Gen V’s first season could have used a couple more episodes

Gen V’s first six episodes are remarkably tight. Boys’ spinoff series immediately establishes its place in the larger universe, and quickly introduces us to an entire cast of characters, a unique superhero university, and a secret conspiracy in just a few short hours. The cast is relatively small, but the story has a lot of depth. Gen V manages to give each one time to shine in their own storylines, letting them all have problems — both personal and superpowered — that just make for great television. The teen drama is seamlessly woven into The Woods, a conspiracy thriller that takes place directly below the school. But Gen V’s last two episodes run into a unique problem: They move too fast.

[Ed. note: This post contains spoilers for Gen V season 1.]

Gen V’s seventh and eighth episodes cover a lot of ground very quickly. After the cliffhanger twist of episode 6 (that Cate has been manipulating the group the whole time), the gang learns that Indira Shetty’s ultimate plan with The Woods is to create a virus that will kill anyone with Compound V in their system. Cate decides she’s flipping sides completely. She kills Shetty, who had been manipulating her, and frees the kids from The Woods, telling them that they’re better than humans and that humans don’t deserve to live — a message Sam gets on board with fast. Marie, Jordan Emma and Andre find all this bloodshed too intense to bear and start battling Cate and Sam and The Woods kids. Homelander arrives to stop the chaos at God University as it breaks out.

If this all sounds a little harried, that’s because it is. A carefully planned series that began with teens expressing complex (and less complex) feelings and discussing the moral implications of being able to use powers suddenly turns into an epic CGI battle. The huge fight feels out of step with everything that’s come before it. It’s exactly the kind of ending you might expect from a Marvel movie that takes a left turn into punching just as the third act begins.

A young person with blood dripping down their face in Gen V.

Image: Prime Video

That’s not to say that Gen V’s first season shouldn’t have ended in a fight — just that it shouldn’t have ended in a fight this Quickly. The fight should have been set up better, allowing the teenage characters’ emotions the space to bubble over until all they knew how to do was fight their way out. It’s a bad time for the show’s first emotional shortcut. The eight-episode season abandons the delicate pacing of the show’s fantastic early chapters to rush through plot points and motivation in the back half.

But with just a couple more episodes, which would ultimately give the season a very standard 10 episodes, it might have been much easier to swallow the way that Cate and Sam’s systematic abuse caused them to turn to wanton violence, or why their friends couldn’t talk them out of it and decided to fight them instead. The episodes 7 and 8 are like a microwaved version ofGen V. They’re still pretty good, but not nearly as great as the slow-cooked setup.

The good news for the show is that the too-quick ending doesn’t take away from how great the rest of the season was. And all things considered, there are much worse problems to have than leaving people wanting more — Gen VThe rarest show which could be enhanced with More information about the productIt’s better to have more than less. The setup for season 2 is still chaotic despite the chaos that characterized the end of the first season.Gen V’s second season is easy to see and exciting to think about. The core of the heroes being trapped feels like great fodder for a prison break, and Cate and Sam having to figure out what to do now that they’re not under anyone’s thumb should be fascinating. Despite the season’s sudden ending, this series is still filled with fantastic characters, and the deftness of the first half of the season has earned the creative team some benefit of the doubt going forward. But let’s hope season 2 gets all the episodes it needs to do its story justice.

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