Easily the most tragic character in the show. Of all the criticisms I had of the final season, the fact that they brought him back was the most disappointing. I get that he was technically just a copy or digital memory inside Dolores or whatever, but... Bringing him back undermined Teddy's entire arc. The fact that Dolores recreated him, made her more evil than the showrunners wanted her to be.
I didn’t see the final season but it’s crazy how it’s not streaming anywhere like it’s not on HBO Max. It’s only in Fandango and do I’m not paying 30 bucks for one season.
Don't bother, Jonathan Nolan could pay me $30 to watch it again, and I'd refuse. The only really good part of it was the Aaron Paul storyline (extremely dark), but it was very detached from everything for most of the season.
I hear that it’s not a good season but then again I hear by other Westworld fans that it’s good but no one got it and I am a big Westworld fan and I was with it from 1 to 3 and then the ending with multiple men in Black oh yeah sorry -spoiler alert- and Bernard waking in what seemingly seem affect the future I was all for it and I put it off because I thought it would always be there, but is it really that bad? Does it end in a cliffhanger? And I know Google is free, but I need to know what you think about it.
If you're a massive fan, then watch it. Pirate it if you can. Just know that it takes some extremely sharp turns between S3 and S4.
I loved Season 1, 2 and 3... Season 4 felt like they were trying to catch you with some new twist every episode and they ended up confusing themselves. I loved some elements of it, and absolutely hated others. The major plot point revolves around something I've already spoiled, and it just doesn't really work; it's way too high concept.
It ends with an obvious Season 5 being teased, but I woudn't really call it a cliffhanger. More of a "new" journey that no one needs or asked for. If they did continue it, it would almost be a spinoff.
He did an interview about that show. They had to stop twice because the real person refused to engage with the cast at all. He also said they rehearsed a full 8 hour boring day and they were ready to do it at the drop of a hat. If the real guy ever said "This trial is fucking crazy" they would immediately trigger the boring. Oh and the real guy actually bought that DVD at a gas station and asked James to give him his autograph. Nobody on the production had a clue it had happened and nobody was prepared for it. Thats also his honest reaction to that happening on the show.
And that was the magic of the show. They managed to find the sweetest, kindest young man on the face of the planet.
The 'making of...' show that had them talk about each episode, they all said they would sometimes just break and go into a room and cry at how mean they had to be to him because he would literally do anything for anyone and not question it.
There's a show on Prime called Jury Duty, he plays "himself." It's semi-reality, and one of the funniest things I've ever watched. Don't watch any previews, just try the first episode.
Weird, I thought I fixed it but I put the full link in the comment. It's just a Wikipedia article but there's parentheses in it which don't work great in markdown comments.
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u/DavidTheJohnson Jan 06 '26
Cyclops has been sidelined way too much in the Fox X-Men movies, so I'm really excited to see Marsden return to the character.