seledoux wrote:I think they dragged it out as long as was feasibly possible. After 7 full years, it would just be creepy if Niles continued to obsess over her, and having one or both of them find another partner would have been far worse than the necessary loss of comedic value that occurred when Daphne discovered Niles' feelings.
It may be an unpopular opinion, but I love season 9. I'm sorry, I just do. I don't like what happens to Daphne's character, but I love Cam Winston, I love Blaine Sternin, I love the proposal. Love them!
kat wrote:I don't hate S9, it's an improvement on S8, but there are still some low points, Cheerful Goodbyes springs instantly to mind as it was on this morning
jrsightes wrote:I think it would have been much more rewarding for the fans if they had waited 'til the end of the series to end the tension and put them together once and for all.
Frasier was at its absolute best when Niles was pining after Daphne.
I think the Rachel-Ross story from Friends is a good model for how sitcoms should handle relationships between two beloved characters. Establish mutual feelings between the characters, tease us by having one character continually almost find out about the other character's feelings, allow them to finally get together, devastate us by breaking them up, and make us wait until the finale to get a conclusive answer.
Instead, the Frasier writers resolved the tension too early, and spent the rest of the series telling the inevitably boring story of the perfect, storybook couple, whose only contrived and silly disagreements are always resolved at the end of the episode with a big hug.
I think its treatment of character romances is the one and only area in which Frasier is surpassed by other sitcoms.
jrsightes wrote:I think it would have been much more rewarding for the fans if they had waited 'til the end of the series to end the tension and put them together once and for all.
Frasier was at its absolute best when Niles was pining after Daphne.
I think the Rachel-Ross story from Friends is a good model for how sitcoms should handle relationships between two beloved characters. Establish mutual feelings between the characters, tease us by having one character continually almost find out about the other character's feelings, allow them to finally get together, devastate us by breaking them up, and make us wait until the finale to get a conclusive answer.
Instead, the Frasier writers resolved the tension too early, and spent the rest of the series telling the inevitably boring story of the perfect, storybook couple, whose only contrived and silly disagreements are always resolved at the end of the episode with a big hug.
I think its treatment of character romances is the one and only area in which Frasier is surpassed by other sitcoms.
Lil wrote:Yeah I understand completely what you're saying, Sammy.
Out of curiousity, you say on your profile your favorite Frasier episode is Dexter. I don't believe I've ever seen that one. Oh! Was that how the series ended? Michael C. Hall went into Frasier's apartment and killed the whole household? Here I was thinking Goodnight Seattle was the last show.
Torrie wrote:I like the fact they got together but I have to admit I did wonder how their relationship worked as to me they seem to have very little in common.
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