Subject: I usually look at it from the opposite direction.
Author:
Posted on: 2014-05-09 04:16:00 UTC
That is, that the initial installment is super well-received, but any and all sequels get panned. I think this is because the (collective) audience enjoys being introduced to an entire new world at the beginning of the story. The sequels, however, are showing us more of the same setting, and more of the same characters (for the most part), and for some reason, it just doesn't hold the audience's attention as well, even if the plot is still steamrolling forward.
I'm specifically thinking of two examples here. One is the Matrix series, where the first movie dedicates a huge amount of time to being inside the Matrix, where everyone is clean and pretty, in cool costumes and doing amazing, physics-defying fight scenes that had pretty much never been seen before. The rest of the trilogy had that as well, no question, but not as much, and spent a lot more time in that universe's real world, where everyone is grimy, dressed in whatever they could sew together, and eventually having a fairly ordinary steampunk-leaning scifi shootout. And also having really gross sex scenes that are also dance montages somehow. I think part of the reason the Matrix sequels get panned is that they got more mainstream compared to all the newness of the original. For the record, I love the entire trilogy, and don't really look at them as separate movies, but a single storyline that got split up.
The other example is Lost. The first season was pretty much fantastic and amazing, and it threw at the audience two mysteries: "What is going on on this island?" and "Who are these people?" The first question only got answered slowly, throughout the show's run (and only partly, really, because that was never the point of the show), but the second question was most heavily dealt with in season one. Sure, new characters were introduced in later seasons that had new backstories and motives to show us, and not every secret of every season one character was revealed in season one, but I think all the later seasons suffered a bit for drifting away from the characters' flashbacks and focusing more on the island's immediate action.
Focusing specifically on the finale aspect of this discussion, I think the last installment tends to suffer from this problem the most, having to focus more energy and time/space on the events that complete the story and less on new aspects of the world or characters.