avclub-915de2c055ae2c9039d8e5a84b653eed--disqus
judas503
avclub-915de2c055ae2c9039d8e5a84b653eed--disqus

Right on!

"Where are the rest of the drugs going?"

"…which means that we can do the things that other people can't. I offered to kill you for detective Carter many times and she always said no. She was good to the very end. I don't think she liked me but I liked her very much. So I consider it my responsibility to fix the particular problem that is you Officer."

This sounds somewhat like "The Sarah Jane Adventures", with Sarah Jane Smith and K-9.

Kevin Chapman should have his own impromptu comedy show.

It has been the most "underdog" show in recent history.

I watched only a few episodes of Alias. It didn't really make an impact on me. Fringe was very good, from a sci-fi point of view. But PoI brought great cinematography in it. It was what Nolan told Caviezel at the beginning.

Not to mention "Zero Day" and "God Mode".

With his own Batman-esque voice.

I know that! Best shows are the ones which have all their ends tied up neatly. It was merely an observation.

Deus Ex Machina's outro was the best!

Ample time for a better setup of the Ice-9 heist, more characterization for Jeff Blackwell and could've given Fusco two or three episodes to go rogue before being clued into what's going on.

Have you ever considered that fact that shows with which J.J. Abrams was tied to never lasted more than 5/6 seasons? I mean Lost managed 6. Fringe, Alias and PoI all got five. Almost Human never made it to second season.

Tall, dark and deranged.

Yeah, people often miss that season 2 had some incredible episodes. Other than Relevance, "Prisoner's Dilemma" was a terrific episode. The unsuspecting among the audience actually learned some game theory from it.

The problem with Reese's characterization lies in the fact that he's a man of few words. So he never got those lengthy, verbose monologues that are so befitting of Finch and Root. It's funny because, most of the times Reese's facial expressions around Finch makes him look like his bodyguard.

The outro sequence to "RAM". That was truly the first experimental episode of the show, and they nailed all of the succeeding ones.

The usual 22 episode in season five would've better served the story. But heck, the finale was unparalleled.

This episode, in all honesty, marks an end of an era. I don't think we'll ever get to see such a quality show on network TV. There were so many great moments in the episode, but none can beat the smile across John's face when he sees Harold finally walking away.

Or it's most likely what many people think- Greer thought Finch kept the password to himself, brought him to that chamber and, thinking they are the most valuable pieces in the arena, decided to "off" both of them.