Person of Interest finale - spoilers
May. 15th, 2014 09:37 amThe season finale of Person of Interest was possibly the grimmest cliff-hanger I've ever seen:
The final episode of Person of Interest left the USA in an interesting state; a "panopticon" society where every action is noted and acted upon, where people appear to be being arrested because of e.g. being "deviant" rather than because they've actually committed a crime. And where the Skynet-equivalent computer has just been told that it's giving the orders...
I think that this will end badly because the new computer doesn't have The Machine's experience and will make bad choices. I'm also guessing that The Machine still has a few tricks up its sleeve and back door access into the new computer. It'll be interesting to see where it goes.
Is it just me that thinks this series is currently the best SF on TV? Certainly a lot more believable and scary than e.g. HYDRA's subversion of SHIELD in Agents...
Comments?
The final episode of Person of Interest left the USA in an interesting state; a "panopticon" society where every action is noted and acted upon, where people appear to be being arrested because of e.g. being "deviant" rather than because they've actually committed a crime. And where the Skynet-equivalent computer has just been told that it's giving the orders...
I think that this will end badly because the new computer doesn't have The Machine's experience and will make bad choices. I'm also guessing that The Machine still has a few tricks up its sleeve and back door access into the new computer. It'll be interesting to see where it goes.
Is it just me that thinks this series is currently the best SF on TV? Certainly a lot more believable and scary than e.g. HYDRA's subversion of SHIELD in Agents...
Comments?
no subject
Date: 2014-05-15 04:31 pm (UTC)One thing I've wondered ... the narrative has kind of presented the idea that the Machine was setting them up to kill someone, and they didn't do it, and that was the tipping point, and now thousands of people who wouldn't otherwise have died have been killed. But if the Machine really is capable of higher intelligence, for example learning morality to go along with its observations and predictions, teaching it that preemptive killing is OK might have been an even worse thing to do. For all that Decima is practically worshiping Samaritan, the new A.I. is still bound in a lot of ways the Machine has already grown past; I think it *will* come down to the A.I.s interacting with each other next year, and it'll be fascinating to watch that play out. (If Samaritan can't be stopped, can it be convinced to turn against Decima?) The show felt a lot more intimate when it was just Reese and Finch running around alone (as well as a lot more accessible to the casual fanwriter) but it had to change and grow sometime, and the added texture and mythology in the last couple of seasons has kept me riveted.
no subject
Date: 2014-05-15 05:05 pm (UTC)