Few TV endings were ever going to satisfy everyone the way fans wanted The Boys to. After years of chaos, violence, trauma, and moral collapse, expectations for the final episode were impossibly high. And judging by the reaction online, many viewers walked away disappointed. Honestly? I understand why. This finale was never going to feel “finished” in the traditional sense. There were still countless possibilities, unresolved ideas, and directions the story could have explored. Some characters deserved more time, some endings raise new questions, and a few creative choices definitely won’t work for everyone. But despite all of that, I think the ending worked. Not because it was perfect — it absolutely wasn’t — but because it understood what kind of story The Boys has always been. At its core, this was never a superhero story about victory. It was about damage, consequences, power, and survival. And in the end, the finale chose closure over spectacle. The Finale Was About Cl...
If there’s one thing that makes people click on a show, it’s a strong premise. And on paper, Utopia had everything going for it: a mysterious comic book that might predict real-world disasters, conspiracy theories, a deadly pandemic, and a group of misfits trying to uncover the truth. Sounds incredible, right? That’s exactly why the disappointment hits so hard. I went into this series without watching the original UK version, so this review comes purely from the perspective of someone judging the 2020 adaptation on its own. And honestly? I couldn’t even make it past episode three. A Premise That Hooks You Immediately At first, Utopia feels strange in a good way. The opening episodes create this unsettling atmosphere where you’re not entirely sure what’s happening, but you want answers. The mystery surrounding the comic book is genuinely intriguing, and the idea that fiction could secretly reflect reality is a concept that instantly grabs attention. For a moment, the show fe...