I hope you never stop being meridith.
I hope you never stop being meridith.
Goddamn Nailed It!
"The movie Her is awful."
I think they should'a just kept them as a secret ninja-occult organization. I thought that the broadening of their mandate in Iron Fist was a huge dilution of the concept, and continues to be here. In DD season 2 they weren't a "deep" organization, but they were very effectively portrayed as an absolute force of…
They mentioned some vague belief that Alexandra has in a prophecy, and I got the general sense that the rest of the fingers really didn't buy into it all that much. I think the series ended up essentially deciding to make its superweapon a myth, which is an interesting route to take even if your mileage on it may vary.
For me Kilgrave petered out halfway through. Fisk is pretty much the only villain I've seen recently who has pulled off the "captured but still a threat" shtick without me actually thinking less of them. By the time Kilgrave was initially captured I felt like I had seen the extent of how threatening he was, and by the…
I loved this series as a whole, and Elektra coming into her own in this episode is what really did it. She's a fantastic character here, and Elodie's portrayal of her is a perfect live-action realization of the character.
Goodbye III/III - The Letter Goodbye - AKA the actual goodbye - AKA the most sincere I’m capable of being at this point in my life right now
Goodbye II/III - The “One Tin Soldier Parody!" Goodbye
Goodbye I/III - The Whazzup Goodbye
The dragons wouldn't have any reason to get into convenient range unless they were trying to rescue people.
"Killing the head vampire" worked in Dracula because every vampire that wasn't Dracula didn't really matter. It wasn't "together these vampires are an unstoppable force but we can get rid of them if we deal with Dracula". It was "these vampires are pretty stoppable but Dracula is a far more potent threat. Let's take…
The first Gojira movie is an absolute classic. The moral drama of it is riveting, and it nails its dark tone.
D&D said in the aftershow commentary that Jon was taking on the wights so that everyone else could escape, which makes no sense because the dragon really didn't need Jon's help, but that was the plan for that moment anyway.
The main character's name could be DeLorean Targaryen. He has a sweet motorcycle named "DragonWulf" and a gunsword and in order to complete his mission he has to travel through time recruiting an army of fanservice characters.
It would have been less dramatic if Dany had shown up with them all just huddled there, and it's clear that this show goes with drama over logic at this point. if they just wanted to kill them outright earlier they could have thrown stuff at them. (Jon Snow, killed by the Night King's wicked fastball.)
Because he was hoping that dragons would show up.
It's a legitimate weak point. When the consequences of travel aren't clear it creates an "anything can happen" feeling that makes it difficult to understand the weight of any travel choices and how those choices will affect characters.
Yes. They brought three spears with them. One for each Dragon. The surrounded group was herded as bait.
"men expect to be trusted."