avclub-1d2910453e4bc62b017c57ade340f2b2--disqus
manic zombie dream girl
avclub-1d2910453e4bc62b017c57ade340f2b2--disqus

Do you mean fuck again? Because they definitely fucked already at least a few times. I thought Kalinda broke it off because Lana is married.

Adam was really, really obnoxious this episode. Not only was he wrong for going behind his business partner's very clearly stated position last episode and fail to see anything wrong with that in this episode, he made his best man speech all about him and his problems. Worst emotional reconciliation on Parenthood by

"Our captain was killed last night… Leaves behind two kids and a pregnant wife."

Oh my god, during the van scene in Before Sunset (Celine's part), I physically had to pause the movie the first time I watched it. It just was so earnest and heart-wrenching. You really saw the personal toll that their first day together took on her after 10 years.

I agree with your point 3, but I'm still not convinced that the red/blue universes exist anymore (point 1). I want to see them again really badly but I don't know how they'll do that while staying consistent with the S3 finale and not be lame.

Similarly, if he really just needed pigment, why didn't he just kill some pigs or other large-ish mammal?

I'm going to assume that Massive Dynamic is trying to distill Olivia's badassery into some injectable supplement and that next time they're just going to modify a turkey baster with a sharp tip for the next visit.

A season of Fringe isn't complete without a episode ending in Olivia being forcibly injected with huge-ass needles.

She calls the Britta stand-in a "skanky concubine." I'm not seeing the sympathy that you see between the two of them.

In-universe, they did a pretty good job at pairing a sexually active woman with  two women with repressed sexualities (Annie moreso than Shirley) while avoiding name-calling (except for a few times by Shirley). It's a shame that Annie has to see Britta as the "whore" that stole away a good man from the watch of a

When the preview of the Jeff/Annie vampire scene came out, it kind of offended my ~feminist sensibilities and such by having such an obvious reference to the virgin who deserves to be saved and the whore that can be thrown away dichotomy. But seeing that it was an insight into Annie's view of the "love triangle" makes