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Saturday 22 March 2014

Has 'Once Upon a Time' Gone Too Far With the Characters?

ONCE UPON A TIME - "Witch Hunt" - Emma arrives in Storybrooke with Henry and reunites with her friends and family, only to discover that no one remembers how they were transported back - or the past year they had spent back in Fairy Tale Land. But Emma is sure that someone in town is responsible for this new curse and teams up with Regina in an attempt to uncover their identity. Meanwhile, in the Fairy Tale Land that was during the past year, Regina, with the aid of Robin Hood, attempts to break into her castle, which has been overtaken by the Wicked Witch, on "Once Upon a Time," SUNDAY, MARCH 16 (8:00-9:00 p.m., ET) on the ABC Television Network. (ABC/Jack Rowand)REBECCA MADER

With the spring debut of Once Upon a Time, the ABC children's story arrangement has turned a page in its storybook and wound up in Oz. The show has been known to force characters not just from fables — both the universal variants and the Disney incarnations—yet dream and science fiction expositive expression too — Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Peter Pan and Frankenstein. Right away, Once Upon a Time has presented characters from The Wizard of Oz, yet will it help a show that appears to be hindered in tall tale lore?


While the first a large portion of the Once Upon a Time's third season occurred in Neverland — with some concise wanders over to Storybrooke or the Enchanted Forest — the primary characters have now come back to the first setting of the show, and they're under an alternate condemnation. This time, be that as it may, another occupant of Storybrooke has showed up: the Wicked Witch of the West (Rebecca Mader) — she's likewise emphasized in the flashbacks every scene. 

The setup of the show's spring season is a comparable setup to that in the debut season (their best so far regarding plot). Due to this, the show has come back to what made fans go gaga for it initially. In spite of the fact that the heading is marginally diverse — on the grounds that now underhanded witches and winged monkeys are running (or flying?) uncontrolled — its comparable enough that fans will think that it forcing. 

Furthermore, in the first a large portion of season three, the show was extremely restricted as far as characters. There was the primary group of great gentlemen (joined by the Evil Queen and Rumplestiltskin) alongside Peter Pan and his troupe of Lost Boys, however that was it. Notwithstanding that the arrangement has come back to Storybrooke, the show can by and by chip away at creating more minor characters and additionally the new characters they've included like the Wicked Witch and Robin Hood (Sean Maguire). 

So will the Wicked vs. Insidiousness fight revitalize Once Upon A Time? Most likely. We can hardly wait to see the two witches battle for control of Storybrooke.

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