AustinAg2K said:aTmAg said:They played out all the existing people locally. Trying to bleed that turnip would have been lame. What would they do? Have Silver build a nuke that they have to disarm?AustinAg2K said:aTmAg said:You want them to do an episode on each of the "random dogos/villians" across the world? That would extend the season even longer and make the viewers hate villains that the Miagi/Cobra dogos have never even met yet. That wouldn't make any sense. It makes more sense to do what they did and have them (and us) meet these new villians together.AustinAg2K said:
I finally finished it, and I guess I'm in the minority, because I found the last season to be a slog to get through. I think the years between season 5 and 6, followed by the mini-seasons with months between episodes, made it really hard for me to get into it. I also started watching the show on YouTube Red, and immediately loved it. I think the best seasons were on YouTube. Once it switched to Netflix, it was still good, but seemed a step off. I feel like the final season was really bad, though. Random dojos. Random villains. Long breaks between episodes. I still loved the series overall, though.
No, they don't need to do an episode in each dojo. However, they could have found some sort of story that utilizes existing characters/villains.
It's clear that the show had to end with an international tournament. When you have an international tournament, you need new people/villians. That's just the nature of it. I think they did really well with it.
I get what you're saying, but I feel like it's because the writers put themselves into a box by constantly having the bad guys become the good guys. Let some of the kids be villains for more than a couple of episodes. Also, for the final fight you had some random sensei who just showed up this year. They had both Kreese and Silver. They could have had a Johnny vs Kreese fight. Or Danny vs. Silver. Instead they had Kreese and Silver blow each other up, and have the final fight with this random guy.
But Johnny's big thing has always been his confidence and he always knew he was the better fighter and could win. In the last fight against the sensei, he didn't have that. He was older, slower, and weaker. He lost his confidence and didn't believe he could win. If he fights Kreese or Silver, that element of the show/fight can't happen. In this ending, he is basically Daniel from the original movie. Underdog who wouldn't win 99% of the time, but wins this time based on emotion, intelligence, and patience. It brought everything full circle.