Responsibility doesn't mean 'only the good parts.' The man made a show that cost a lot, for a tightfisted company that hands out third seasons approximately never, and delivered an incomplete story in two seasons. Who else on the face of god's green earth is at fault for fans expecting a third season they definitely won't get?
So you are expecting David Fincher to make a smashing 3rd season for a vastly lower budget, automagically get everyone and their grandma to tune into the show, make Netflix a profitable company again, fix everyone's scheduling conflicts and close all negotiations, all the while fulfilling rest of his contract obligations to make other films like Mank + The Killers?
Anything else? Why not bring peace to the Middle East and eliminate COVID? /s
Everything you said suggests you have very little understanding of how any of this works and you're just airing grievances of how Fincher is "failing" your weird expectations.
I'm not expecting anything except consistency on your part. You, personally, here, now, said: can't blame him for the outcome.
Why.
How.
It was entirely under his control.
It was a tiredly predictable situation.
What other human being could possibly be to blame for this outcome, moreso than the guy who italicized-for-emphasis IS the show?
Instead of answering, you've chosen to make up a conversation you'd rather be having, with some imaginary idiot who says a bunch of things I sure didn't.
Listen, there are plenty of things in life that are NOT ENTIRELY under one person's control, ESPECIALLY a content deal like this. Read the quote again:
"But it’s a very expensive show and, in the eyes of Netflix, we didn’t attract enough of an audience to justify such an investment [for season three]."
In case it wasn't clear, I'll spell it out for you: Netflix does not want to renew Mindhunters S3 because it costs too much and doesn't make them enough money. Netflix made a bet with S1, S2 but folded when it comes to S3. And you still want to pin this 100% on Fincher?
It was a tiredly predictable situation.
Is it now? I guess Netflix should snatch you up as a VP for Da Future since you've readily predicted the whole thing with your crystal ball. Or I propose a more likely scenario: a hindsight of 10/10 because you've completely misread the situation?
What other human being could possibly be to blame for this outcome, moreso than the guy who italicized-for-emphasis IS the show?
Uh... the powers that be at Netflix? Plenty of people there are involved in the decision. Take your pick.
Listen, just because you are unhappy with the outcome of the situation, doesn't change the reality that this is closer to a partnership situation than David Fincher calling all the shots. It's just not how things work. But continue to play it off like Fincher some how victimized you and owe you something, if you like.
just because you are unhappy with the outcome of the situation
I've never seen this show. I'm probably never going to. Apparently I wouldn't be getting a complete story anyway, and for reasons yooou have outlined, that aspect is the director's fault. He had two seasons to tell a complete story. He did not. He did not, knowing full well Netflix doesn't like doing third seasons. He did not, knowing his show was unusually expensive and complicated. He did not, knowing the viewership wasn't about to skyrocket from the known figures for season one.
And for some reason you said he's not to blame for the incomplete story he told.
Are you suggesting he's an idiot? Because even idiots knew about Netflix's two-season limit. It did not sneak up on him. It was tiredly predictable. It was, and remains, the most likely outcome for any Netflix series lucky enough to get a second season. No crystal ball is required for this basic pattern recognition. Sneer all you like; it is common knowledge.
Cliffhanger endings at the best of times are a frustrating gamble against cancellation. Creators are as responsible for them as they are for every the rest of their story.
Okay, you've gotta be jerking me around. You can't actually be serious. And you haven't even seen the show, so I don't even know what you're on about.
I'll just leave you with this - Mindhunters had two FANTASTIC seasons and were setting up for bigger stories to tell. The scope of the two seasons are already huge and a season 3 is completely not out of the question, i.e. they are not milking it just for the sake of continuing the show. And remember, these guys were making this back in 2017 so I guess you are wiser than them for being in 2023 and knowing more about their future?
Sneering harder won't make Netflix's long-running habit any less predictable.
All I'm on about is what you've said. You refuse to say Fincher is responsible for the state of the show: incomplete and dead. Even though he'd be an idiot to expect a third season, knowing his budget and viewership numbers, and he is so thoroughly in charge of writing that he IS the show.
And now it sounds like you are trying to cope with the show being stone dead, by suggesting a third season is "not out of the question." To paraphrase an annoying comment I recently saw: are you expecting everyone and their grandma to come running, so he can fix everybody's schedule on a vastly lower budget?