User Reviews (441)

Add a Review

  • This show started with an incredible premise. Everyday people starts to have superpowers. Each one discover their power and try to deal with it. There is also serial killer Sylar who discovers a way to kill these special people and take their powers.

    Like the brightest of stars, they burn hottest but don't last. This show fizzled as the story got more and more complicated. The vast number of characters with unique superpowers gets out of hand. There are too many to maintain. Like a truck overloaded, it just couldn't continue and rolled over. By the 2nd or 3rd season, this show gets increasingly convoluted and becoming almost unwatchable. They try to reboot the 4th season by adding a whole new set of people and a circus. Of course, it didn't work and the show was canceled. The first season is a 9 or even 10 but it's a long slide into 4 territory at the end.
  • I was awestruck watching the way it took off. One character at a time, it kept developing. The fantasy was top-notch, plot like never before. It gave the traditional save-the-world genre, a new look. Season 1 was magnificent. Few characters, mostly Hiro, were impeccable. It did look stretched in the second half. The first 4-5 episodes of season 1 were exceptional. Soon, it started slowing down. Episode 10 was the greatest of them. However, yet again, it started slowing the pace and awesomeness. Only the last couple of them were magnificent after the 10th. The climax was stunning. I enjoyed the complete season 1 and it was a package full of fantasy, emotions, creativity and wonderful characters.

    Season 2 never looked the same. It couldn, even for once, keep up to the level of the first.

    I eneded in the middle of season 2 until things started making no sense whatsoever. Hiro wasn't hiro either.
  • Heroes is one of the most controversial shows of the decade, but not for the reasons you may think. When Heroes premiered, it was one of the most popular shows on television. Fanboys were created around the world, but disaster struck: Heroes, for reasons unknown, started to suck after a wonderful first volume. Fanboys were in denial everywhere: Was their precious Heroes really going down the drain, or was it just a hiccup? People expected old Heroes to come back when volume three came to us, and.... Heroes was awful. People stopped watching, but as they stopped, the old Heroes we loved slowly came back in volume four. Now the show is in volume five, and did the show returned to form? Read on...

    VOLUME ONE: GENESIS - Here's the thing about Heroes: Instead of having "seasons" like normal TV shows, it has "volumes" to be more like comic books. Volume One is where everything starts. In it the Heroes must stop a nuclear bomb from exploding in NYC, but all of the Heroes are scattered around the world and none of them except one knows about it. We're introduced to the main cast that has remained with us up until recently. The best part about superhero stories has often been said to be the "discovery" phase, and the whole first season is devoted to that. As the volume progressed, the characters become more accustomed to their powers, showing the natural stages of average Joe to superman. The magic of real people having superpowers captivated the world. The only major downside to this volume was the average finale. People expected a grand finish for the volume, but one wasn't delivered. Maybe I wasn't disappointed because I watched this volume after the fact, but fans were just plain angry. Despite the sub par finale, expectations still soared for volume two...

    VOLUME TWO: GENERATIONS - Volume Two dealt with heroes from the past, and the heroes also had to stop a virus from being released. Sounds exciting... at least on paper. In execution however, this volume was horrible. Nothing happened in the first 4 episodes. It was BORING. These people have superpowers, but they aren't doing anything. Things started to pick up, but none of it seemed to be planned out. As the volume started to be interesting, the volume was cut short due to the writer's strike. What we're left with is a boring mess that made fans want to tare their hair out. Tim Kring apologized for the show's 180 degree turn in quality. Fans laid the blame on the writer's strike, so expectations soared yet again for volume three...

    VOLUME THREE: VILLAINS - Volume three had the heroes trying to stop a formula which gives normal people superpowers from being mass produced, and would therefore destroy the world. This season started out by introducing new characters to us and created exciting new twists that should have been awesome. After the premier though, things started to suck. Instead of things being too slow now, they were too fast. Random things were happening left and right, the plot was spinning out of control, and fans everywhere gave up on the show. Thankfully, this volume was only half the season, and Heroes then segued into volume four...

    VOLUME FOUR: FUGITIVES - After the events in volume three, the show rightfully decided to ignore most of volumes two and three. This volume had the heroes on the run from the US government. After the madness of the last two volumes, people had given up on the show. Something happened which I started calling the "Heroes effect". The Heroes effect is this logic: The last two volumes of Heroes were so awful that Heroes is bad forever no matter what. This of course is not true. With this volume, the plot slowed down and the heroes started doing rational things. We started to actually care for them again, and they did things logically again. The magic of the show started to return, but by this point there were only about 10 people left who cared enough to notice. The volume also slowly drifted away from most of the show's usual tropes, and fans started to actually look forward to next week's episode. With Heroes starting to get back on track, we now have the current volume...

    VOLUME FIVE: REDEMPTION - This volume, aptly titled "Redemption", shows how the writers have learned from their mistakes. The cast aren't bouncing off the walls like in Volume Three, but they aren't sleeping like in Volume Two. The heroes did things we can relate to again, the new villains this round were the most interesting since the first volume, and most of the stuff they did was logical. It started off a bit slow, but takes off with episode 4. After that most of the episodes were awesome up until episode 12; then the volume became really boring. Almost Volume 2 boring. It kills all of the momentum it built up. It's like this for a while, but then the last 4 episodes are fantastic. This volume, unlike all of the others, actually has a satisfying ending. If it didn't have those really slow episodes in the middle, Volume Five would be just as good as Volume One. It's certainly more entertaining than the previous three volumes.

    Looking back, it's a miracle how the show got back on track. Heroes promised so much in volume one, but didn't deliver any of it. Heroes had fallen so far that the turn around in quality doesn't even matter now. Most people who watched the show are now biased against it, and the ratings are so low that the show's future is in doubt. Luckily NBC's ratings suck this season, and Heroes is still one of its better performing shows, so Heroes might get lucky.

    If you plan to watch Heroes for the first time, skip volumes two and three. They'll make your brain hurt.
  • I first saw the teaser commercial for Heroes at the end of Medium's last season and started salivating. And now that I've tuned in I'm hooked. The premise of super-humans has been done before and most recently in Mutant X. And I've been around to check these shows out. The misfit one with Courtney Cox was an old favorite. But none of these shows garnished the pure mystery that Heroes had going for it all the way to the end of the pilot. Plus a killer cast should make it a surefire hit.

    I've loved Adrian Pasdar since he chewed up the screen in Profit and while he seems to be playing a similar role here, he is balanced by Milo Ventimigilia as his kid brother with a more human heart and dreams he can fly.

    But the real scene stealing of the show belongs to the ladies. Ali Larter creates a believable single mother with serious money problems. Her strange gift is actual scary and has yet to have been fleshed out. The sequence where she awakes to find things have gone horribly wrong in her favor are chill inducing.

    And on the flip side Hayden Panettiere's discovery of her gift is grueling, bloody, and refreshingly ironic as a modern day Supergirl. All her stunt work in a cheerleader's outfit made me smile. And by the show's end a revelation comes about her family life that made the show even more interesting.

    With a painter who creates art that sees into the future and a comedic turn by Masi Oka and his abilities it's hard not to enjoy heroes. It twists and turns in only an hour and keeps you grounded to the characters and the situations they fall into. The previews for upcoming episodes made me actually want more. If your not tuning in on Monday nights, you might be missing something spectacular.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    When Nathan sacrifices himself saving brother Peter Petrelli and flying of to explode in the sky. They could have simply stuck a knife / or shard of glass in the back of his head. As per earlier episodes with Peter and Clare Bear. And 'froze/killed' him. Actually why couldn't Peter fly? Just no need for Nathan to die, unless there is moral statement regarding salvation or redemption and it just ain't that deep. There seems to be a new breed of serialised drama which follows a basic pattern of lots of characters and little air time per person as in soaps. Little character depth or plot development. As entertaining as the series was there could never be a real ending, and ultimately this just falls flat.
  • ffx21026 September 2006
    I just watched this today (recorded it from last night) and quite honestly, I'm pleasantly surprised. I was convinced the hype machine would kill this show, building up expectations so high they could never be met, but Heroes has measured up nicely, hitting on all marks in my book. I'm as a huge a 24 and House fan as is out there, but Heroes may have just taken TV's top billing in one night.

    I must admit, shows now-a-days tend to go down hill after the pilot, but NBC's latest offering seems to have set itself up with a concept and tone that could carry on strong, at least for a season. My initial reaction was that we would either see clichéd super hero garb or some awkward NBC drama soaked in hero juice. What we got instead was a surprisingly good pilot that brought enough "hero material" to live up to its name, but not too much as to make us think we were watching an X-men ripoff.

    The writing and the interweaving plot and characters is compelling and interesting, nothing dumbed down, but nothing contrived either. The direction fits the concept perfectly, it grabs you as much as it should, without being distracting. The acting is most surprising in that it's actually good. Masi Oka, who plays "Hiro Nakamura", is quite possibly the best of the cast, though he never speaks a word of English (unless you count "Spock"). Overall the cast is nothing big on paper, but they all manage to hit their marks well.

    Last but not least, there were some pop culture references and nods to comic book lore that just made me smile. There seems to be a very cool hero/comic book hip feel that makes you trust the writers on this one.

    Again, shows have been known to start strong and fall off soon after, but in this case, Heroes has made a strong enough showing that everyone should check this out.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I'd have to give the first season of HEROES either a 9 or a 10. It was brilliantly written and the characters were very engaging. However, apparently NBC thought that the writers were expendable and for season two and beyond, marsupials were chosen to write the episodes. My theory is that wombats began writing it, my daughter thinks they are Tazmanian Devils--either way, this is great stuff if written by animals with little gray matter in their primitive brains. If, on the off chance, humans are still writing the show, then they really should be ashamed. Why ashamed? Well, apparently what has happened in previous seasons ISN'T particularly important and characters do things from season to season that are inconsistent--making all the characters seem like they have schizophrenia! This is especially true when Sylar becomes "Mrs. Clever" for a while and Mohinder, fighting to cure everyone, then deliberately infects himself?!?!?! What were they thinking?! In addition, some characters began with such promise but the new writers of seasons two and three apparently forgot that the characters should grow and develop--not seem pathetic and stupid. As an example, I point to Hiro. He was very likable and naive as the show began but you knew that his character would evolve into something greater. But, in season two and three he was still pretty much an idiot with no growth and apparently not much common sense (I point to his letting the letter from the safe fall out of his hands so quickly as well as his letting his arch-enemy out of the coffin--two really dumb moves). Now, instead of cute, he's just annoying. In fact, by season three they ALL were pretty much annoying and week to week their actions varied so much you thought the writers were just picking plot points out of a hat or they hated their fan base so much they WANTED to alienate them!! My advice, then, is to watch season one and just stop. Season two is bad but don't even try watching it because three only gets a lot worse!! Geez, I hope that the show gets canceled soon! I hate it for pulling me in and keeping me watching week after week only to find that ultimately there is NO payoff!!
  • Heroes, in this writers opinion, is probably the most compelling pilot I've seen this year. Yeah there's "traveler" "Jericho" "Kidnapped"... they were good, but nothing that wasn't predictable. I must give credit to "Tim Kring" the creator of this series much credit for not treating the viewers like idiots. Superhero TV shows always have tendency to be wannabee big-budget Jr. movies. "Heroes" will have none of that! From reading the outline one would an expect "X-men" rip-off. Such is not the case for "Heroes." It is completely original in it's presentation. It would be a crime for me to give away plot details. I just hope the rest of the series continues to be this smart.By the way, it's nice to see "Ali Larter" given a provocative role like the the one she plays in this series, that's demonstrates her range as an actress. Kudos to all involved! Now only if NBC gives this darn show a friggin' chance!
  • The concept of this show is about people with special powers similar to mutants in the Marvel universe. And how the characters cope with it and what they decide to do with it. The main drive of this show isn't necessarily the the superpowers, but the subconscious and the philosophical aspects that revolve around power. Unfortunately this is one of those shows that has a very captivating and entertaining first season, but goes downhill from there. It probably has to do with the fact that after the first season it was first planned to introduce new characters with brand new main characters with just Suresh (who is sort of the Beast character from the Marvel universe without the furriness). Which didn't go into effect because they wanted to keep the main cast that become dis-likable and annoying as the seasons drags on. The writer strike could have been a big factor why the show started to go downhill after season 1. I think season 2 was the most boring season of all. Season 3 it sort of picks up, but just about everything is so inconsistent with the story and the character that it takes away a lot form the experience. The 4th season revolves around a mutant carnival and they just seemed to drag that on way too much. And the constant love, hate relationship between Claire Bennet (Hayden Panettiere) and Noah Bennet (Jack Coleman) gets really really annoying...Like super annoying and irritating. As a matter of fact most of the chemistry that starts out strong in the first season goes downhill. The story gets poorly written for each season after one that even the characters decisions and motives makes no sense sometimes. Especially the villains in the shows, including Sylar. And to increase the running time of the show, it has multiple story arcs that doesn't go anywhere. One of the most disappointing part about the show is the showdown between Peter and Sylar. The constant plot-holes and tons of time paradoxes when it comes to time travel doesn't make things better. Overall this is a show that has a good start but gets worse and worse with each installment. Who knows, maybe just maybe the fifth season could have been a boost with the world knowing about super humans and might go in the direction like "True Blood" except people with super powers going out into the public. And Sylar's redemption might have been cool to watch. To sum it up it's one of those shows that soars skyward with the first season and spirals downward. I give this show a 6.4/10 because I found some of the philosophical aspects to be intriguing.

    6.4/10
  • Although the show's concept is sort of a ripoff of the X-Men concept of people evolving to have super powers, I have to admit it was enjoyable. The acting was all very well done as were the slices of life that introduced you to each character. The effects are kept very low-key making it more believable than the typical super hero show. There is a great underlying darkness that permeates as well, giving one the feeling that some very bad things are about to happen. My mom even liked it, and she usually just sticks to shows about cops and politics (like West Wing, Law & Order, and CSI). If you haven't seen it give it a try. It's a very good show so far and only promises to get better.

    I will definitely be tuning in for the next episode myself.
  • Season One was excellent, but the writer's strike Mid-Season Two made for a clumsy unanticipated finale. Unfortunately, the series suffered as a result and never fully recovered with many writing inconsistencies that followed. My rating reflects the goodwill and potential based on the first season and took -1 per season that followed.
  • bgood2627 November 2006
    Warning: Spoilers
    "Heroes" is similar to Marvel's "X-Men," in that its characters discover they have different powers. But where "X-Men" is driven more by action and plot, "Heroes" is more character-driven.

    The show focuses on an ensemble of eight characters, each of whom have a different power. Claire Bennett is a high school cheerleader with the power of spontaneous regeneration, DL Hawkins has the power to phase through matter, Isaac Mendez is a brilliant artist who can paint the future, Hiro Nakamura is the office worker who can bend and travel through space-time, LAPD Officer Matt Parkman has the power of telepathy, Nathan Petrelli is the ambitious politician who can fly, his brother Peter is an in-home nurse with the ability to absorb others' powers when he is near them, and Niki Sanders has super strength.

    But what separates "Heores" from most shows and movies is that each of our heroes are uniquely flawed. Claire, like most high school seniors, frequently forgets who her real friends are. DL is running from the law. Isaac is addicted to heroin, and can only see the future when he is high. The wonderfully geeky Hiro used his power for personal gain. Matt is dyslexic and has marital problems. Nathan cares more about his career than his family, particularly Peter, who suffers from depression. And Niki, a single mom and internet stripper, has a brutally violent alter-ego.

    Parents be warned: "Heroes" deals with some very mature subject matter, including rape, infidelity, drug addiction, and mental illness, and the show is rather graphic. But it is smartly written and very well acted, with deep characters you'll actually care about.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The first year of this series started out as a 10, but the series declined as the seasons went by. One of the biggest problems was the self-destructive need to maintain actors and actresses that were becoming popular outside of the series well beyond their relevance to the series. For me, this was greatly exemplified by the continued presence of the Petrilli brothers. Their sacrifice at the end of Season 1 crowned that season and, if they had died as it was thought they would, the two characters would have been remembered as glorious examples for future "Heroes" to emulate. Instead, Peter's character became an unwieldy plot point because his powers were truly as ultra- powerful as Superman's. Likewise, Nathan's character vacillated between corrupt and good. I had heard that the original plan was that many of each season's characters were supposed to die at the end of each season.. This would have greatly helped the series for me. I can only imagine that this idea was rejected by the producers of the series. No new characters were ever allowed to stay for long, and so the fun of each good character's journey to Hero was removed. The Villains were usually a mixed bag, and the one good Villain, Sylar, was bound to the same overly extended stay on the series that the popular Heroes were, to the point where his fans began to lose their taste for him. Let this be a lesson: let the writers rule. If necessary, have them write a series Bible that details all plot lines, but don't have them re-write to adjust to what the producers think that audiences want. Producers are usually to insulated to know that answer.
  • This must by far be the worst butchering of a TV series ever. It is almost impressive how they totally trash a tremendous show along the way until only a burning wreck remains. The writers responsible should quit their jobs and live in shame for the rest of their lives. This is a painful display of inconsistency and incompetent writing. I was actually excited when I heard about "heroes reborn" but now that I have just finished s4 I am not so sure anymore. Maybe I will watch it out of pure curiosity and I am telling myself that it can not get any worse. This show desperately needs Hiro to go back to the start of s2 and bitchslap everyone around the writingtable.
  • The first season is terrific I would rate it like a 9.5 out of 10. Some people dislike the ending of season one but I thought it made complete sense and kind of loved it. Originally they planned to have a new group of people each season and tell a new story; however, the first season was such a hit the network wanted the fan favorites back again. Huge mistake. The story didn't have anywhere natural to continue to and you feel it being stretched. Finding ways to keep the characters from over coming things with powers they now know how to use. The second season is bad (maybe a 5 out of 10) and each season gets worse than the one for it. Watch season one and stop there.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is truly sad: when something has so much potential and then it just fades away and dies. Heroes was the rose in the desert of NBC and then it lost it's bloom so quickly. It began with the characters waking up with the question of what purpose do they have in the world and the quest to search for that meaning while these individuals realize that they have supernatural powers: Peter Petrelli, the kind hearted and gentle nurse has the ability to absorb powers; His brother, Nathan, a politician, has the ability to fly; Matt Parkman, an LAPD officer with marital and career problems is telepathic; Nikki Sanders, a Las Vegas showgirl and single mother with a dual (and deadly) alter ego; Her son Micah, a young prodigy with the talent of manipulating technology; Hiro Nakamura, a Japanese nerd who can time travel and teleport; Isaac Mendez, a NYC artist and heroin junkie can see the future and depicts them through his art; and of course, Claire Bennett, a teenage girl and high school cheerleader who has the amazing ability to heal and even come back from the dead. While these individuals slowly begin to realize their awakening powers and that their destinies will meet there are also evil shadows lurking from the giant company led by Noah Bennett (Claire's adopted father) that wants to control and harness their powers to the soulless villain, Sylar, who kills people with special abilities and acquires them for himself. The first season of Heroes had me hooked and the show came at the perfect time when people wanted to see a show about heroes and escape from war and a looming economic recession. But then I saw Season 2 and I was disappointed but I didn't give up because of the Writer's Strike. And I waited for Season 3 and I stopped caring. The characters went from three dimensional to one dimensional; Plot holes were laid out to trap clichés; Too many new characters were introduced and viewers were never allowed to get to know more of the characters we knew from Season 1. The writers killed off key characters like Isaac Mendez, the prophet; And some and interesting characters from Season 1 and Season 2 disappeared (what happened to little Molly, the little girl who can pinpoint the location of others like herself); Why did the show become so dark so quickly? It seems that the writers and creators of the show stopped caring and so did I. It's a shame and it's sad. I loved this show and I miss it for it was...so has it's fans.
  • I can't actually recall the last time I was so literally addicted to the show. I don't get home until about 9:40 on Mondays, so it's torture until we can watch it on the laptop. And we willingly watch every commercial with glee to get to the good stuff. I am really impressed by the multi-media approach NBC takes with this - give addicts like myself (who used to maybe watch 5 hours of TV a WEEK) a constant source of intellectual stimulation, while shamelessly promoting the show. But it's so good, who cares!?! There are character blogs & the comic book on the site has hidden links to it that even incorporate the characters as real people, with real blogs on NBC and even on myspace, with fake character friends AND real people as friends. Put fans in the actual drama. There are SO many hidden clues and homages in the episodes, you can watch them over and over and not catch them all.
  • kosmasp14 June 2020
    I have to agree with another reviewer that wrote that the show starts off good. I have to disagree with the notion of only rating and reviewing a show based on a couple of episodes or even just one season. You have to see the whole package. Something that is also true of our heroes on display here. The variety at the beginning is something that is great to see.

    The fact it gets predictable and jumps the shark quite early (even season 2 one might say). There are too many coincidences, too many convinient things happening, too predictable, too much hoping and giving the viewers all the characters almost all the time. And then there are character developments that are just plain ... well not good to say the least. Flipping and switching to serve a narrative or artificially heighten the tension.

    You may accuse me of being too harsh and you may not care for some of those things. But I am laying them out there for you, not that they are hard to spot. So it is up to you to decide what weight you see in certain things and what matters most to you. I always follow through with watching stuff, even when I lose interest. But I want to able to know where something is going ... clearly the makers didn't think the last season here, would actually be the last season. I have not researched but there may be a continuation in comic books, something Buffy and Angel did for example. Whatever the case, it will leave you with an uneven feeling ...
  • jheke19 September 2006
    wow...it is an amazing take on the whole "next stage" thing.. i believe that it may become one of the top five shows to watch and i can't wait to see more.. all the characters are beginning to develop a lot of depth, and i know that they have yet to show all the characters in the pilot but hopefully we will see just how far they can take this and show the back side of things..not the heroes everyone thinks of, but how they all become that person. the cast is very talented Ali Larter is an amazing actress that in my mind hasn't gotten the opportunity to really express how good of an actress she is. the rest of the cast i am not too familiar with but from what i saw they all look quite gifted actors.
  • db_in_uk31 October 2007
    I grew up in North America, and quality shows like Heroes were a staple. Now having lived in Europe for a few years, I find it difficult to watch American serial dramas. Heroes is an excellent example of a great story, a great cast, and certainly great potential. Unfortunately, American TV stipulates that the story must be dragged out over 23 episodes. What this means is that, in every episode, not much happens. Wait another week and still not much happens. I am now on episode 8 and am ready to bail. I'm not sure I have the patience to last another 15 episodes.

    Series like Heroes deserve better. The story deserves to be told for the sake and quality of the story. It does not deserve to be tampered with for the sake of filling a season, because what you get is what we've got with Heroes. A lot of filling and not much substance.

    I think what Britain could have done with this. Probably made a cracking good series over 3-4 hours where the story is the focus and the audience is the viewer. Not the advertisers and TV executives.
  • This is an episodic series very similar to the "Lost" format when dealing with characters and their history. Like "Lost" they also have a habit of bringing up questions without giving you answers but hopefully that will change as the series goes along. The actors/actresses are very good at what roles they have and I for one am already hooked.

    The main characters are individuals that are just discovering their super-human abilities and as the show progresses you are given the feeling that these individuals will be coming together and assisting one another to prevent major catastrophes from occurring. A scientist's son is picking up where his father's research left off and knows these folks are out there and are important to the world.

    The second show has some gruesome spots (not a spoiler) so this may not be one for the "kiddies". It does have a great deal of intrigue and hopefully won't leave you with a feeling of being left out on a limb. I am interested in how the sub-plots will all come together.
  • So, this show... I happened to have to been hearing a lot about it and so, managed to catch a couple of episodes... and just couldn't get enough of it.. I wanted to watch more and more. It started out really really interesting with the discoveries and resultant comical situations... but as Hayden Panettiere (the cheerleader, Claire Bennett) unknowingly (I guess) put it in an interview... "these shows start out really great but then lose their plot and become really cheesy"... Well, that has exactly what has happened.. so many things just refuse to make sense as people (and even those special people with powers) act in the dumbest of ways possible.. I mean nothing coherent takes place now. This may not stop me from still watching the show... for what it's worth, it's good pass time while dinner... but that's about it... special effects are fine, nothing great.. overall, if you're looking for something to kill time, this could be your cup of tea.. if you're really looking for a good show to watch (a la Rome) .... then thou shalt look elsewhere. I gave it 7 out of 10 because of the initial spell it cast on me... the first few episodes were a lot of fun.
  • When I saw the trailer for this in the surprising best movie I've ever seen, The Descent, I knew it looked unique, different, and fantastic, but I had no idea just how great it would be.

    "Heroes" prevails without a doubt in the area of character development. The show is not reliant on constant action but rather an incredible relation to the realistic characters and then a mind-blowing release. "Homecoming" is a favorite episode of mine because of the way it sealed up the whole "Save the Cheerleader, Save the World" deal. I'm sure the season finale will be absolutely extraordinary as well, as it should all lead up to an amazing concluding episode. One could only imagine my joy when it was officially announced for a second season. All of the characters are interesting, intriguing, and well-written, and my favorites are Peter and Claire.

    Not only is "Heroes" a perfect character drama piece, but also a mesmerizing tale of what would happen if real people with real emotions got superpowers. The images are stunning and vivid, and the special effects are subtle and realistic. This is what a good superhero show should be.

    After nearly an entire season, I already rank "Heroes" second among my favorite TV shows of all time—it ranks second just under "Buffy the Vampire Slayer." There isn't a single negative thing to say about the show except for the fact that after the passing of each episode, you only want more, more, more! This is, quite honestly and truly, the most addictive show ever on television. Be sure not to miss even a single episode of "Heroes!" You should check out one of the highest rated new shows—you won't be disappointed!

    EDIT: After all of season 1 has completed and the finale aired, Heroes is still one of my favorite shows. The finale was my favorite episode of the entire season as every storyline reached its peak and all of the characters finally met face to face. I loved every minute of it.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I love the first season! The originality of the show and the characters are amazing! The remaining seasons are convoluted. The characters go from good to bad over and over again. It is strange and seems pointless.
  • I loved the first series - innovative, good story, slick cgi, great cliff-hangers. Sadly season 2 seemed to lose it's way (story wise), and it all started to get messy - worse still it was full of moments when you say "what the... why would you do that?!!!?!" for example, you've had a major fight within your arch nemesis & for once he's on the floor unconscious - now is your chance -finally! - so what do you do - would you a) pick up the gun on the floor and take the 2 seconds to shoot that person, or b) leave & then come back later..... let me see now...

    Let me give you another example - you are a Dr, and the former most dangerous man in the world, who you know murdered countless people & almost brought the city to the edge of destruction, comes to visit - but you find out he's lost all his powers. He "thinks" you can help him get these powers back with an injection, do you a) give him the injection - knowing he'll probably be unstoppable & continue to murder his way through humanity, or do you b) give him an injection of something like saline, or even better some sort of poison - which he wouldn't have known you were doing as he had no medical knowledge??? Again, let me think....

    Too many moments like this made it silly and unbelievable, which is a shame....
An error has occured. Please try again.