It feels like they became a true family in Schitt's Creek before ultimately going their separate ways because they were ready to. They're genuinely adorable.Īnd then there were the Roses as a unit. And the way they made it a classic rom-com romance, with a sort of sweetness and purity to it, was something new and fresh. Though seeing homosexual relationships on television isn't really novel anymore, I don't recall ever seeing the entire arc of one, from meeting to marriage, in a TV series. So while transformation was predictable, it didn't play out quite the way I expected, and I found myself oddly happy that it didn't.īut David and Patrick's relationship is where Schitt's Creek really shines. The Roses didn't give up the frivolous complaints, the bizarro accents, or the distinct fashion sense that they started with, and those things became lovable quirks, endemic to their characters. I was also surprised to find that some of the things I found annoying in the beginning became endearing. We got to see the characters bloom into themselves as opposed to change from one thing to another, which is honestly the best kind of character development. The town and the people they got to know certainly had an affect on them, and vice versa, but the changes in the characters felt more like a slow revealing of the different dimensions of their personalities rather than an actual change in who they were. But what I found surprising about the character development in the show is how much they didn't change. This part seems predictable just based on the premise, right? The characters are self-centered and snooty in the beginning, but they're going to be changed by their experiences in this small, quirky town, blah blah blah.
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