avclub-5efea3355481283643a4bf7203c34fe9--disqus
tanuki g
avclub-5efea3355481283643a4bf7203c34fe9--disqus

Yes, knees are difficult to target, but our Heroes are Just That Good.

Maat; Goddess of truth, justice & order. She stands by Ra-Osiris as he faces the underworld every night.
Haven't figured out one for Control yet, but Elias can definitely be read as Petbe, God of retaliation and revenge.

Use of that track was just effin' perfect. Even listening to it now I'm getting all misty (which it would never have been able to do before).

"You look like someone about to do a 10 day sex tour of Thailand"
"10 Days? I'm flattered!"

It did feel a lot like the Angel finale in many ways, even down to Amy Acker playing a character who had died and become the new form of a God.

Yep. This was a perfect finale, every moment just felt right. If there were flaws to it, I can't be bothered looking.

"I'm beginning to like this new side of you, Finch. It's terrifying, but I like it."

Both Samaritan and the Machine went up to the satellite. It was never clear which one, or combination of both was going to come back. But they were not going to be what they were.

The four dead cops left after they tried to assassinate he and Reese would have caused a fuss as well.

The point wasn't saving him, but he was their mistake. If in that episode they'd been able to intervene in some way maybe he would have been able to live a life free of Samaritan. Remember, after he took the job with Samaritan he was not given good choices to make.
He slipped through the cracks and though I would have

If i was a cryer, I would be but also smiling.

This show is turning into a little gem. I liked the matter-of-fact corpse humour at the start of episode 2, but the highlight of that was Rhys Darby's Steve has at asshole Todd. He's utterly perplexed at how making a painting of the two of them together could be taken as a come-on. And his schoolyard dummy-spit at the

She also seemed like the kind of female character you can centre a show around when the previous lead leaves, which may have been the game plan art some point.

Well no, neither Dracula or Lucifer were defeated but neither won dominion over the Earth. Both were still around so more of a draw really.

Season 4 had better be Catriona going to visit her friend Sir Lyle in Egypt.

A lot of people here have hated Dorian, mainly as he never really intersects with the rest of the cast, but these last three episodes have brought Dorian's story into sharp focus and his final scene with Lily were to me the most satisfying part of a final episode mostly avoiding catharsis.
And Reeve Carney has acted

Brilliant that the show was back in style this week. Some episodes have felt like 2 jammed together instead of the proper sense of passing pacing but that was restored and gave everything room to breathe.

Maybe she asked Fusco to come to the subway and flip a switch sending her into a dormant mode. Possible anyway.

Reese has had, if not ptsd then at least serious moral qualms with the actions he made in service. It's his work with team machine that have gradually allowed him to come to terms with it. It's not that hard to see a version without that coming to a sad end. Importantly they don't mention how he died, be it suicide or

I liked it. It really owes little to Lost, apart from the setting, and there are none of it's supernatural trappings. I wouldn't mind if they started showing up but there's at least none in this episode. But the cast that could have been grating fall mostly on the endearing side.
The losers aren't irredeemable