next_to_normal (
next_to_normal) wrote2012-01-27 10:28 pm
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Chuck finale
The series finale of Chuck really needs a proper reaction post, but I am just feeling TOO MANY FEELINGS right now. I am happy and sad and nostalgic and conflicted and flaily.
Anyone? Coherency?
Anyone? Coherency?
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Though it didn't bother me as much as it might've in different circumstances for a few reasons. For one, it doesn't skeeve me so much when it's the villain causing it and not, say, the lead 'protecting' their love interest/family by erasing their memories. coughcoughHERMIONEcoughcough And for another, I was really distracted by the way they had to twist things around to make it work as symbolically as they wanted it too.
Why did Morgan lose early memories and Sarah more recent ones? How on earth did Quinn remove her memories so precisely? How did he know what she would wake up remembering? Why didn't Chuck bring up stuff that Sarah wouldn't have revealed while undercover, like her real name or that he knew about her mother? What was with the glasses being so important--didn't the show start with Chuck getting the intersect through a computer screen? Can't they make more glasses regardless? And Chuck using up the last usage of the glasses--why didn't they just hook up an mp3 player to some speakers for the bomb? Then they've got all the time they need to get in someone to defuse the bomb don't they?
I had...a lot of questions.
Actually, what bothered me a lot was the implication during the finale that the love between Sarah and Chuck was the most important part of the entire series and not, you know, Chuck growth from sadsack Nerd Herder to someone with drive and self-esteem and contentment with his life. Someone whose made peace with his past--and the same with Sarah and Casey, frankly. But no, apparently it's all about the romance.
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Actually, what bothered me a lot was the implication during the finale that the love between Sarah and Chuck was the most important part of the entire series
Yeah. I mean, it doesn't surprise me, because the show has always considered Chuck/Sarah the focal point, the "heart" of the show, so I'm not surprised that the finale and Sarah's memory loss was all about their relationship.
But, you know, one of the saddest moments of the finale, for me, was when Casey was saying goodbye, and he and Chuck have a heartfelt moment and then he turns to Sarah... and she goes to shake his hand like they're mere acquaintances. Which, of course, to her they are, but OMG! Casey - who unequivocally DOES NOT HUG, lol - is actually hurt that Sarah is so impersonal in her goodbye, after five years of working together. That moment said SO MUCH about the characters and how they've ALL changed each other by working as a team, not just Chuck and Sarah's romance.