avclub-0208ec6861d4344ea9db35ce4e4b7197--disqus
MsFjordstone
avclub-0208ec6861d4344ea9db35ce4e4b7197--disqus

I see them more as undertakers than surgeons — they are working on bodies, but not (truly) live bodies. So there's less at stake. In fact, have we ever seen Felix or VR-porn-loving tech do anything more complex than taking out a bullet and repairing the hole? I want to say that these guys are doing mainly cosmetic

Have we ever actually seen Teddy in the (possibly 30-yr-old) scenes with William and Logan? When they first arrived in Sweetwater, it was William who picked up Dolores's rolling can, because Teddy wasn't there to do so.

Or robotic dogs. With robotic bees in their mouths, and when they bark, they shoot bees at you.

Mr. Robot?

I think you mean the jury.

No, the park is supposedly open for about as long as we've had Disney parks in this reality. That's a lot longer than 35 years. What happened 30+ years ago is some sort of 'accident'. And Arnold's death.

Theseus's…boat? I think you're on to something, but how about the part of the story where Theseus brings a ball of thread into the labyrinth with him so that he can find his way out? Maybe Arnold had a 'thread' of some sort — downloading himself into Delores? — that he hoped to use to find his way out of some sort of

It's not "Alonzo"; it is "El Lazo," which is Spanish for "the loop." I'm surprised more people aren't watching with captions, or can hear the difference between an "uh" sound ("uh-LAHN-zo") and an "eh" sound ("ehl-LA-zo"). Anyway, El Lazo is his outlaw moniker, and Lawrence seems to be his real name. I think he said

I don't think you can call it "unprofessional" that Emily found Bentley's accent bad enough that she wishes his next character is a mute. She's a critic; critiquing is implicit in the job title!

She really is the weak link in that ensemble.

I think it was presented to us as really, really obvious, since key players this season are Regina/Evil Queen and Jekyll/Hyde. Hrm, gee, let's see, who else on the show might be hobbled or harmed by a dark part of themselves? (eye roll)

Even if they did, they don't all have the same level of talent. By far.

Agreed, and I think it was particularly bad form for a critic to drop it into a review. I don't read pre-season press for shows I watch because I don't like to be spoiled; I'm kind of astonished to have been spoiled so early in the season, and by a recapper/reviewer. Oh well.

Yes, it was Susanna Thompson (this morning IMDb has her listed).

Yeah, Wyatt was the weak link. I mean, the guy is such a disciplined soldier that even while drunk and off-duty, he calls Lucy "ma'am," but…he attempts to break the ONE SOLID RULE of all time travel, ever: don't try to save someone who's supposed to die! Of course, the Hindenburg doesn't crash that time anyway. But I

That's a great bit of irony.

That show was great, and made solid music choices. New Gary Numan!

I don't know if it's an age thing or what, but I wonder if a certain demographic really *needs* their time travel to be convoluted with often-incomprehensible, not-fully-thought-out arc-length mythologies, like what "12 Monkeys" has become, or Moffat-era Who. A show can have an arc-based plot without requiring the

Oh! D'oh! I completely missed that!

Hey, I thought he was alive, too. For one thing, Mr. Robot never said "We killed him. He said "We SHOT him." Now, that turned out to be false, but I noticed that Robot pointedly avoided saying "killed" in that conversation.