They will be replaced with tingly feelings when you look at Enver Gjokaj. Don't worry, it's very nice.
They will be replaced with tingly feelings when you look at Enver Gjokaj. Don't worry, it's very nice.
She didn't kill him earlier because she wanted him alive to save Hope. It's pretty clear that she identified with Hope, and was trying to save her from having to deal with the same kind of fallout that she felt after her experience with Killgrave. The turning point for Jessica deciding to kill Killgrave wasn't a man…
My guess is that he's the Unspoken - a former inhuman king with basically unlimited power. In the comics, he was banished and was regarded as a boogeyman until he came back to try to rule the inhumans. It sort of fits what's going on here. Plus, he was introduced roughly the same time as Lash popped up in the…
The robot hand helped too
I think it would be easier to list the things that are actually bearable about this show. I like the teleporting noises. I like that Claire is dead. I like that there was ice cream a few episodes ago.
That was the reason I was hopeful for this series, actually. Grown-up Micah as a technopathic freedom fighter was a solid use of an existing character and powerset. They sort of had the right idea with Molly, but they totally squandered Noah by wiping his memory.
Hell, I thought "found a working freezer" would be as important as finding actual food. The food itself is finite, but they found a house with working power and the capacity to store fresh food. You can get up high and see what houses have solar setups. Check those houses for power, and start setting up freezers…
As someone who's slogging through Heroes Reborn, I can tell you that shows can be much, much worse.
I will point out that contrary to the show's belief, Carbondale, IL is not a suburb of Chicago. It's 330 miles away. There are actually not many Illinois cities that are farther from Chicago than Carbondale.
Having the younger characters back would be far better than watching Noah obsess over Claire for the eight millionth time. A show centered around Micah and his underground rebellion would give the show more narrative urgency than the "what happened on June 13, WHAT HAPPENED TO CLAIRE" refrain that we're getting now. …
Of people with super speed getting punked out by a woman with a gun? Or how a guy with telekinesis can just get grabbed by a couple of goons?
I wish this show would explain why people are so afraid of evos when they're apparently really easy to capture and kill.
I thought the point of her basically taunting them afterwards was to suggest to them that it would be embarrassing if anyone found out what really happened - thus keeping them silent.
Because we'll get used to him calling her "Tremors", and then eventually she'll do something crazy badass and he'll be like "Damn! that wasn't a tremor, that was a Quake!"
Well in the last episode, she knew that if she dug down a few inches, she would find mud. I'm willing to infer that she also figured out how to get water and food.
While Frank's great, he joined the cast in the 8th episode of the show. That's pretty early to be considered a "midstream" addition.
Yeah, and it's not even an extra. They tack it right onto the end of that episode and give a little "in light of the recent events…" blurb before it. I'm glad they changed it though, the new version of the story was funnier and more original.
So he knows she's #1!
I think her returning to her to VPdom would be the least plausible thing this show has ever done. For one, she absolutely loathes the position. Second, I can't imagine anyone willfully going back to being VP once they've been POTUS. I'm hoping that she wins the congressional vote, but is viewed as being something…
DADT was actually a compromise position that stopped the military from actively rooting out and discharging gay people. It wasn't ideal, but it provided some measure of relief to gay servicemembers by getting rid of the witch hunts.