Disliked episodes 2 and 6. The rest was good, especially ep 4, which was really fun.
The third and final show in the trilogy features a random new hero, as well as some new villains that seemingly came out of nowhere. On top of that, while the other two shows in the trilogy, Trollhunters and 3Below, were comedies with some action, this one was all about the action. With only 10 episodes, I found it very hard to get invested in any of this. Sad, given how much I had loved the rest! Here's to hoping to movie concluding the saga will be better.
I felt the protagonist just got less and less likable with every passing episode...
After a so-so first episode, the rest was very watchable!
If you enjoyed Gilmore Girls, I think the Ren Faire setting and quirky characters will remind you of Stars Hollow a lot... except, with some "horny nerd humor", as one of the characters complains at one point!
Despite a few vulgar jokes, I found the show really lovely. It's both funny and sweet, and the lead is very likable.
Blandest thing ever. Not one character, not one event is interesting on this show! Plus, the lead turning into the camera to deliver his "deep" monologue every episode is just creepy.
(Review based on the full first season... I blame summer!)
First season (6 eps): cute and funny, if a bit amateurish-looking. Second season (5 eps): not as good.
Half satire that makes excellent points and half crass gross offensive stuff just for the sake of being crass gross offensive. But if you can stomach that, it's a funny show!
Enjoyed this. It was cancelled after one season, but the case was resolved at the end of episode six, so it can be watched as a limited series.
Pretty grim, and you have to let go of your 21st century ideals if you have hopes of liking the male lead. Things I liked: the last ten minutes were romantic, the female lead is pretty cool (most characters are pretty good actually), there's a nice female friendship. But overall, I found it just okay.
Disclaimer: I'm new to '19th century romance' as a genre and find it a bit hard to fully appreciate when you're not familiar with it. Though I did love Pride & Prejudice to bits! This in some ways is more similar to Poldark, with the focus on industry and class struggles.