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  • Veronica Mars (Kristen Bell) was previously a popular girl in school next to her rich best friend Lilly Kane (Amanda Seyfried). When Lilly was murdered, her father Sheriff Keith (Enrico Colantoni) arrested Lilly's powerful father, but later someone else confessed. They ran Keith out of office and Veronica became a pariah. Now she investigates the deep dark secrets of her school divided between the ultra-rich and the poor minorities.

    Rob Thomas has created a high school Nancy Drew with an edge. She's as smart as Sherlock Holmes. Only she's a girl trying to survive the High School world. It works as both a murder mystery, and a high school teen drama. This is Kristen Bell's break out role. She really gives a funny spunky likable compelling performance. This is a teen drama for smart people.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I have watched and loved the show from the beginning. I was really looking forward to another season. I know things couldn't be exactly the same since they are older. But now two people are gone that are one of the prime reasons that I love the show. In my opinion, I wish the last episode had not been done. With all the junk and live shows passing as shows at all, I had hoped to enjoy regular tv again. I guess I expected too much. Seasons 1-3 are a ten. Season 4 not so much.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    All I will say is, if this gets a season 5, Rob Thomas needs to make the first episode Veronica waking up from a real bad dream. As Logan has said "Our love is epic" he is a part of her. My heart is broken.This is crazy..WHY ????
  • Season One: 8/10

    Themes: Mystery, High School, Drama, Private Detective, Crime, Suspense, Murder Investigation, Lies, Blackmail & Relationships.

    Review: This show has some really interesting and compelling things going for it. The main character being a smart, sarcastic bad-ass being amongst the first of those things. It's very easy to root for her and get sucked in with her shenanigans. Then again, I did find some of those 'adventures' to be a bit more on the boring side; especially when they focused on a storyline only related to one specific episode, rather than the over-arching plot of the whole season. I just felt like sometimes the show lacked direction and tended to drag. It still managed to be pretty entertaining but I definitely had a preference for the episodes that tended to be a bit more meaningful for the general plot and the character's relations to each other.

    Top three character: 1) Veronica Mars, 2) Logan Echolls and 3) Eli 'Weevil' Navarro.
  • I loved this show more than anything. It may or may not have had influence on me going to school to be a private investigator for some time.

    It addressed concepts so before it's time. Rape, victim shaming, sexual freedom, women's rights, alcoholism, abuse on many levels. It took every concept seriously.

    It seems like high school drama but it really was well written, well acted and funny at times.

    Best show.
  • I am obsessed with this show ! In my opioin this is the best show to ever be on T.V . I did not watch it while it was on T.V but it is on netflix so i can watch it 24/7 . I love this show so much i can quote it and name a lot of the episodes . This show is addicting I could not stop watching it ! If you don,t want to get hooked on it i would not try to watch it but this show is too amazing not to watch ! The combo of her crime solving and her teen life being in high school is wonderful . I still think that they should bring it back even though it has been off for around five years . I,m a super fan who thinks there should be a movie or really a forth season . The last episode kinda left you at a cliff hanger
  • Warning: Spoilers
    As a completely different show, Season 4 of Veronica Mars would be watchable. As a continuation of a established show, it was a discordant watch almost from the first episode.

    It seems apparent that the show runner, main actress and Hulu executives believed that the titular character was the only reason for continued interest in the show, and so wrote Season 4 specifically designed to shoehorn that character into a different genre. To do that, they had to regress her to the emotional maturity of a teenager. (Incongruously , because moving the series away from teenage drama was apparently an intention.)

    When the central intention is badly conceived (and in show interviews, even more poorly articulated) then the lacklustre episodes that resulted are understandable.

    Every canon character in this season was a parallel-universe version of themselves, including the character of the town of Neptune.

    Keith, a strong, understanding, quick witted father figure, is infantilised by the loss of mental acuity and shown to be weakened man by the obvious device of a cane, several years after his accident. The father-daughter interactions of previous seasons are still thankfully present, but are nostalgic rather than vital. Keith's season long story arc is resolved with a whimper. (If only some ex-criminal had turned up earlier to get the correct diagnosis.)

    Wallace is still in Veronica's life. She treats his new life and family dismissively, (drugs in the bathroom, anyone?). She gaslights Wallace by inviting him for a night out at the movies, and dragging him along to follow a lead. This character would not grow up to be a man that missed nuance and the way that Veronica views his partner, his family and his life, and he would have called her out for it well before now.

    Eli, a long-time friend, is treated disparagingly and appallingly by Veronica for 'reasons'. These are later spelled out - Keith and Cliff worked hard (at their jobs) to get Eli compensation for his treatment by the Kanes and the police department, and... Eli took a settlement to provide for his family. Success, right? But not for Veronica. Who despite having it explained to her a couple of times - in actual words - is deliberately obtuse and demeaning. To emphasise the enduring nature of non-reciprocated loyalty to Veronica by the supporting characters, Eli saves both her and her father from certain death by a just-in-time intervention, and is supposedly amply rewarded with ... a look. So, Eli's character arc and redemption by the time of the movie has gone full circle, and he is returned to the teenage Weevil with limited options.

    Critics of fan-servicing in the movie, reference the presence of cameos of fan favourites as a problem. Season 4 cameos came from the B-list of supporting characters. Max, who cheated on loved character Mac, Tim, the murderer, Mercer, the serial rapist. They did however, give 'new' Veronica a chance to be sarcastic and manipulative again to those currently unable to reciprocate. Although, Mercer did manage a dig at young Logan's supposed infidelity - a trait inconsistent, once again, with canon. The most likable, character, Parker, is introduced solely as a past-love interest of Logan to create tension when the marriage licence was finally going to be acquired. How the writers must have laughed to include her parting advice - "Enjoy the honeymoon", knowing what was to come. Whoever came up with the "Let's give them what they want, but make it last less than an hour..." surely got the most giggles.

    Dick, has become a caricature of the already comic character that he was. A completely hedonistic male with occasional glimpses of depth, but always - a fierce loyalty to those he cared for. Another character reduced to a teenage level of maturity, by writers unable to explore what happens to people who suffer tragedy and whose support systems are others who have the same background. His convenient displacement to Romania, as an actor playing a mannikin, is parallel to the writers exile of his character to plastic body form. His presence is not required for the death of his father, the marriage of his best friend, or his best friend's death, because he served his purpose as badly written comic relief. A figure of ridicule, not sympathy.

    Mac - dry humoured, quick witted, tech-expert with fascinating origin story, and personal trauma of her own and such admirable resilience is also... sent to Istanbul.

    Critic reviews have referred to Maddy as a suitable replacement for 'teenage' Veronica Mars, except - Maddy has none of her redeeming features. Maddy steals a ring which she then sells. She also uses her victim status to great effect at Mars Investigations, so her need for manipulation techniques from Veronica seems unnecessary. She witnesses the beheading of a long-standing character without reaction or emotion. No relationships are seen to be formed with any other character - unlike Veronica, who found connections with others such as Wallace, Mac, Weevil and Logan despite herself and her self-defense mechanisms. A soul-less doppelganger is hardly a great choice for a replacement Veronica for Keith. Frankly, Keith can hire an actual competent detective.

    New characters, the Maloofs, stay for the duration of the season in Neptune because of a ring. The blackmail situation undertaken by Mars Investigation, was both solved and resolved by detective ... Echolls. The lost ring, despite being part of the brief into the bombings and paid for by the Maloofs, dismissed by Veronica as irrelevant and solved by the sheer deductive brilliance of ... Vinnie Van Lowe. In fact, even the Mars exposure of the second bomber of Neptune - was previously foreseen by the bomber himself - and utilised in order to plant the bomb that - so very precisely, yet arbitrarily - killed Logan. The mysteries were poorly written. The neck bomb does not fit into final bomber narrative at all. Especially as he used a non-specific, pre-timed, casually placed bomb as his final coup-de-grace.

    The Mexican cartel characters were given considerable time and dialogue to show the sympathetic side to violent murdering sociopaths. Enjoying lattes, loving relationships, comfortable friendship dynamics while holding down stressful jobs. Of course, their violence was rewarded with another paid hit job for a senator. It is strange that a large portion of this season, which dehumanises and diminishes so many long term characters, is used to show the humanity of two characters that practice casual violence, including the unneccessary killing and beheading of a man because of the coerced accusation of a Spring Breaker.

    Dick Casablanca Snr, the 'Big Dick' of the Season almost duplicated the Woody incorporation storyline of Season 2. With his proposal for town regulations, he intended to further divide the Neptune community in order to make himself individually wealthy. Similar storyline, similar outcome.

    Vinnie Van Lowe, detective extraordinaire solves the missing ring mystery by Sherlock level deduction. Veronica, who allows her office to be bugged and also invites in the thief who steals their information and tech, disparages him because he demanded a high daily retainer. Seems a strange fixation for someone who charges $300/hr plus expenses, and then uses partner's contacts to actually get a result.

    Leo, is reintroduced to provide the supposedly shunned teen-drama love-triangle tension, that is fed by a long drawn out sexual dream sequence and more screen time than her supposed significant other, Logan.

    Logan's growth, in stark contrast to Veronica's regression, required skilful handling. So, Logan, inexplicably impoverished, is fridged. Enough has been written by others about their reaction to this character's story arc and death for Hulu to understand the problems with this treatment. Dismissal of this reaction as shippers getting "what they needed" is poor justification. Despite Rob Thomas and Kristen Bell's assertions, they have previously indicated their distaste for this character's popularity. They mistakenly assumed it relied on the attention of the titular character for drawing power. However it happened, the Logan Echolls character, carved his own space independent of - but parallel to - Veronica's and many viewers loved his story arc separately. He was also the only character, that despite his relationship status with Veronica - called her out. Given Logan's current evolved character, and Veronica's devolution the question is not - will they - won't they? It's more - why would he? Street cleaning death, is an apt metaphor for the belittling consideration given to this character and his contribution to the show's popularity.

    Logan, was the possibility of redemption and healing in human form, and many viewers are mourning that loss. Neptune, was the microcosm of the inequalities and injustices in the wider world, and many viewers are mourning that loss. Despite the title, the attraction for many of the original show was the ensemble cast of supporting characters - not solely the titular protagonist - many viewers are mourning that loss.

    Veronica's previous teenage character was flawed, and made mistakes because of a fierce personal need to get to the truth, and make some part of her world make sense. This middle-aged "strangely teenage" version, is out of character - even taking into account her regression - so many viewers are mourning that loss. . The complete recharacterisation of Veronica, the removal of the integral parts of the show that made it beloved, and the delivery of a season that retroactively removes the enjoyment of previous seasons makes it a season to regret.

    Veronica Mars was a great show - after watching season 4 - I miss it already.
  • WHY UPN?!? Granted, when I saw the previews for this show when it was on, I was like huh? and LAME (mainly because of the title). But upon viewing it from season one I realized my faults. The problem with Veronica Mars that it was too much for UPN to handle.

    It's plot was all comprehensive, and you'd have to watch every episode to get everything that was going on. And I think calling it the modern day Nancy Drew didn't really help. Because Veronica Mars is 10 times greater than Nancy Drew, plus there's no girl named George in Veronica Mars… Alright a girl named Mac, but that's besides the point.

    Oh Kristen Bell, I adore you! Her character is really great a bit over scripted with cleverness, but that is something that I really adore. It's one of those rare shows that you should watch every episode.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I'm a writer and a writing coach, and as much as the ending of season 4 disappointed me as a fan and as a person whose favorite character is Logan, what I hated was all the betrayals of established and accepted formula for something other over something I agreed to through three seasons and a movie.

    Let me explain. When I started watching, I was given a set of guidelines. Veronica is the main character. Check. Veronica solves crimes. Check. Veronica Mars (show, character, and supporting cast, especially Logan) is funny. Check. Veronica has meaningful relationships with friends and family, season one through the movie. Check. Season four. Check-ish.

    Sure, we got Keith and Logan. And I loved watching that, but where the heck were Wallace and Weevil? It got particularly irritating to me when instead of Wallace and Weevil, we got way too much of lots of new and ultimately unimportant characters.

    This is part of why I liked the show better as a procedural with one overarching big bad for the season. One case per episode means we get less of these extraneous characters, but still get the big case. But because they decided to deal with one case for all 8 episodes, and not use a lot of Weevil or Wallace, I got bored with them and ended up fast-forwarding those scenes. And you know what, fast-forwarding didn't make the plot hard to follow, which tells me those scenes really weren't necessary anyway.

    However, I found myself making allowances for the things that lacked, because I loved the moments where Veronica was with Logan and working on her relationship (although, I didn't like how she treated Logan with regard to his therapy and personal growth-what is she, 12? Even in high school she was more understanding than that.) I also loved seeing V with her dad and watching them deal with his memory loss, and no matter how fleeting, I was totally into the scenes with Wallace and Weevil and even Dick! I watched on tenterhooks, thrilled whenever we got them.

    I dealt with the strung out mystery, that at times was so predictable it had me face-palming, because I wanted to see what would happen next with Veronica and the other characters of the universe of the show-but particularly with her relationship with Logan. It was fresh and interesting and felt, for the most part, like a natural progression. "So, this is what adult Veronica and Logan would be like together. Awesome!"

    Logan was the character through all seasons and the movie, that pushed Veronica to be better, do better, to come to grips with what she wanted from life. Sometimes because he was being supportive . The reason his character is so integral to Veronica's character growth is because he's the only character who is not only as smart as Veronica but also willing to call her on her crap. Sure, Keith is wicked smart, but he doesn't really push V. And sure, other characters call her on her crap, but they're not as smart as her, or they don't care about her as much or as deeply (they're not in love with her,) so it's not as interesting.

    If a loser tells her to grow up, we roll our eyes. If Logan tells her to grow up, it makes an impact. Even people who don't like Logan are going to have very strong opinions about that. It's either going to hurt like crazy, infuriate us, or make us cheer. What it won't do is cause a blasé reaction. In writing, we'd call Logan Veronica's "impact character." And, frankly, no one else has the chops to pull that off.

    I like Leo, but he can be bought with pizza for crying out loud. I like Dick, but there's no real relationship there. I love Wallace and Weevil, but while important to her, they don't have enough at stake with her to do it. And I LOVE Keith, but part of what makes him so fun is watching how he dotes on her. Not the main trait of an impact character.

    Logan filled a position that no other character can, and that, after four seasons and a movie, no one else should. It's been established, and we accepted it. Every episode, every season, the Kickstarter movie, and even season 4, which was brought about, in part, by fan pressure again, was like a contract saying: this is the established universe, this is what you'll get. We held up our end of the contract and supported the crap out of the show. (It definitely wasn't fan service. It was self service.)

    Perhaps that, Logan being an impact character, was the point of killing him? Rob Thomas did say he wanted it to be more about the mysteries, so adios character development? That's dumb. I'm not here going on about the mysteries. The mystery was fine, I guess, if not predictable. I'm here going on about character building. The true essence of the show.

    Are the mysteries fun? Absolutely. Are they what keep me coming back? Nope. I mean, it's not like I'd want to watch a show where Logan and Veronica sit for an hour arguing over their relationship, but it's not the mysteries that really make an impact. I don't quote lines from bad guys. The memorable stuff, the stuff you talk about after the show is over, are the characters and what's happening to them. Point and case, no one is talking about the bomber now, or the case, or any of those several new characters that are never coming back. Everyone is talking about Logan and their very strong feelings about what happened to him. We don't care about the cases. We may like them and think they're interesting, but we don't care about them. What we care about is memorable and "epic."

    This show has never been about how the characters can impact the mysteries; it's been about how the mysteries impact the characters. This is a character show. It's not GoT. You can't just kill one of THREE main characters, especially the impact character, and act like it's no big deal, like you can move the show onward and have it be as good or better. It is a big deal. And the show will never be as good if this is allowed to stay canon. It'll never get better. Veronica will never grow. She'll (the show and character) will stagnate. And fans will abandon ship.

    Just by sticking through this season, I already agreed to: 1.) Give up the procedural aspect 2.) Watch (or fast-forward) through characters that are overall unimportant to the lives of the main characters or even the mystery, really 3.) Losing screen time with characters that normally had much bigger roles and who were more interesting than the guys in #2 4.) And now, it seems, I've even agreed to lose the place we've been repeatedly told is Veronica's field of battle, Neptune. 5.) And if #4 is for real, then also screen time with any of the characters that made up the world of Veronica Mars except for Veronica Mars. (What is she supposed to do? Have witty conversations with herself in the mirror now?)

    But, I agreed to all that, because they kept her relationship with her dad and with Logan intact. But especially Logan, because again, he's her impact character. The one that keeps her doing the things she needs to do to be better; a better person, a better partner, a better investigator, a better friend, a better everything. He's the one that forces her to be introspective.

    But now that's gone, too?

    And just Logan in general who is an amazing character, that I'm glad to hear they're proud of, but pissed that they thought he was expendable. He, all by himself, is still the most interesting character to watch next to Veronica, and I'd argue sometimes he's more interesting than her. That's how you know he's un-expendable.

    But no more Logan and just "deal with it, the show'll be better." Really?

    It's like they got an idea for a new mystery show and wanted Kristen Bell to be in it, but because she was already in a mystery show, they just decided to wipe everything that made the real show so great and try something new. (Heck, it even comes with a built in fan base! Maybe not anymore.)

    And, I probably would've gone along with it forever, until it turned in to "Murder, She Wrote," even, if they'd left the main trio alone.

    Why would I watch a show that betrayed every rule it established as "the world of Veronica Mars" to be just another crime scene show. I wouldn't. If I wanted to watch CSI, I would. This was supposed to be different. Better. And it was.

    They manipulated my feelings and then ripped the only really good thing, the only one of two things that stayed the same from the original show, out from under me; the reason I kept watching when if it'd been any other show I would've quit halfway into the 3rd episode. That's why "How I Met Your Mother" fans were so ticked. They were promised one thing and were given the opposite of that.

    Also, killing Logan because you feel like you've written yourself into a corner, or because you don't know how to write an interesting story that includes a man who is a Naval Intelligence Officer with a crazy backstory and loads of interesting baggage is lazy writing. It just is. I can think of ten solid ideas off the top of my head. I expect more from one of the most creative and clever shows I've ever seen. They know how to do it.

    On a personal note, I hate and reject the idea that the only way V can be interesting to watch is if she's wounded and alone and doesn't have a man waiting for her. It's almost 2020 and we're still pushing the misogynistic idea that a woman can't be successful in her career, be interesting, and be happily married? Really? What the cuss?

    Also, the whole idea that they're trying to get rid of the teen drama by killing Logan just sounds like they weren't paying attention to what they wrote this season. The only person acting immature was Veronica.

    If you want an adult show, how about you make your MC act like an adult? And there's not much more adult than being married and having to deal with the trials that come with that. We, as the audience, have grown up-we wanted that for Veronica too.

    Best, One Cuss of a Frustrated Writer and Fan
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I don't want to spoil it, but the ending really let me down. I just started watching this show and pretty much binged it before season 4 came out. Season 4 was only interesting because of this character and they kill him off? I feel like that was a bad move. And i am not sure if i will watch in the future.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The thing that made season 1-3 so interesting was that every episode had mystery that was solved and an overall big mystery which were excellent. Season 3 started off great but the whole story of Lilith house of them faking the rapes and being extremest, ruin season 3 and it also distracts because you can't keep track of who the real victims are or explain how no victims had any evidence of rape. The arc ends and another great arc starts. Also they really stuffed up the whole Logan and Veronica relationship in season 3. They Limited their interaction and hence chemistry between the characters.

    The show is fast paced and if you miss one conversation you might be confused as what's happened or how Veronica solved the case. (Season 1-3)

    Season 4 - one big mystery. No little mysteries every episode. Logan only good aspect of season 4. It's honestly the worst reboot every made. Just don't watch season 4. (2019) Veronica Mars is 1/10. Spoiler alert- - - - - - - - veronica works out who the bomber Was but doesn't think "oh I better clear the car since the bomber was inside it" it went from a smart character to dumb and then of course killing off the best character of season 4. Lame
  • Veronica Mars is a fantastic show - the greatest since Twin Peaks. I feel very sorry for those who can't appreciate its incredible acting, suave and wry humor, amazingly detailed storytelling and hyper-complex characters. The massive amounts of angst and intensity among these high schoolers is the only unrealistic (or rather, surrealistic) aspect of the show, and it is forgiven because this is an superbly crafted exercise in stylized fiction and symbolism.

    The names, for one thing - Neptune, Tritons, Mars -, are not only planetary, but mythological. Neptune is a cold, distant place, but reluctant gods of war inhabit it. Keith and Veronica Mars do not instigate war, but when others declare it on them, they prove supremely good at it.

    The show represents one of those very rare couplings of a great concept, great writing and great directing with a remarkable actress who totally "gets" the whole complex atmosphere of it, and can act the part perfectly. Kristen Bell is an incredible actress (I, for instance, became aware of this show solely because I took an interest in Bell after seeing her tiny but impressively acted part in the movie Spartan); she has every conceivable facial expression completely nailed, and on top of that she is also fabulously gorgeous - all the more so because of her obvious intelligence.

    Veronica Mars is, as far as I'm concerned, one of the two best American TV-shows I've ever seen, and my rating of it would be 9 or 10.

    This show WILL go down in history as a timeless TV classic.
  • This TV series follows the story of Veronica Mars (Kristen Bell)as her best friend is murdered and her father is removed as county sheriff, Veronica dedicates her life to cracking the toughest mysteries in the affluent town of Neptune.

    The show is heavily carried by the clever twist and turns of the plot lines, they keep me guessing from the beginning of the the show till the very end.

    What also makes this show is the brilliant acting, manly Kristen Bell and Jason Dohring. The acting is very impressive and they play their parts very well. None of the acting is cheesy, they all pull of the wit and sarcasm that they are given in the fantastic scripts.

    Overall, i advice that you watch this show!!! One episode and you'll be hooked!!!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Writers made the worst mistake a series can make. Lazy writing and falling back on an old predictable trope. A heroine cannot have a happy personal life and still be a heroine.

    Huge part of this show's popularity came from driving the story toward a HEA for the main characters. They profited from it for years and then broke that trust.

    Pointless cheap emotional manipulation.

    Poor choices badly done.
  • Veronica Mars is a dark and poignant tribute to teenage angst and isolation. As a sophomore, we find Veronica popular and happy. She is dating the most popular guy in school, Duncan, and is best friends with Duncan's sister- the wild Lily Kane. After Lily's brutal and highly publicized murder, Veronica loses her friends, her social status all because she choose to stick by her father who accused Lily Kane's own father, the rich and beloved Jake Kane.

    Season 1 follows Veronica's life post Lily's violent murder. Veronica has become cynical and disheartened due to what she feels as betrayal by her closest friends. Overnight Veronica became the most hated girl in school. She formed a hard outer shell, cutting herself off from her emotions in order to handle all the events that occur after the murder, the taunts of classmates, and the current class war that's been waged through out her town.

    Veronica Mars is homage to the noir film genre of the 1950s with our main character being a high school teenager. The uses of color in scenes are key to understanding the story. Every aspect of the show is used to tell parts of the story from lighting to background prop placement and it all comes together to tell a beautiful story about death, betrayal, love, revenge and redemption.

    The best thing about Mars, besides the character develop, plot twist, and witty dialogue, are the issues that Veronica Mars faces on a daily bases. Including murder, rape, teen pregnancy, gang violence, reports on abuse, and drug trafficking. It also tackles the normal high school issues all teens face like peer pressure, cliques, and gossip but in a smart way. The story lines are tasteful and believable; the writers did a great job avoiding the normal camp and clichés found in a lot of teen shows.

    Veronica Mars is hands down the best show ever to be featured on UPN/CW, and possible network TV in general. It is defiantly worth your time.
  • First time I've heard about this show was when I saw Kristen Bell in Heroes. I came here and saw VMars. It took me a long time before I decided to watch this show. I started to watch it for one reason and one reason only -> Kristen Bell. Stupid I know, but when I saw the pilot episode I knew that this show will be something new, something different, something worth watching and I was hooked. The is one of the best TV shows that my eyes have ever seen before. Smart and funny dialogs, beautiful and talented cast of the show, interesting twists,mysteries... This show has everything. This show is awesome but sadly it has been canceled for a long time now. I really wish that this show will return to screen as a new season or a movie.
  • realtvhrdbfq-123 September 2011
    What is so incredible about Veronica Mars? Chemistry between characters, intelligently written script, never-ending sarcasm except a few moments. No.

    Veronica Mars had been canceled after only 3 seasons and probably whoever canceled it did not let they shoot a proper finale, even season finale. If it is only about ratings and nobody cares about the quality, why are we watching TV? I can count more than ten series lasted more than Veronica Mars which their crappiness is completely verified. But for mysterious reasons, they kept going on and on and on.

    I wonder who made the final decision on Veronica Mars. I guess he or she must have done something like that: He checked ratings and saw VM's ratings are low more than it should be. And he says to himself, why aren't we canceling this show? I bet he did watch only the pilot. Rest of it is not watched at all. There is no other explanation of canceling.

    They watch Gossip Girl which people only watch because of hearing voice of Kristen Bell, they watch Desperate Housewives and if it goes on for another 100 seasons, they will keep watching too. They watch all crappy shows and if they don't watch a brilliant show like Veronica Mars, the stupid guys in charge decides to cancel it.

    This show should have lasted at least three more seasons but it ended without a season finale.
  • Despite dismal ratings and crazy scheduling, in 2 short years 'Veronica Mars' has obtained a cult following... so what is all the fuss? Well, I'll tell you...

    Season 1 centers around the murder mystery of Lilly Kane (Amanda Seyfried); daughter to software billionaire and best friend of the show's protagonist, Veronica Mars (Kristen Bell). Before the murder of her best friend Veronica lived a pretty idyllic life in Neptune, California; a town, as Veronica puts it "without the middle class". By all means Veronica shouldn't have been apart of the elite 09ers (kids who live in the prestigious 90909 zip code), her parents didn't meet the pay-cheque quota and despite the fact that her father used to be Sheriff (which had a certain 'cachet') the only reason Veronica was one of the 'beautiful people' was because she was dating Duncan Kane (Teddy Dunn), Lilly's brother and heir to the Kane software company. But everything changed when Lilly was murdered –Veronica's father, Keith Mars (Enrico Colantoni) accused Lilly's father of murdering his only daughter and was booted out of the force when a video of the crime scene was released over the internet. Veronica's home-life began to fall apart when her family had to move out of their house and into a cheaper apartment, and when Veronica's mother could no longer handle being shunned by the elite community, she took off. Things got even worse for Veronica's social scene when Lilly's supposed murderer was captured after an anonymous tip-off. One-year on Veronica is no longer the preppy princes she once was; she has an attitude problem, no friends and now helps her father in the P.I business; 'Mar Investigations'; Veronica investigates everything from unfaithful husbands to a dog kidnapping conspiracy. But things begin to change with the arrival of new student and sidekick, Wallace (Percy Daggs III), as Veronica tries to figure out who really murdered her best friend, and who raped her the summer she was shunned by her former friends.

    Veronica Mars is very reminiscent, but in no way a clone of previous successful teen dramas. VM has the same quick-witted writing jam-packed with pop-culture references as 'Buffy' and 'Gilmore Girls', combined with the mystery plot lines of 'Twin Peaks'. With a blonde, female P.I protagonist the show is constantly paralleled with 'Nancy Drew'; but be assured the investigative teen is the only similarity between the two. Veronica's mysteries aren't as corny or Scooby-Doo as figuring out who is really haunting the house on top of the hill – the show deals with infidelity, sexual abuse, murder and kidnapping…. Taking a page out of Joss Whedon's book, Veronica Mars is extremely character driven – while the season's big mystery is very edge of your seat, it's the characters you care about and keep coming back to watch. Kristen Bell brings many shades and layers to the jaded Veronica; she's a wise-ass who tries hard to keep her shields up, but at the same time she is very fragile; and some of the show's best and most memorable moments come when Veronica lets her guard down, or feels totally beat by life. Perhaps the best thing about the character of Veronica Mars is the fact that she's extremely flawed. Sure, she looks cute with her perfect shiny blonde hair and impeccably cool wardrobe, but she isn't always the best judge of character and sometimes she just plain screws up. Whether it's dating a drug dealer, accusing the wrong person of murder or faultily stereotyping someone; Veronica is the best kind of heroine because she isn't perfect, she's damaged and that makes her real and accessible to audiences. Veronica is the high school underdog; living on the fringe of popularity, shunning the 'cliques' and mainstream, unafraid to put herself on the front-lines of unpopularity for what she believes in. She is the ultimate outcast, and everyone at least once in their life can relate to her because of her constant social struggles.

    One of the other great things about 'Veronica Mars' is the fact that Enrico Colantoni and Kristen Bell have a great rapport. Amidst the seediness of Neptune's underbelly, it's nice to see that the father/daughter relationship is quite often the beating heart of the show. Jason Dohring who plays Logan Echolls; Veronica's former friend and current rival; is also absolutely fantastic. His character is constantly shedding layers, going from 'psychotic jack-ass', to tormented teen. Logan is a conundrum, one minute he's the typical high school jerk, with lewd comments galore: "my underbelly is rock hard. It can go all night" the next he's quoting great minds like William M. Thackeray for his daily inspirational phone message: "To love and win is the best thing. To love and lose, the next best". Logan has one of the most interesting and complex character transformations that have endeared him to 'Veronica Mars' fans.

    Veronica Mars is 'on the bubble'; a TV show term for when a show is about to make it big. 'Veronica Mars' constantly receives rave reviews, but poor ratings (usually due to yo-yo scheduling and bad time slots). The show has ferociously devout fans and an extremely dedicated cast. It is a breath of fresh air at a time when cookie-cutter TV shows like CSI are ruling the box and reality TV shows are being churned out and devoured for no good reason; 'the Bachelor', 'Dancing with the Stars'. Do yourself a favor and dip your toes into this TV show; I guarantee that from episode one you will be taken in, hook line and sinker.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I have just finished watching all three seasons of this show, and I have to say, I've had better times. I've been moping around the house all day reading reviews, watching (mostly bad) fan made videos and thinking about Veronica Mars and how I'll never see her again. This sounds awful but this is the worst break-up I've ever had, honestly it is!

    The thing is not that it ended, it's how it ended. Surely the creators must have had some idea that there might not be a season 4 so why not tie up some lose ends, let us go easy, give us some closure. The only character who got closure was Sheriff don Lamb and it was done so well that I felt sorry for him. Why wasn't this honor extended to the other, much more important and well loved characters?

    The finale not only did not feel like a finale, it didn't even feel like a season finale. It looked like as season 3 progressed they were grappling with different formulas, desperately trying to find something that works. I don't think that what they did was half bad, I enjoyed the last few episodes as much as the rest, but by the end it was clear that there was no plan and they were making it up as they went along. It had to end and it was a bit messy. It left me with a bad taste, instead of remembering Veronica firing clever quips with her dad and Logan I'm picturing her walking in the rain, sad and disappointed.

    I always thought Veronica as well justified in all her dubious decisions and dealings but what she did in the end was, well, a bit bitchy (hence the name I guess), and she didn't have time to redeem herself with her dad, with her friends or with us.

    It was good while it lasted, but it left me heartbroken. Watch with caution and prepare your ice-cream.

    Oh...I was so eager to get over with the girl talk that I almost forgot to mention that this is an excellently written, wonderfully acted, impeccably executed series. Kristen Bell carries the show but what makes this series what it is, is that the cast is great all round (except for a cameo by Paris Hilton, but it's forgiven). Special mention goes to Enrico Colantoni and of course, Jason Dohring, I'm certainly looking out for more of his work.
  • I hate being sucked in. More than anything. I avoid anything that's popular just because I can't stand the herd mentality. It took me three years before I touched a Harry Potter book. I would not have watched this show willingly. My one uplifting, redeeming quality is that I'm a good friend. Always. Even at the sacrifice of my Wednesday evenings. I originally started watching VM because I was taping it for a friend who didn't get UPN in her new town. I was just going to tape it, but I thought it would be nice if I cut the commercials for her. Now, half a season later...I can't stop watching it. It's horrible. I actually rented the entire first season and watched it in one twenty-four hour sitting. If you start watching this show, be warned you WILL get hooked, no matter how hard you try to resist. It is a great mystery. Each episode has its own mystery that is self inclusive, but the overall season mystery is what keeps you speeding through traffic to get home in time on Wednesday nights. Kudos to the creators, they did a great job!
  • kmylml27 September 2006
    After reading quite a few comments from people who thought this show is "horrible," I was really surprised with their reasons. First of all, there are very few TV shows out there that are in every way true to life. Of course the situations aren't completely plausible! That's why we watch TV shows in the first place - we're entertained by things that we would not normally do or see. If I wanted to watch something "realistic" I'd just tape myself and watch it at the end of the day.

    What's real in this show is that every character is complicated and has layers in their personality. The bad guy isn't all bad, and the good guy isn't so great either. There's just this gray area - just the way people are.

    Then there's the complaint that Veronica Mars is "too smart." And that's a bad thing because...? I'm sick of mindless shows that give away the ending in the first minute and/or have the same tired plots. If witty is not your thing, that is sad and someone needs a good dose of "sense of humor." Maybe everything we watch on TV should be bland and predictable from now on? By the way, detective work is supposed to be logical - not flashy. When you want to look for someone, you'd automatically put a trace on things they own. What did you expect would happen? Some kind of laser tracking thingy?

    The writing on this show is amazing, as are the actors and everything else. The artistic value is also incredible. If TV watchers can't appreciate that, then I really am worried about the population.
  • The first two seasons of VM were my favorite two seasons of television ever. The writing was smart, the characters' interaction touchingly human, and the story lines fun (both the episodic and long arch story lines). It can be cerebral at times and laugh out loud funny others. I have watched the first three seasons back to back four times. I consider myself a true Marshmellow. These seasons were ahead of there time on so many issues. It is fun to watch the "before they were famous performances" of Amanda Seyfried, Tessa Thompson, Kristen Ritter, and Tina Majorino. Ken Marino slays the role of the slimy PI as does Darren Norris the role of dead pan smart-alec public defender. All the minor characters contribute to the overall enjoyable quality of the show VM's Dad, principal, the antagonists, the supporting crew are all great.

    Season four was pure money grabbing garbage. Characters whose traits led you to watch the show week after week. (Yes, I used to set my DVR. I am old. I accept it) changed to fit a more female oriented demographic. Which is NUTS because what made the show great was empowerment without condescension and blatant pandering. Not shoving an agenda down the audiences' throat the made the underlying messages seasons 1-3 more potent.

    So the first two seasons A+ Third season A-/B+ Fourth season F
  • Warning: Spoilers
    *SPOILER-ISH WARNING* (Although I don't go into any details or tell you anything that happens I do express my thoughts on the show but more specifically the last episode of the new season 4. If you want to know what actually happens you'll have to watch or Google it. If you don't want any expectations going in you probably won't want to read this. If you're still interested keep reading.)

    I just started watching this show about a week ago because I saw new episodes were being released. I've always heard about the show so I decided to check it out. I really liked it & I was excited to watch the movie they released a few years ago and then the new season. I was a big fan until the last 10 minutes or so of the new season that's when everything fell apart and I kind of felt like I wasted my time getting invested in this show. I feel like they completely destroyed everything in those last few minutes. I can honestly say my life would suck less if I didn't finish that last episode. It honestly felt like the writer Rob Thomes just decided to see how angry he could make the fanbase and how fast he could destroy this show's reputation. Honestly after seeing the last episode I don't even care if it ever gets another season! Unless they undo what was done I'm completely over this show. I really don't write reviews for things but this infuriated me & I need to let out my frustrations! If you're going to watch this show don't watch the last episode! It also would have been nice if season 4 was longer but I could've overlooked that if the season didn't end like it did! I can't think of another show that has made me feel this way! I'm so mad right now!
  • I have never watched any of the prime-time shows on UPN after Buffy the Vampire Slayer ended until I watched this show and I think that UPN has themselves a hit show here and the show is Veronica Mars. The show is about a smart, fearless 17-year-old girl named Veronica Mars (Kristen Bell) who is an apprentice to her father, Keith Mars (Enrico Colantoni from "Just Shoot Me") who is a former sheriff and has Veronica help him with his struggling new private investigator business. By sneaking through back alleys and scoping out no-tell motels with a telescopic-lens camera and her math book, Veronica attempts to uncover the California beach town's darkest secrets, including who killed her best friend and Duncan's sister, Lilly, and created a scandal that cost her father his job, his home and wife. Pushed to the edge of this multicultural, venomous little Peyton Place, Veronica Mars relentlessly continues to search for evidence that will clear her father's name and get her back into the "in-crowd," but what she finds may tear the town of Neptune apart at the seams. The show I think is like those detective book novels almost. I like this show! I think Kristen Bell is going to be the next Sarah Michelle Gellar! This show premiered on UPN September 2004. I hope this show lasts more than one season!

    User Rating: 9/10

    BOTTOM LINE: THIS SHOW IS SO COOL!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Here's a show that has been on my watchlist for years but never quite made it up the mantle. That is until a feature film was released this past March so I thought what better time to start the show than now. My girlfriend being a huge fan definitely helped a bit as well. Veronica Mars is just about one of the coolest characters of all time. This review sounds very unintelligent by making such claims, but seriously the girl kicks a**. The third season was wrongfully cut short and 7 years later a movie is released. I have yet to see the film but I have been told it does the series and it's characters justice. As long as it sticks to what make each of these characters so lovable, then I'm sure it will be excellent.

    The first season dealt with Veronica attempting to reopen her best friends murder case and coping with the grave loss. The show takes a few episodes to really kick in but it really hits it stride down the stretch of season 1. Wallace is that loyal friend we all want to have and Keith Mars is that dependable but at the same time hip dad that fits Veronica's personality perfectly. The shows main strengths were all used to perfection. Even the shows weak spot, Duncan, didn't have as many scenes as you would think. Of course the shock of season 1 for me was just how much I ended up loving the Logan character. It came as a surprise when he fell for Veronica, but it really worked.

    The show had a number of great supporting characters through the years and the writers took advantage of each of their strengths and created a great show. It's truly a shame it was cancelled mid way through the third season as it was clear the ending of that season was rushed. I have to say though, it was a bit disappointing Veronica never took a case back to Neptune High for old times sake. Francis Capra as Weevil was always a delight to see on screen as he and Veronica had one of the more unique relationships. There was a great deal of mutual respect between them even if they weren't on the same sides of the coin every time.

    I loved season 1 and really liked season 2, but at times I feel the show became obsessed with feeding us lies and red herrings. I cant tell you how many left turns season 2 had, and as a binge watcher it became extremely difficult to keep everything straight. I think the show always stayed true to what it was, which was a crime-family-teen-mystery-drama, but it didn't reach enough people to stay on the air. I would like to hope that this film will be even better, even if it didn't make enough money to even have hopes for a sequel. So Veronica Mars is an excellently written crime drama that just about touches every area you hope a mystery would. It also has a high re-watch-ability rate which is always a plus.

    +Characters, characters, characters

    +Realized what it's strengths were, fixed it's problems

    +Teased for what was to come

    +Veronica Mars is literally my girlfriend

    -Obsessed with giving us red herrings

    -Cancelled too soon

    9.2/10
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