Safety first!
Safety first!
It just needs toys to play with.
The woman believed her god was punishing her and demons were chasing her. I'd say that qualifies.
I'm with you 100% on this being a better tie-in to Thor, since the gang theorized (and it's a sound one) that labs were trying to f**k with opening trans-dimensional doorways. And it was by far their best special effects baddie to date.
Railing kill!
We put our faith in Blast Hardcheese!
"Mittens?"
She hadn't signed Sherry's birthday card yet.
I believe that delivery was the father of Hercules's infamous "Disappointed!!!!" line.
1. Space Mutiny starring Reb "Buff Drinklots" Brown
2. Track of the Moonbeast/Prince of Space
3. The Phantom Planet/The Thing That Wouldn't Die (not to be confused with The Head That Wouldn't Die starring Jan-in-a-Pan)
4. Wurwulf/Riding with Death
5. Pewma Man/Merlin's Magical Shop of Wonders
Baby oil?! AAAAAAAAAAAHHHHH!
"My name is Vadinio."
"I'm an onion."
I think the real problem here isn't that we're not getting the A-listers—anyone expecting even someone like Hawkeye to show up for a guest spot has their head in the clouds—but it's that we're not getting B or even C-lister characters from the MCU, but rather these obscure, bottom-tier names. When I have to google who…
I agree wholeheartedly about the procedural aspect, but the trouble I have is maybe the pacing of the revelations, usually saved for the end of the second act. I'd prefer to see them figure it out even sooner and spend more time in action-land trying to stop the villain rather than just barely getting a handle on…
At first I was like "wait, I can buy that a scientist might have some sort of religious faith, but this is a woman dealing with a particle accelerator; atom-splitting, core-of-the-universe stuff—why is she such a Jesus Freak?"—and THEN halfway in they finally mention she was indeed a safety inspector, which then I…
Really? I thought Zeta was the second coming of the Fugitive (series) covered in metal.
I'm sorry, I thought this was one of the best episodes they've had so far. For one, they finally had some ethereal, alternate-dimension plane-hopping villain that actually fits with a comic book universe—until now, "Scorch" was the only thing remotely close to it, and look how long he lasted.
The solved case count between Peralta and Santiago did make an appearance again during a morning in a later episode though, so someone didn't forget about it.
"Can we switch places?"
Psh—one department store (which I'm not naming—they want free advertisements, they can pay me!) already has theirs up on the web as of Tuesday morning. Which I do have to admit is pretty cool—they're just getting the early shoppers out of the way.