Also it gave Olivia that last dose of Cortexiphan so she could car smash Windmark, as someone more clever than I noted up thread.
Also it gave Olivia that last dose of Cortexiphan so she could car smash Windmark, as someone more clever than I noted up thread.
I actually figured he was safe once the Observers got ahold of him, but only because they wouldn't send him so similarly to Nina.
As soon as Walter started talking about the strange letter Peter got from him, I knew it was going to be the tulip, but damn if I STILL didn't cry seeing it. I know it was kind of fanservice-y (just like seeing Lincoln and Fauxlivia again!) but I still loved it. I'm not even ashamed.
"You're my favorite thing, Peter. My very favorite thing."
Ha! I'm sorry!
If they'd just resolved that storyline back with Bradley Whitford it would have been fantastic.
Wasn't she always "the late Irene Adler," though? I always thought she was dead before Watson got around to telling her story in Scandal in Bohemia in the first place.
His "I think what you do is amazing" was fantastic. I'm really liking Jonny Lee Miller in this role a lot.
I read some suggested casting somewhere (which I had taken in my mind to be real casting for whatever reason) putting Idris Elba in the role of Moriarty. Which would be fantastic, obviously.
It's not the fracking itself that's dangerous to the groundwater; rather, it's the transportation of the gained gas up from the deep deposits where leakage may occur.
It's not the fracking itself that's dangerous to the groundwater; rather, it's the transportation of the gained gas up from the deep deposits where leakage may occur.
They hadn't been sleeping together for months, though—not since the Kiki incident.
Actually, I think Lix's reaction wasn't on quite as grand a scale BECAUSE she'd had regular contact. She gave the baby up to a place she knew (or hoped) would be safer and was able to lock away that part of her life because of it. Randall didn't know any of that—he had no definite reason to believe child was safe or…
It's because both actors sold it so well. Oona Chaplin's relief and joy was palpable.
I know you can be overwhelmed, and you can be underwhelmed, but can you ever just be whelmed?
I can't remember how she phrased it, but I loved her nervous line about allowing in herself actions she'd condemned in him. I think they both know it's not his and they're wonderfully both alright with it. That scene was probably my second favorite of the episode, following that absolutely heartbreaking Lix/Brown…
Even just Cloud Atlas and what I've read of Ghostwritten probably puts him in that category for me, too. I couldn't put the first section of Ghostwritten down; I was definitely hooked.
Yes. After my initial confusion over whether my book had some printing error or something, it was the Zedelghem section that really drew me in to the point where I knew I wouldn't be parting ways with the book anytime soon.
I've got the sample sitting on my Kindle, though it'll be at least a month before I read it because I try to alternate authors a bit before I come back to one again. I find I never (or rarely) get burned out on a writer or a style that way.
I'm a little ways into Ghostwritten by David Mitchell. Cloud Atlas is one of the best books I've read in the past few years, but this is only the second of his books I've read. I have to say, it really captured me right off the bat.