RAWR!! I can't believe it!! THEY DID IT AGAIN! STUPID NBC! They canceled "The Cape" :( They didn't even wrap up the series nicely.. they just left it on a cliffhanger! RAWWRR!!!!
I figured that one was going to go the way of so many good shows so I didn't even start watching it. (I've got enough that I already watch that I'm really trying to keep the list shorter.) Sorry to hear that you were left hanging.
LOL If I could count all the times they canceled a show I actually liked I wouldn't have enough fingers and toes to count that high!
There are some shows that deserve to be canceled. They simply sucked. But I just hate when networks cancel shows and not wrap up the plots or holes. It is just evil.
More than I can remember. To name a few I thought Enterprise should have went longer as well as Voyager , the Newer Battlestar Galactica , The 4400 could have (and should have) went another one or two to fix any missing storylines, I remember finding the season one of Surface that should have went on , there's just too many to say and remember.
I wish that Enterprise had gone on longer. Still, it went on longer than the original Star Trek (which also was cancelled too soon IMHO).
I honestly didn't find Enterprise all that appealing. They were trying to sequence it as a prequel to everything and it only alienated fans. Then they tried weaving in the story line from the 29th century and that even pissed off more people. Frankly, it felt like they did not know what they were doing.
I must say that I wasn't enamored of the time travel portions of the show. (To me, only "alternate universes" are worse.)
It became distracting at times honestly. If you were not keeping up on what was happening, you couldn't follow the story because one moment you were in the future. The next moment you were in the past.... Finally you were in the normal timelines. It simply became too much.
Yep, it did seem to be distracting. I also thought it was used sometimes when they couldn't figure out how to write it straight, rather than with a tired literary device.