08-14-2016, 09:39 AM
I'm someone that doesn't just care about the end results and call it a day. The journey is just as important as the destination. I always like a story more when all the details matter. It takes me out of the show a bit when I feel like the writers are changing details on the fly. I'm fine if they all add up in the end but I have a problem when continuity is broken. Later writing should not contradict earlier writing. It ends up getting to the point where I have to overlook too many things. We all have to have a suspension of disbelief but there are writers that tend to abuse this and the story ends up becoming convoluted.
The keys are a big deal because we were told how important they were in the pilot episode. That mystery was a staple of the show even if it was mostly handled in the background. It felt like the writers just wanted to wrap it up quickly instead of giving it the right attention and we end up with five keys out of seven. They could have just said there were five keys to begin with and avoided this problem. Renard says the Royals were in possession of four keys and the math doesn't add up as of now. I know it doesn't matter to everyone but the keys were given great importance right from the start and I don't think they handled the resolution very well.
The keys are a big deal because we were told how important they were in the pilot episode. That mystery was a staple of the show even if it was mostly handled in the background. It felt like the writers just wanted to wrap it up quickly instead of giving it the right attention and we end up with five keys out of seven. They could have just said there were five keys to begin with and avoided this problem. Renard says the Royals were in possession of four keys and the math doesn't add up as of now. I know it doesn't matter to everyone but the keys were given great importance right from the start and I don't think they handled the resolution very well.