avclub-79e61e60dd63ed268851c669c826f43d--disqus
darkxaero
avclub-79e61e60dd63ed268851c669c826f43d--disqus

I actually thought that this was easily the best episode of the season so far. Admittedly, that's not saying much but it was thoroughly entertaining and Damian Lewis was in excellent form. There were some cringe worthy moments early on in the episode (that speech scene was awful) but the rest of the episode stayed

Have you seen both?

Mozart in the Jungle and Man in the High Castle are both good shows.

I have only seen three episodes so far but this review sounds very harsh to me. It's nothing great but it's pretty entertaining, and relies well on its cast to make it work. I can see that the main characters constantly screwing up throughout 10 episodes is going to get repetitive & really annoying at some point, but

You're acting like what TW3 did is similar to the Dead or Alive series. The alternative costumes for the female characters weren't exploitative at all.

Mozart in the Jungle is definitely worth watching.

The first season of this show was one of the best TV surprises for me this year. It's hard to define what genre it really falls in, but whatever it was, I found it really entertaining. I hope second season is as good as the first.

I would add Thursday (starring Thomas Jane & Aaron Eckhart) to the list. A small, flawed indie film, but ultimately, enjoyable.

Great first season, and the show has been a great surprise for me this year. I didn't know anything about it until it aired, and for me, it has been the best new show of Fall 15 season. Here's hoping we get a second season from BBC.

The show's trivia explained this. It said that after the actual WWII, the yen became very weak with Japan being in a bad state. But in the show's reality, Japan is victorious, and the yen gets stronger.

He wasn't.

First of all, Philip Winchester isn't Australian, and both Winchester & Stapleton were great on Strike Back. I haven't seen The Player but they were far from bland in their Strike Back roles. I did catch the Blindspot pilot though, and Stapleton's character (at least in the pilot) was the stock FBI agent character.

No one uses surface? Really?

And how is that Don's fault? He thought he was doing her a favor by cutting ties with someone that she despised. She still retained her status as a partner and didn't have to work with that guy anymore. He was also the only one who was against the idea of her sleeping with that guy in the first place. Joan's

Correct, it's a callback to season 1 where Rachel confides to her sister that she's having an affair with a married man over a phone call. The sister is against the idea (hence her reaction to Don's divorce last night)

I think season 1 Proctor was a villain you could genuinely root for. But after what transpired in season 2 and this season? Hell no. Still a great, multi layered villain, but like Hood, I want to see him gone now.

That can happen now anyway since they broke up.

That's not true. Season 5 had plenty of great humor. Jay and Roscoe were hilarious.

So is it safe to assume that only Siobhan knows Hood's secret in Banshee Sherrif's Department? The files were mailed to the Banshee SD, but I guess Siobhan got to it first? Unfortunately, this might mean that Siobhan could die this season. Hood would never kill her but convenient writing will.

He was a good Nite Owl though. Not his fault that the character is supposed to be the most regular superhero/vigilante character you can find.