A newly released show I'm currently watching is Paradise (Hulu). Even though it's pulling from a few already well used Sci-Fi scenarios, it is so well executed as to be a thoroughly fascinating and satisfying watch. Currently Paradise is intended as a limited series - 8 total episodes. And without getting ahead of expectations, I can already sense a potential season 2 will feel forced.
I'll have to check it out. I like Sterling K. Brown and usually enjoy the shows he does. Totally get what you're saying about the single-season format. One of the best things Hulu has done in the last few years (imo) is Dopesick, and can you imagine trying to do a second season of that? (I feel like I shouldn't even type that, because somebody out there is dumb enough to try.)
Finished watching
Paradise on Hulu last night. Created by Dan Fogelman whose best work is most likely as producer of
Only Murders In The Building.
As mentioned earlier, none of the SciFi concepts in
Paradise are original. But that isn't the point. There's such a pessimism toward film and television misfires these days, it's a winning hand when a show executes well, which Paradise meticulously does. To reference
Lost from earlier, the best summation I've heard of
Paradise from a critic named Robert Meyer Burnett who said "
Paradise succeeds where
Lost tried, and pulls it off in only eight episodes."
Yes,
Paradise opens with a great big mystery that's solved in the last episode, all while we're left with a cliffhanger to set up Season 2. Hint, it involves a character not dying when they should've. This coincided with Hulu confirming a season 2. Which leaves me wondering whether if in case a season 2 had not been confirmed by the finale, was there a backup ending ready to go where the character did in fact die? Which would've made for a clean ending.
This is the advantage of Disney+/Hulu releasing episodes by the week rather than doing the Netflix whole-season dump. The success of a series can be gauged earlier, and adjusted with minor edits to either end the series for good or keep going.