I decided not to renew my Netflix account I discontinued last summer. I'm going to miss Ozarks. Anyone here care to give a summary?
It's good if you're into watching people dig themselves deeper into a hole. Justin Bateman is a really good actor.Aliceinbubbleland said:
I decided not to renew my Netflix account I discontinued last summer. I'm going to miss Ozarks. Anyone here care to give a summary?
Started binge watching this with my wife, Alice. Kind of addicting. Yep, ole Jason Bateman solves one problem and is immediately knee deep in another one. I am two episodes into season two.Aliceinbubbleland said:
I decided not to renew my Netflix account I discontinued last summer. I'm going to miss Ozarks. Anyone here care to give a summary?
First, I think Ozark may be the most polarizing show on television that I can remember. I know a ton of people that absolutely love it. I thought it is ridiculously stupid. I powered through seasons two and three out of nothing else to watch.Aliceinbubbleland said:
I decided not to renew my Netflix account I discontinued last summer. I'm going to miss Ozarks. Anyone here care to give a summary?
I think that's really unfair to The Americans, which was a truly great show. My issue with Ozark is:Aliceinbubbleland said:
Just WOW. What about the kids? Weren't they being drug into the Web. Reminds me of The Americans, a favorite of ours.
Actually, I think the pregnant FBI Agent is a likeable character. Now matter how hard she tries to do the right thing and stay the course, she gets screwed over. Even by her bureaucratic boss. Will be interesting to see if she can remain on the side of law and justice. I am pulling for her.Flaming Moderate said:I think that's really unfair to The Americans, which was a truly great show. My issue with Ozark is:Aliceinbubbleland said:
Just WOW. What about the kids? Weren't they being drug into the Web. Reminds me of The Americans, a favorite of ours.
1. There is no likable characters - I am cheering for the cartel at this point
2. The show spends several episodes on a particular plot and then drops it
3. Like the Americans, they do get in some tricky situations, but unlike the Americans, the writing is not good enough to find an interesting solution - all Mary Sue
On the kids ... not sure ... I think the boy is laundering money through his xbox and the girls is boning lake rats. Actually the girl inexplicably returned after emancipation and now helps run the biz.
Most amazingly, Darlene shot the balls off the Kansas City mob boss' son, and he does nothing in response.
I think that's where I struggle - there really are no stakes. In Breaking Bad, Walt was motivated by caring for his family in the face of a deadly and expensive diagnosis. Even though his evolution into Heisenberg moved him away from that core mission and less likable, he started from a pure perspective. And they White's seemed to have a sympathetic, functional life if you will - easy to cheer for. Marty was in it for greed since day one, and his family dysfunctional: wife having an affair, kids bratty (or at least the girl). I thought the writing was much better on Breaking Bad, and yes Breaking Bad had some crazy moments to escape peril, they relatively were based in Walt's brains or Jessie's street smarts ... someone the Byrde's went from suburbanites to sophisticated criminals in 18 months?!? In the real world, Marty is killed by the Langmore's in episode 2(?), and the show is over.PartyBear said:
I like the show. It is very similar to "Breaking Bad" story. I was going to say Marty is a likeable character but I as I thought about it, he really isn't a sympathetic character by the end of season 3 even though he was clearly wanting out at the beginning of the season.
Justin Bateman is also the producer of the show. He said we are entering the end now. He envisions the series as a 4-5 season story.
Not so. Marty's dead partner was in it for greed. Marty didn't have a clue what his partner was doing until the cartel showed up to kill everyone. He only made the Ozark move as a desperate attempt to save his own life and that of his family. In the beginning the move gave him an opportunity to reform his dysfunctional family, but his wife was irredeemable when it came to finding new ways to redefine greed.Flaming Moderate said:I think that's where I struggle - there really are no stakes. In Breaking Bad, Walt was motivated by caring for his family in the face of a deadly and expensive diagnosis. Even though his evolution into Heisenberg moved him away from that core mission and less likable, he started from a pure perspective. And they White's seemed to have a sympathetic, functional life if you will - easy to cheer for. Marty was in it for greed since day one, and his family dysfunctional: wife having an affair, kids bratty (or at least the girl). I thought the writing was much better on Breaking Bad, and yes Breaking Bad had some crazy moments to escape peril, they relatively were based in Walt's brains or Jessie's street smarts ... someone the Byrde's went from suburbanites to sophisticated criminals in 18 months?!? In the real world, Marty is killed by the Langmore's in episode 2(?), and the show is over.PartyBear said:
I like the show. It is very similar to "Breaking Bad" story. I was going to say Marty is a likeable character but I as I thought about it, he really isn't a sympathetic character by the end of season 3 even though he was clearly wanting out at the beginning of the season.
Justin Bateman is also the producer of the show. He said we are entering the end now. He envisions the series as a 4-5 season story.
Malbec said:
Not so. Marty's dead partner was in it for greed. Marty didn't have a clue what his partner was doing until the cartel showed up to kill everyone. He only made the Ozark move as a desperate attempt to save his own life and that of his family. In the beginning the move gave him an opportunity to reform his dysfunctional family, but his wife was irredeemable when it came to finding new ways to redefine greed.
Those are not mutually exclusive. His partner was going to flip on the cartel, but Marty was not laundering cartel money because he felt strongly about legalized meth.Malbec said:Not so. Marty's dead partner was in it for greed. Marty didn't have a clue what his partner was doing until the cartel showed up to kill everyone. He only made the Ozark move as a desperate attempt to save his own life and that of his family. In the beginning the move gave him an opportunity to reform his dysfunctional family, but his wife was irredeemable when it came to finding new ways to redefine greed.Flaming Moderate said:I think that's where I struggle - there really are no stakes. In Breaking Bad, Walt was motivated by caring for his family in the face of a deadly and expensive diagnosis. Even though his evolution into Heisenberg moved him away from that core mission and less likable, he started from a pure perspective. And they White's seemed to have a sympathetic, functional life if you will - easy to cheer for. Marty was in it for greed since day one, and his family dysfunctional: wife having an affair, kids bratty (or at least the girl). I thought the writing was much better on Breaking Bad, and yes Breaking Bad had some crazy moments to escape peril, they relatively were based in Walt's brains or Jessie's street smarts ... someone the Byrde's went from suburbanites to sophisticated criminals in 18 months?!? In the real world, Marty is killed by the Langmore's in episode 2(?), and the show is over.PartyBear said:
I like the show. It is very similar to "Breaking Bad" story. I was going to say Marty is a likeable character but I as I thought about it, he really isn't a sympathetic character by the end of season 3 even though he was clearly wanting out at the beginning of the season.
Justin Bateman is also the producer of the show. He said we are entering the end now. He envisions the series as a 4-5 season story.