I find it far more fascinating if Fitz is Fitz. This notion that heroes were always meant to be heroes and villains, villains is deeply unscientific. Given the right circumstances, we all could be guilty of the greatest atrocities.
I find it far more fascinating if Fitz is Fitz. This notion that heroes were always meant to be heroes and villains, villains is deeply unscientific. Given the right circumstances, we all could be guilty of the greatest atrocities.
Probably because Radcliff's determination of life is only valid for Radcliff himself. His 'choice' isn't transferable to everyone else.
Who invited the party pooper?
It's understandable. We all think we 'know' people, and cannot conceive that those we love are capable of atrocities. It's the same reason that wives and girlfriends of serial killers will be launching appeal after appeal pleading their innocence long after the cell door key turns on them. As a scientist, she should…
Kinda funny that he's back to playing the same character as before his heel-turn, but it feels way more interesting with the benefit of his narrative baggage.
…and 'mainframe' is cliched TV technobabble used to the point of tedium.
Another name for bandwagon is 'critical consensus'.
It must do, but I've never noticed any overlaps between AoS and the Netflix shows beyond both referencing the Avengers films.
Why wouldn't they… get rid of all those pesky regulations that stop them crashing the financial system/making loads of cash off other people's back and a tax-cut on top of that. Trump is Mecca for the greedy elite.
Chase was okay, but didn't really have the staying power of previous antagonists. As for Lumen, have to disagree. She was introduced far too early after his previous relationship ended, and she was so one-dimensional. You could almost see the whiteboard from the writers' room behind her every character trait … it's…
One of the core strengths of early Dexter was the shows ability to deal in dramatic irony as it showed us one thing while Dexter told us the opposite. It was fascinating to somewhat objectively be able to see his contradictions, delusions and the outright fallacies he told himself … by Buck's reign, it'd devolved in…
Honestly, the last episode of season 4 works as an incredible series finale if you ignore every episode after that.
Must have the same security company as STAR labs in The Flash.
Buck always had the same problem with Dexter. His attempts to handle Dexter's love life in tandem with the serial killing were laughable. His only plan was to turn Dexter into some kind of superheroic child-like figure. Added to his infamously awful plotlines, character grasp, dialogue and lack of any vision and it…
I checked out of the CW-verse halfway through last season. It's kinda sad that AoS probably won't make it past this season, since it's the best comic-book series on the small screen these days.
Someone clearly picked their supervillain name after mistakenly going to thickipedia.
Think of the poor lackey who spent an entire afternoon with the IKEA flat-pack to give that table life!
They really should have thought of that before they decided to live on the East coast.
His MO has been quintessentially Dexterised from the start. The only difference being that Dexter didn't murder henchmen on his way to the target.
I was like 'well duh!' when that "reveal" dropped. You could say the quitting was the bombshell, but he's quit before, and moved to the suburbs with Felicity, and seemed to rather enjoy it.