I NEVER watch procedurals, but perhaps the show is tailored for that audience to get their minds blown? This can only be the case if the quality and shock value in procedurals is worse than The Following. I just don't know firsthand.
I NEVER watch procedurals, but perhaps the show is tailored for that audience to get their minds blown? This can only be the case if the quality and shock value in procedurals is worse than The Following. I just don't know firsthand.
Or, to put a fine point on it, a large percentage of the male population can relate to a male protagonist who has a female companion that acts as an obstacle to his goals and desires.
I agree with what another commenter said a few weeks back, that this show has all of the ingredients to be amazing, but it has a bad cook who keeps fucking up the recipe.
I'm trying to hate-watch it, but am instead finding that I hate watching it.
The Following just drops violence into the plot like bad clichés. The people making this show don't seem to know how to use violence so that it effects the audience the way they want it to.
The "wife is cultist!" revelation and the "Now?" neckstab were timed like clockwork. Hard to imagine anyone but Mulderette being able to set those series of events in motion. It could not have been a coincidence.
On the contrary, the violence seems cartoonish to me, but perhaps that is because the show's reality feels so very contrived.
Stop talking about Emma with the doors open, fake fake gay couple! She's already flexed her master eavesdropping skilz!
I was actually bored with this episode. It made me want to go outside and shovel snow.
I can't help it, I'm just amused that your rationalization for seeing Warm Bodies is several orders of magnitude more complex than your actual review of the feature.
Ok, I'll translate for you:
Oh, and Necrophilia.
Dead People. Zombies are dead people. Literally walking corpses.
@avclub-d019eb089e65903455cc52308f00b997:disqus I'm guessing that double agents from a major adversary are quite valuable to an intelligence agency. Being able to have an asset that deep in the enemy's espionage infrastructure without having to incur the initial investment of time and money to get your own plant in…
Didn't the whole Valerie Plame affair teach us that FBI/CIA agents are never supposed to talk to anyone about their jobs, even family? I think this is especially true for those involved with the intelligence services. Emmerich just comes right out and says he is in counterintelligence. I'm fairly certain that is a big…
I agree. I never really understood why Kira loved Odo back. It seemed one sided and wish fulfillmenty.
Paris is the capital of the Federation.
San Francisco is where Starfleet is Headquartered.
I may not have phrased the point perfectly, but Odo does endeavor to become more human on some level - a level that members of his own species wouldn't even fathom. Namely [SPOILERS] pursuing a romantic relationship with a solid!
Season 7 has some good moments, but it mostly just makes me sad, on several different levels. Sadness that comes mostly from pity and disappointment.
It always seemed to me like Odo was a successor in the line of Spock and Data, who's confusion with humanity just got old for me after a while.