Besides, the reveal can go a lot smoother now that they can show her Rosalee turning into the cutest chipmunk, instead of Monroe turning into a giant bad wolf.
Besides, the reveal can go a lot smoother now that they can show her Rosalee turning into the cutest chipmunk, instead of Monroe turning into a giant bad wolf.
Because they're addicted to games. Even the way they create their names as anagrams is a game to them.
Two? It's actually 4 characters!
And 2 of them are evil!
The other eyebrow?
…and yet, the mysterious, older bald man introduced himself to Monroe as a main character in this episode too.
I think that if she knew that The Flash really exists in Central City, she would have felt ashamed of making that awful pun!
Most episodes, especially this one, are like a constant seesaw of B+ moments (sometimes A) (that you really feel could have easily been A+ moments), and abysmal F moments.
The former manager of the subway is probably in the list.
My first thought when she was finally able to walk over the pit into her normal living room was, "she's going to dash to the kitchen to drink some water!," but no; apparently not drinking anything for more than a day doesn't make people go thirsty in Portland.
It doesn't look like the show wants to ever make it as simple as, "ah! these were really the good guys and these were the bad guys all along!" for either or the two groups. However, there is one very specific (and very huge) thing near the end that adds an enormous amount of perspective while still not being exactly…
I can totally see how, if a character were called George Washington, -nobody- would comment on it.
She is also a 10x better hero for me.
An office worker with no special training or powers is told directly that the last person investigating that mystery (a security expert) was murdered. She has no pressure nor any personal stake to accept. Still, she did not hesitate for a minute.
She is also a 10x better hero for me.
An office worker with no special training or powers is told directly that the last person investigating that mystery (a security expert) was murdered. She has no pressure nor any personal stake to accept. Still, she did not hesitate for a minute.
<<"I want to be swept up in the magic of it all, to be transported in that manufactured yet satisfying way a good romance can offer. If a show is so determined not to seduce me, why should I be invested in this couple?">>
<<"I want to be swept up in the magic of it all, to be transported in that manufactured yet satisfying way a good romance can offer. If a show is so determined not to seduce me, why should I be invested in this couple?">>
I actually fully expect that Jeremy's tattoo and the sword lead directly to Professor Shane's Cthulhu tomb and Cthulhu is one and the same with Elena's "cure".
I actually fully expect that Jeremy's tattoo and the sword lead directly to Professor Shane's Cthulhu tomb and Cthulhu is one and the same with Elena's "cure".
She was a minor and he's 200 years old. It was rape.
The difference in mental sophistication between a high school person and someone who has lived four lifetimes is too great for consent to even be possible.
She was a minor and he's 200 years old. It was rape.
The difference in mental sophistication between a high school person and someone who has lived four lifetimes is too great for consent to even be possible.
I started reading the review during the last commercial break. Of course, as soon as I read that the ending made the reviewer angry, I stopped reading and went back to wait patiently for the show to anger me with its unspoiled ending.