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But these following Netflix shows? They completed the difficult task of sticking the landing. If you were to ask every fan of the series how they felt about the final episode, at least 95% of them would say something along the lines of “It didn’t disappoint.”
5) Cobra Kai

Cobra Kai (which moved to Netflix starting with Season 3) aired its sixth and final season in three parts, meaning fans had to wait extra-long to get to the end. It was like Stranger Things, except Cobra Kai didn’t disappoint a portion of its fanbase.
In “Ex-Degenerate,” Johnny Lawrence takes on Sensei Wolf (Lewis Tan, Mortal Kombat). It seems as though the fight is going Wolf’s direction, because he keeps cheating, but then Johnny has a tender moment with former adversary Daniel LaRusso, who gives him the pep talk he needs. Johnny comes out on top, we get most of the series’ fan-favorite characters getting happy endings, and Johnny and Daniel ultimately collaborate on training students in both Cobra Kai and Miyagi-Do. It’s the show coming full circle and paying off not just the show’s six season run, but the original Karate Kid film as well.
4) The Crown

The epic multi-period piece The Crown was a show that didn’t take its own success to mean that it should stick around longer than it needed to. It had a specific tale to tell and didn’t drag itself out telling it just to squeeze another season in at the end.
With “Sleep, Dearie Sleep,” The Crown gives a heartstring tugging farewell to Queen Elizabeth, who had died in real life just over a year before Season 6 aired. Imelda Staunton’s older version of the real-life figure has to reconcile with her middle-aged self (Olivia Colman) and younger self (Claire Foy) as she prepares to embrace with what comes after life. It’s a beautiful bow to tie on the whole thing.
3) The Haunting of Hill House

Probably the apex of Mike Flanagan’s projects for Netflix, The Haunting of Hill House is a consistently atmospheric and well-acted string of 10 episodes. That applies to the finale just as much as the other nine episodes.
“Silence Lay Steadily” shines a light on just what the Red Room is and how it can tailor its terrors to the individual’s specific fears. Timothy Hutton’s Hugh Crain makes a sacrifice for his children. The Crain children get past their differences as estranged siblings and unite. It all is emotionally satisfying.










