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At the risk of thousands of people deciding to publish on the Internet videos of themselves dancing with enthusiasm, we will call it here, gentlemen: L & # 39; OA is dead. The Netflix series, science fiction and mystic, which deals with an "original Angel" with gigantic dimensions, was canceled a few weeks ago. (Or was it ?!) (Yes, yes, that was true.) But there was still a hope that the series would get this now standard plan at the end of the redemption, a chance to break down seasons whole truncated parcels in one small package: The big final movie.
But unfortunately, that should not have been, with Variety signal tonight that there was just too much OA left in the tank to enter a two-hour movie. The series – which ended on a really crazy second season cliffhanger – was originally scheduled for five seasons, after all, at the time when "trying to do a five-season series at Netflix" did not seem so obvious that the spell was tempting. More: L & # 39; OA was produced internally by the streamer, which means that the chance of a resurrection by another network is basically zero.
The star of the series, Brit Marling – who also created the series with Zal Batmanglij – posted a very long post on Instagram earlier this week, thanking fans for their love and support. Since the show went very meta-fiction out there to what is now, without a doubt, the end – as in "suggesting that Brit Marling might actually be an amnesic version of The OA trapped on Earth" meta – c is probably also a complete farewell of the character, and the series, as fans are now likely to get.
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