![]() ![]() From this point we have a long season ahead of us – okay 10 minute long episodes, but there are over 50 of them in this one season – double the length of all previous seasons. We see the reason for this and it produces a dramatic few episodes which are dark and unsettling in some ways – my only complaint would have been that it seemed to resolve everything too quickly. The fifth season opens up where the fourth ended, with Finn now very much a human and in a place where none of Ooo seems to exist. With Adventure Time I do not think they have always been successful with their development and aging, and to be honest nor have I always liked it, but it is a good strategy and probably is making for a much better show season 5 is an example of how it can work, albeit also an example of the downsides of this. ![]() This change in age brings a lot of change in taste, so a show not moving forward may lose them, which I guess means you can aim for the same age range and just hope the new ones come in the door to an already established show, or you try to age with your audience. I'm not sure how shows like this target themselves to their audience, because on one hand you want to keep doing what you are doing that got viewers in the first place, but then at the same time if you are essentially making a show for teens and pre-teens, you have a demographic who would have gone from 8 to 13 years old in the span of this show thus far. It is interesting to see a show like Adventure Time develop over 5 years. ![]()
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