfocused season. This should have never been ten episodes long and should have been much much shorter given the amount of filler episodes.
This show was completely unnecessary. There were two Mandalorian episodes wedged in there that were good, other than that I could have done without this show.
What a fun season. I love seeing a show about a non-super powered superhero.
Starts off with the best episode and then is very uneven throughout the rest of the season — leaning more on the “meh” than on the good.
A surprise discovery. I love this show.
Still a great show, but this third season lacks the magic of the first two. The main thing that drags it down is that the character House has changed in a subtle but impactful way — and not a good way. In the first two seasons, while he was a jerk on the outside, there was always a feeling that he still cared about people. In this season, that caring is gone and he is just a jerk all around.
Not as great as the first season. They weren’t able to recapture the magic in this season.
This season was a stark contrast to the previous seasons. It got more serious and less funny. The big thing I noticed about this was the new composer for the score that went more serious and less playful. That’s not a bad thing though. The last half of the season with the introduction of Agent Riley nearly ruined the season though. Her motives were too vague and unbelievable, which made the latter part of this season weak.
Mobile Moo Shu pronouncing bulgogo "bul-gaw-gee"... Sigh.
This first season started out so strong, but lost it's way in last few episodes before redeeming itself in the finale. The season finale is actually a logical ending for the show itself. I don't know if I will return for a second season if they produce one.
I can see why this series was canceled. This last season was not good at all. Turning Lightman into more of a curmudgeon and making him unlikable really did not help the show at all. There were quite a few episodes where they recycled ideas from previous seasons. The only thing I would have liked to have seen was what they would have done with Michael B. Jordan's character. It almost seemed like they were getting that character ready for a larger role in the next season.
Much better than the first season, but still a bit rough in the middle section. I did like this season a lot though.
A much better season than the first -- maybe because the writers and everyone involved knew that the show would not continue. Starting with episode four of this season, things got really great and the velocity of the show increased tremendously -- making the show so easy to binge. I am glad that I stuck it out through the first season and the first part of the second season.
An uneven season that got pretty dark. When the show was firing on all pistons, it was quite a thrill ride. There were some lulls, but the good outweighed the bad this season.
More entertaining than I thought it would be when I randomly started watching the pilot. JCVD is a great sport in making this statire of himself.
Cringe-worthy script paired with some terrible acting takes away from the grand story that I can see them telling.
They introduce the character Jimmy early on in the episode with just him joking and a quick picture of him and his kid and wife. After that we flash-forward and we find that there is a main storyline that is based on this character that we don't even know and could hardly care for. This was mistake number one.
Mistake number two is the casting. I could not stop being distracted by Christina Ochoa's perfectly plucked eyebrows. Nor the bad acting from her and Matt Barr. Then there is the casting of Melissa Roxburgh as a CIA operative, it just felt completely whacky. I get that this is the CW and they like to cast young pretty people in their shows, but if they want to make a serious show, this kind of casting really takes the audience out of the show and scrambles the ability to suspend disbelief.
The third mistake is the score and soundtrack to the pilot. The pilot seems to want to have some gravitas, but the score is completely distracting and the pop music used squanders any attempts at gravitas.
The twist at the end was unexpected, but not enough to keep me coming back for more of this show.