Just finished up the finale myself. A great ending to a fantastic show which I'm sorely going to miss. As a UK viewer, it stakes a claim, at least among the people I know, as the greatest show that nobody watched. But I did, and that's what matters.
salute.gif
Someone's reddit post on a theory of why The Machine could beat Samaritan for a change, up in the Satellite. Thought it was an interesting theory.
I'm sure there was a brief conversation about the technical parts of the fight, but yeah, this is cool. Also reading the comments apparently the version of Samaritan on the satellite was a beta version too?Someone's reddit post on a theory of why The Machine could beat Samaritan for a change, up in the Satellite. Thought it was an interesting theory.
Impressive...most impressive.
So, who is the mystery man that knows all about The Machine...He has a yellow box...
I would guess Nolan since he's also in the Times Square scene.
I'm going to miss this show so much.
Return 0 is sitting at a perfect 10 on IMDb right now (with over 2,000 votes). When the lists update that will put POI at 8 of the top 50 episodes, beating Game of Thrones' 5 and Breaking Bad's 4.
Someone's reddit post on a theory of why The Machine could beat Samaritan for a change, up in the Satellite. Thought it was an interesting theory.
Well deserved. I watched it again and it really was a perfect end.
I just realized. The Machine planned it all along. The satellite was launched by Root when she went to Eastern Europe at the end of QSO (5x7).
So, I now do know that the Machine knew that the events of The Day the World Went Away were going to happen, and even knew that Harold was going to use Ice-9 to destroy Samaritan.
The Machine essentially planned to corner Samaritan into using that satellite, so it could finish it off, and also save itself. God damn, this fucking show.
hold on
wait, what?
is this for real?
What actually caused the ratings to drop? Any real info about that? Or yet another case of the wrong show on the wrong network?
I can't for my life imagine watching procedural shows where you can just skip 5 episodes and not miss anything. Person of Interest really nailed it with blending it together. When it went full on 'serialized' at times it really was absolutely amazing.
People claimed the show jumped the shark when Carter was killed, and when Samaritan was introduced. IIRC, people preferred if they had stayed with the procedural elements instead of evolving into large mythology. Which is insanely mind-boggling.
People claimed the show jumped the shark when Carter was killed, and when Samaritan was introduced. IIRC, people preferred if they had stayed with the procedural elements instead of evolving into large mythology. Which is insanely mind-boggling.
Yeah, I think timeslot more than anything killed it.
I mean, Limitless pretty much matched the performance in the same timeslot.
I know people say Limitless was good, but I refuse to watch it or anything else on CBS, after CBS killed POI.
POI barely received any publicity in the last 2 seasons. Loads of people didn't even realize Season 5 had started airing, and you wouldn't even know it was coming on 2 times a week unless you were already watching the airing.
It's kind of amazing how only now people are noticing the series and how good it is.
Also just realized the meaning of the date on tombstone...
Nolan must have been reading my mind, he knew I would want a reference to my favourite episode! =D
"Tonight, at midnight, when the virus reaches zero, a certain payphone will ring with the most important phone call in history..."
Root's first direct communication with God...ahem, The Machine - May 3, 2013
Nolan: I had imagined that in any version this would be the final season for Samaritan. And we had a blueprint we used for what could come next. If this was the ultimate big bad - like, what could we do afterward? And we had some pretty cool ideas. But certainly for a final adversary, Samaritan is a pretty great one.
Yes, a case of the week structure, but you always wanted the sense that there was a looming threat out there and you trust the audience to be able to sort through it. One huge problem with that was that we didn't know we weren't going to be streaming. And when every other show is streaming, it's no longer a fair fight. We had an arm tied behind out back while trying to tell a complicated story, and the only way the audience could catch up was to wait for the box set. It was a slightly old fashioned show [in terms of distribution] in a new world, and that was tricky.
Nolan: Last year, it was 24, X-Files and Heroes. You'd be forgiven for waking up and checking your TV Guide thinking you'd traveled back in time 10 years. So you never say never. They've got our number! They can call us. We love these f**king characters. We love this world.
Chris Fisher either sniffed out our musical taste or he shared it to begin because occasionally... He tried to drop Pink Floyd's "Machine" into an episode in Season 2 and we were like, "F**k off, Fish, we got plans for that one." [laughs]
I read the IGN interview and this is painful:
I read the IGN interview and this is painful:
What could they have realistically done, outside of maybe having Team Machine vs. the Machine?
Basically the same in the US as well.