avclub-22917e9547a39fad4966a8da3067b595--disqus
Last of the Mojitos
avclub-22917e9547a39fad4966a8da3067b595--disqus

I think it was the same actor as one who appeared on "Defiance" (as a weapons maker). There's a certain low-rent quality to his acting.

@TheDosemasterGeneral:disqus :

It would certainly be too much, but on the principle that turnabout is fair play, Alison could circle Aynesley's grave, asking her, with "concern," how she is and whether she's okay and telling her how worried everyone is about how sedentary she's become.

I agree. The "Wrong Man" plot can be very useful in a movie (e.g., "North by Northwest"), but in a TV show it can be tedious. (I don't think a "The Fugitive" TV show would work today.) I'm glad the show avoided the wrong-manning of Sarah Manning.

I'm a little confused as to the "proclone" dig. Which "pro" prefix is this? "Professional" or something like the usage in "proconsul"? Sorry to ask for an explanation of the joke; that's rarely rewarding.

That scene at Felix's apartment with three clones (Sarah, Cosima, Alison) all interacting, passing each other glasses and such, crossing each other's paths, was a bravura sequence, a sort of in-our-face "We're not skimping on budget for this episode!"

I agree that Kira is probably safe enough, taken by Mrs. S precisely for her safety, but even this fake peril (which Sarah thinks is real) feels cheaper than the show's normal level. It's a (bad) cliffhangery kind of thing with facile button-pushing.

I didn't like it either. The rest of the episode was great, save maybe for Cosima and Delphine bonding again (ugh) over their flatly rendered decryption scenes.

Delphine's T-shirt, for when she's hanging around Cosima:

In the baseball movie "42" Harrison Ford uses it as well, and it's described as the character's harshest (fake) swear word.

"My other me is a lesbian."

And also suitcases!

Alison will pop some ladywood at the prospect of getting to clean it.

Gotcha. Thank you. That makes sense.

"As you do" cracked me up!

I went ahead and read "Wolverine and the X-men" 24, and I can confirm that Logan and Ororo hook up. What I didn't see at all was anything regarding "so nobody would get any funny ideas about him and the sixteen year old Jean Grey that just showed up."

It looks like #24—thanks a lot!

There is a peash that can only be found on the other side of war! (Thanksh!)

Thank you kindly!

Is this true? What title/number was this in, please? (the new X-Men #1?)