Unless they're super hot? Your argument holds up better without that phrase.
Unless they're super hot? Your argument holds up better without that phrase.
And the withering stare she gave Alicia just before talking to Will. Yikes!
Elsbeth is L&G's secret weapon.
Blah blah blah zombie noise blah blah…
Sneak preview.
At the time I am writing this, there are already 250 comments. What more can be said?
—I liked the review, Zack.
Because you, like the survivors, are used to seeing people and zombies killed on this show. You are inured to human response.
Good sleuthing, Doppelgangirl.
It'll be fun, no matter what. Let's keep watching!
Sure. How would you go about doing that?
Kole's a young, good-looking guy. Plays smart, arrogant types. This would be an interesting new dynamic. Hard to see how Neal will get the better of him, but he will definitely not like it that some junior agent is telling him what to do, methinks.
Redrum is so compelling—I would've given it an A by virtue of casting and execution. Much simpler than some plots, but so well-acted. Morton's got superior chops. Great use of close-ups on his face.
Redrum reminded me of Monday, too—one of my all-time favorite X-Files.
Yes, it's good that they don't try to "replace" Mulder with a new character. It's also interesting that Scully is now imbued with insights into X-Files phenomena and can guide Doggett—a near role reversal, taking in the years she played the skeptic to Mulder's gullibility.
I didn't find Invocation satisfying as a monster-of-the-week episode because the monster was ill-defined. The child was strange, but not a monster. Ronald Purnell was creepy and weird, but in the end, was revealed as a tortured soul who only wanted to help Billy, (and who knew Billy was dead and feared his ghost.) The…
Agree—the use of the lullabye is effective and creepy, starting with the soprano descant behind the merry-go-round scene at the fair. The lyrics are about pretty horses, so it dovetails perfectly with the merry-go-round horses and also the little horse used as a lure for Josh at the end:
Instead of asking Jake, "Why are you here?" Liv should be asking him, "What would you like for dinner?" The poor guy's been in a pit for several months. Give him a Gettysburger! Now!
Presently, Jake is the only character who seems to resist Scandalspeak and talk like a human. Resist, Jake!
Jeesh.
My favorite scene by far. More David!