Skip to main content

The Umbrella Academy season 4's new cast reveals have me worried

Web Hosting & Remote IT Support

Netflix has revealed three new characters who will appear in The Umbrella Academy season 4 – and I'm not sure what to make of them.

The streaming giant has confirmed that Nick Offerman, Megan Mullally and David Cross have signed on to appear in The Umbrella Academy's fourth and final season. According to Netflix's press release, Offerman and Mullally will play community college professors (and husband and wife) Doctors Gene and Jean Thibedeau. Cross, meanwhile, will portray a shy businessman called Sy Grossman, who longs to be reunited with his lost daughter.

So, what's the problem? First, let me say this: I have nothing against this talented trio. Offerman is a fantastic hire for one of the best Netflix shows around – his performances in The Last of Us, Parks and Rec, Devs, and many other productions are proof of that. Mullally – Offerman's fellow Parks and Rec alumnus – is equally wonderful in Bob's Burgers, and Will and Grace among others, while, Cross (Arrested Development, Kung Fu Panda) is a brilliant piece of casting, albeit someone who's had his fair share of controversy.

No, The Umbrella Academy season 4's biggest issue is one that TV fans – especially those who enjoy TV adaptations of other forms of media – know very well.

The Game of Thrones problem

Sean Bean as Ned Stark in the first season of Game of Thrones

Game of Thrones' final season suffered because it had no source material to draw on (Image credit: HBO)

Yep, it's the Game of Thrones problem. HBO's fantasy series was one of the world's most popular show throughout the 2010s, but its final season drew plenty of criticism for some controversial character development (or, rather, underdevelopment), baffling storylines, and a finale that left viewers underwhelmed. 

The reason that its final season tarnished its overall legacy in the eyes of many? The TV adaptation got ahead of George R R Martin's book series of the same name. The legendary author still has two more novels to write, meaning the writers of one of the best HBO Max shows (if you ignore season 8) had to forge their own path for its final batch of episodes.

This is a problem that The Umbrella Academy now faces. Gerard Way and Gabriel Bá's graphic novel series of the same name only comprises three volumes, although a fourth one is on the way at some point. With three seasons under its belt, The Umbrella Academy TV show has caught up with its source material. Like Game of Thrones, then, The Umbrella Academy's showrunner Steve Blackman and wider writing team have to create everything from scratch for its final season.

See more

Admittedly, this isn't the first time that Blackman and company have put a novel spin on Way and Bá's works. The Umbrella Academy season 2 added storylines that aren't present in the graphic novels, such as the introductions of Lila Pitts and Harlan Cooper, and Vanya's romance with Sissy Cooper. Meanwhile, The Umbrella Academy season 3 introduced The Sparrow Academy, who were teased in the final panels of volume 3, and who'll feature prominently in volume 4. Without much in the way source material to draw on, though, The Sparrow Academy's TV iteration is sure to be different to its comic book counterparts.

And that's what has me worried heading into season 4. In my review of The Umbrella Academy season 3, I said it was the weakest installment of Netflix's adaptation so far. Seasons 1 and 2 largely stuck to the narratives and character arcs seen in the comics. The show's third season didn't have the luxury of adapting any elements from the books, resulting in original content being created by the writing team – most of which felt like a step-by-step retread of what we've seen before (we're looking at you, world-ending apocalypse number 3...).

Then there's the concern over the Thibedeaus. As professors – ones who are suffering from the most extreme case of deja vu, according to Netflix's press release – it seems they've encountered the Hargreeves family (i.e., The Umbrella Academy) before. If that's the case, and if (as I suspect) the Thibedeaus are physicists who specialize in theories surrounding time travel, season 4's main narrative could be based around the idea of a multiverse and/or branching timelines.

In an increasingly saturated multiversal story market – Marvel, DC, and even the multi-award-winning movie Everything Everywhere All at Once have explored this extensively – we could do without another film or TV show doing likewise.

Case for the defence

The Hargreeves family prepare to fight in The Umbrella Academy season 3 on Netflix

The Umbrella Academy needs a great ending (Image credit: Netflix)

All of this isn't to say I want The Umbrella Academy's TV adaptation to fail. I'd love nothing more than for it to live up to its potential, give us a fantastic final season, and allow the Hargreeves family to walk off into the sunset after rectifying the time travel errors they've made along the way. If a trailer and official plot synopsis – once they're released – suggest that's going to be the case, I'll be more confident in Blackman and company delivering a fitting end to the TV series.

As it stands, though, I'm a bit concerned about whether The Umbrella Academy season 4 will live up to expectations. 

I love the graphic novel series, so I feel more invested in the show and its success than more casual fans. I want to see these characters get a break, and actually save the world properly for once. I want them to make peace with each other after the familial trauma they've suffered; and I want a emotionally satisfying conclusion to their overarching journey. 

Right now, though part of me feels like I'll be left disappointed. I hope I'm wrong but, based on the latest character reveals and potential retread of stale storylines, I'm worried that The Umbrella Academy season 4 could become another Game of Thrones – and that would be a huge pity.

For more Netflix coverage, read up on the best Netflix movies, best Netflix documentaries, and new Netflix movies coming in 2023.



via Hosting & Support

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

This new malware campaign can hijack your Gmail or Outlook email account

Web Hosting & Remote IT Support Cybersecurity researchers from Cisco Talos have spotted a new hacking campaign they claim is targeting victims’ sensitive data, login credentials, and email inboxes. Horabot is described as a botnet that has been active for almost two and a half years now (first spotted in November 2020). During that time, it’s mostly been tasked with distributing a banking trojan and spam malware .  Its operators seem to be located in Brazil, while its victims are Spanish-speaking users located mostly in Mexico, Uruguay, Venezuela Brazil, Panama, Argentina, and Guatemala. Horabot botnet The victims are found in different industries, from investment firms to wholesale distribution, from construction to engineering, and accounting. The attack starts with an email message carrying a malicious HTML attachment. Ultimately, the victim is urged to download a .RAR archive, which holds the banking trojan.  The malware is capable of doing plenty of things: stealing l

Want to store 1PB of data in the cloud? This startup can do it for you for as little as $10,000 a month — Qumulo says it can scale to Exabytes off premise and wants to eradicate tapes once and for all

Web Hosting & Remote IT Support Qumulo has launched Azure Native Qumulo Cold (ANQ Cold), which it claims is the first truly cloud-native, fully managed SaaS solution for storing and retrieving infrequently accessed “cold” file data. Fully POSIX-compliant and positioned as an on-premises alternative to tape storage, ANQ Cold can be used as a standalone file service, a backup target for any file store, including on-premises legacy scale-out NAS, and it can be integrated into a hybrid storage infrastructure, enabling access to remote data as if it were local. It can also scale to an exabyte-level file system in a single namespace. “ANQ Cold is an industry game changer for economically storing and retrieving cold file data,” said Ryan Farris, VP of Product at Qumulo. “To put this in perspective with a common use case, hospital IT administrators in charge of PACS archival data can use ANQ Cold for the long-term retention of DICOM images at a fraction of their current on-premises leg

No light without dark : making the most of ‘shadow IT’

Web Hosting & Remote IT Support In the last few decades, technology has created a modern digital workforce that is technically skilled and adept at finding innovative solutions that would help them succeed at work. However, with 95% of employees struggling with digital friction in the workplace - including a lack of access to the right tools - ambitious employees who are hungry for results have often needed to explore fixes outside the scope of existing systems provided by their employers. On top of that, the popularity of cloud-based apps has resulted in business processes often ending up fragmented across various systems, requiring workers to devote time to manual maintenance. This has accelerated the spread of (the unnecessarily ominous sounding) ‘shadow IT’, or applications that savvy workers use without official authorization to help them bypass limitations and get work done. In a perfect world, a balance can be struck between giving these technically skilled workers freed