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[VIDEO] 'Hawaii Five-0' Deleted Series Finale Scene Teases Season 11

This commentary deeply analyzes the deleted scene from the Hawaii Five-0 series finale, challenging the official storylines and character choices—especially around Steve, Danny, and Catherine. It critiques controversial relationship developments and questions the authenticity of the narrative portrayed by executive producer Peter Lenkov (PL). If you're curious about how fans felt about the finale's emotional beats and character resolutions, this guide dives into those details and the tension behind-the-scenes.


1. Steve's Final Scene: Authentic or Forced?

The deleted series finale scene for Hawaii Five-0 has sparked some heated discussion, especially regarding Steve McGarrett's last moments. The writer points out that, despite the narrative being pushed by producer Peter Lenkov (PL), Steve's emotions didn't quite hit the mark. According to them, Steve "looks constipated through that whole scene," hardly the image of a man finally at peace.

"PL can try and push the narrative that it was the first time Steve had truly smiled in years, but that's BS. The way he has smiled at Danny, at his team, even earlier in the episode was better than that."

Throughout the series finale, the tension around Steve's character arc is palpable. Catherine suddenly inserting herself into Steve's journey—after leaving more than five years earlier—felt "gross and hugely assumptive" to the commenter. There's a strong sentiment that their relationship was never meant to be endgame, and it was jarring to suddenly frame Catherine as "the one," given years of Steve denying that idea.

"Steve spent years saying she was NOT the one, not his girl, not the one that got away and that they were not meant to be. Then in the finale she's all the one, the one that got away, his girl? Naaaah."

The guide argues that actor Alex O'Loughlin (who plays Steve) stayed true to the character, playing him as uncomfortable and distant in that scene. As stated,

"Steve looks around the plane like he's looking for other people around her. He looks not happy that she's there."

And the relationship reset didn't come across as genuine, but rather forced—something that the performer himself seemed reluctant about but followed through because it was required of him.


2. Critique of Catherine's Character Arc

The portrayal of Catherine through the show's run comes in for major criticism. Early on, fans appreciated her as a "guest star booty call," but when the story tried to turn her into Steve's grand love interest, things didn't work.

"When PL tried the whole 'no wait actually they're super duper in love' thing it stopped working and then Cath became Doris 2.0, but Steve just forgives and forgives... making himself look like an idiot? Over and over. Nah."

The comparison to Doris (Steve's complicated mother), and the way Steve keeps forgiving even the most hurtful betrayals, is seen as a negative trait that made his character appear "weak and pathetic." The idea that Steve's leaving Hawaii because of pain, and then chooses to leave with Catherine—the person responsible for some of that pain—was, to the fan, a baffling story decision:

"He's leaving Hawaii because of the pain it caused him, so he leaves with the woman responsible for some of that pain? Blech."

The writer even mocks PL's efforts to justify these storylines publicly, calling out the disconnect between the actors' understanding of their characters versus the showrunner.


3. Danny and Rachel: Another Romance That Rings False

Similar skepticism is directed at Danny's potential reconciliation with Rachel. According to the commentary, there's no way Danny would realistically forgive Rachel after her actions:

  • She hid his child for years.
  • She only planned to tell him the truth if their son Charlie was ill.
  • She lied to everyone about Charlie's parentage.

"No WAY on earth would Danny EVER consider getting back with Rachel after she hid his child for years, never planned to tell him if Charlie wasn't ill, and lied to EVERYONE about his parentage. That was unforgivable. Utterly."

Despite this, the series showed Danny letting go of his anger quickly, and eventually suggesting "let's try again," which the fan finds insulting to Danny's self-respect. This is used to highlight a pattern in the show's writing regarding its female characters and romance plots.


4. Portrayal of Female Characters

One of the most significant criticisms in the commentary is about how Hawaii Five-0 treated its women. The fan observes a clear divide:

  • Female characters were often "hired for what they looked like in a bikini" and served as bland love interests.
  • Alternatively, they were written as "lying deceptive shrews."
  • Only a select few—Kono, Tani, Quinn—were portrayed as fully developed people.

"PL's views on women were clear throughout the show – they were either hired for what they looked like in a bikini and as blank dull love interests or they were lying deceptive shrews. Very few were allowed to be real people."

Even Kono, who started out as a dynamic character, ended up spending most storylines embroiled in drama about Adam, her mobster husband.

"Once Adam arrived, 90% of her time was spent talking about Adam, worrying about Adam, thinking about Adam, moping about Adam, Adam Adam Adam. She went from awesome Kono to one half of Adam'n'Kono."


5. Plot Holes and Unrealistic Story Choices

Finally, the writer points out inconsistencies and improbable storylines that undermined the show's credibility. For example, Kono being able to date—and even marry—the child of a yakuza boss without any professional consequences was unbelievable, given the show's own rules:

"A rumor ended Chin's career. Yet she marries a man who was leader of the yakuza, used their resources to kidnap Wo Fat, planned murder, committed murder himself – yes, it was self-defense but a lawyer would not care – and everyone is cool??? HA"

These choices, according to the fan, compromised both the characters' integrity and the believability of the show's world.


Conclusion

The deleted finale scene of Hawaii Five-0 and the relationships it tried to resolve were met with disappointment from some fans who felt the character arcs were forced and unfaithful to established personalities. As this commentary argues, deeper issues with how the show portrayed key relationships and its female characters left some viewers frustrated by the finale's "happily ever after" attempt. In the end, the sense is that the cast knew their characters best, and the official narrative just didn't ring true.

Summary completed: 8/4/2025, 5:58:00 PM

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