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poetic noble land mermaid
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This is exactly where I think Mom-El's arc is going. In this episode we saw him leave the woman he loved to save her; the final and most difficult step of his character arc/growth will be leaving her to save/help others (the Daxamites) when being with her is the happiest he's ever been. It would therefore be the most

Actually, while Emilie de Ravin (Belle) is Australian, Rose McIver (Tinkerbell) is from New Zealand. Even though the accents share some similarities, neither nationality likes being confused for the other.

Genuinely curious, is this just wishful thinking or is there historical precedence for a sequence of events along those lines?

In looking over other people's lists, I realize that at least half of my favorite movies are from before I was born, so I don't know if I'm as inclined to do this. I mean, missing Star Wars off of any of my favorite movie lists just feels wrong.

That Cogsworth thing legitimately horrified me because the rest of the film showed that this woman was a complete monster, so while everyone else was getting happy endings, here was poor Cogsworth getting the opposite. And you could tell that we were supposed to find it funny. Uh, no.

So my local CW affiliate has now been holding the channel hostage in order to extort more money from my provider for almost 2 weeks and since about 85% of the current shows I watch are on CW, I'm incredibly frustrated. But watching the next day isn't exactly the end of the world, so I've tried to remain patient.

Agreed. And last week should be Dan Stevens'.

Even Casablanca started filming with only the first half of the script written; they had to film it in sequence as a result.

I'm straight, but I had a similar reaction nonetheless. If you'd told me April Ludgate could be that sexy, I wouldn't have believed you.

That's not what I was saying at all. I agree that they needed to exit, I just think the way it was written was a lazy cop-out. Like they knew the characters weren't liked so figured that the audiences wouldn't care how they were written out, just that it happened.

Responsible? This band of outcasts and misfits…?

Putting aside the bigger issues with the Hawkpeople last season, I feel like Nate and Amaya's relationship gets everything right that the Ray-Kendra one got wrong when it came to the conflict. For one thing, with Ray and Kendra, it came across as manufactured angst most of the time, whereas here is comes across a

"Are you the criminals? From the statistics?!" had me laughing so hard tears formed, and it was at least 75% his delivery.

"I have 2 questions: where did I get 35 dollars from, and also, can my name be Daphne?"

Yes, I actually went to the signing after that panel to get Seanan McGuire's autograph, and all the other authors from the panel were signing too, side by side. I looked over and saw Amber and had an "Omigod it's Tara!!" reaction; even though I guess I must've seen her name among those listed, it hadn't clicked that

This was just beautiful.

Yep, I love this show, but I'm pretty sure this is the last time I'm going to watch it right before going to bed…

Stein also referred to Rip as "our OLD captain" in the scene before they entered his mind.

Ah, yes, that MUST be it!!

But…doesn't cutting his hair mean he'll lose his strength?! Or wait, is that someone else?