author_by_night: (Ann by nuv0le_rapide)
author_by_night ([personal profile] author_by_night) wrote2015-02-26 08:44 am

More (positive) thoughts on the Parks and Rec finale


I rewatched the P&R finale, and I actually liked it better the second time.

I think the way I'm looking at it is this - there's really two finales. Season six was a straight series finale; we wrapped up character arcs, we had callbacks to earlier seasons and episodes (bye, bye Little Sebastian...), and the former rival towns of Pawnee and Eagleton successfully merged. Season seven was almost more what a movie may have been like - we see the characters at a later point when the town's changed a lot, and we see them going away. Then we get an idea of what it might have been like for them moving forward from that. So this finale was an epilogue to an epilogue, or to a movie version, and as clunky as that sounds, it actually worked well for those purposes. There really wasn't supposed to be a grande finale in the same way season six  had one.

So season six's finale is more of a series finale to me, but I also like season seven's finale as a "where are they now?" finale. :)
One of my LJ friends asked if there's any shows with similarly great female characters and dynamics currently on the air.  I couldn't think of any. Anyone?

I think there's shows now off the air that come close. FRIENDS actually has pretty well written dynamics between the female characters,  and Buffy did in the beginning with Buffy and Willow, but I'm not sure what else even in the past, let alone now. I think TV is almost afraid to write female characters having any non-volatile relationships. Same with movies. (Books do, although I feel like a lot of them go the other extreme, where one of the friends dies in the end. Or you realize all four friends were melodramatic southern belles who traumatized their children for life. I love Ya-Ya-Sisterhood, I really do, but...)

[identity profile] thesunifollow.livejournal.com 2015-02-26 02:27 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't know if you're watching it, but Brooklyn Nine-Nine has some great female characters and is overall doing great things with a diverse cast.

[identity profile] dolorosa-12.livejournal.com 2015-02-26 05:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I second the recommendation for Brooklyn Nine Nine. I would also argue that Orphan Black has some great (if messed-up) female characters, although they're almost all played by the one actress. Orange Is the New Black is entirely female-centric and has a huge and diverse cast.

[identity profile] ragnarok-08.livejournal.com 2015-02-26 08:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Brooklyn Nine-Nine is definitely great :)

[identity profile] chocolatepot.livejournal.com 2015-02-26 11:48 pm (UTC)(link)
It depends what one means by "similarly great female characters". Because I get a similar vibe from The Mindy Project, but at the same time Mindy is a COMPLETELY different type of person than Leslie. Re: dynamics, assuming it's total show dynamic we're talking about rather than inter-female character dynamics, Brooklyn Nine-Nine absolutely (not surprising, it's got the same creator).

[identity profile] rhoda-rants.livejournal.com 2015-02-27 02:42 am (UTC)(link)
Sleepy Hollow does pretty well on multiple fronts. Also, Orphan Black, which is coming back soon-ish. I've heard good things about Rizzoli & Isles, but I've never watched it. We were talking about this in my retrospective not that long ago--how a given show or movie might have some decent female characters, but rarely has multiple female characters working together as a team.

[identity profile] musicpsych.livejournal.com 2015-03-02 11:35 am (UTC)(link)
I like your take on the Parks finale. It was interesting to read that the writers had written a few episodes throughout the seasons as finales in case the show was cancelled.

I think Nashville does a decent job with relationships between female characters. There is some volatility at times, but the characters will support each other, too.