Why Fox should let 'Wayward Pines' die after one season | New York Post

An eerie flash-forward prologue, in which Ethan drags Kate to the reckoning stage and holds a knife to her throat, kicks off Wayward Pines' penultimate episode. By now, it's difficult to believe that Ethan would actually go through with executing Kate

Describing Fox's “Wayward Pines” to the uninitiated is like taking part in a pitch meeting that never ends: “It's 'Twin Peaks' meets 'The Twilight Zone' meets 'The Truman Show' meets 'Lost'…” To that list of titles, you could add 

An eerie flash-forward prologue, in which Ethan drags Kate to the reckoning stage and holds a knife to her throat, kicks off Wayward Pines' penultimate episode. By now, it's difficult to believe that Ethan would actually go through with executing Kate

Describing Fox's “Wayward Pines” to the uninitiated is like taking part in a pitch meeting that never ends: “It's 'Twin Peaks' meets 'The Twilight Zone' meets 'The Truman Show' meets 'Lost'…” To that list of titles, you could add 

The final episode of Wayward Pines, aptly titled “Cycle,” went full monster movie, as the townspeople and the insurgents banded together to kill the abbies and head to safety after Pilcher cut off all the power and left them to fend for themselves