It does. Pretty much every episode review so far, there've been tons of people in the comments complaining about it.
It does. Pretty much every episode review so far, there've been tons of people in the comments complaining about it.
Exactly, loved that they said "no" to "another Bechdel," then the conversation pivoted to a man.
I like a lot of the ideas in this show, but I'm not sure it's quite working for me yet. I like a lot of the choices, like how they're handling Evie's attitudes towards Xavier's apocalyptic theory, and how they use the premise to explore regular relationships (apocalypse theory as character quirk, like the reviewer…
Stopped watching this show at the end of S3 (meant to come back, since I really liked the S3 finale, but just got sidetracked by other TV). Worth revisiting once I have time? How do these two seasons compare to S3? I recall mostly hating the tiresome Neverland plot and mostly enjoying the second half of the season.
Top guess for me is probably Maggie (who would then lose the baby), but I could also see Abraham or even Glenn for the fakeout.
Although Damian has been around for centuries or whatever, right?
Sounds good! It'll be cool to see someone who's actually young teaming up with the Avengers.
The Internet did a "great job," etc
Not a film, but one of the things I've always liked about Breaking Bad is that many of the tensest scenes are in the daylight (especially Ozymandias).
I love this show so much.
Great reference.
Now they just need to do a 2-week Marvel Marathon including all of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., Daredevil, and Agent Carter.
I liked Thor: The Dark World a lot more than Thor, and thought all the Loki stuff in that movie was done great…until the last scene. Can we kill off some of these excess characters?
Thought this episode was odd but funny. The sentimentality was a little forced but still somewhat effective.
I'm a bit indifferent at this point, and Rowan bugs the fuck out of me, but I liked most of this episode. The ending scene was great, and I actually liked the scene on Sally Langston's show (although the body language reading was pretty dumb). This season could end pretty well, and maybe the fifth season will begin…
I loved this episode. Frankie was great, Elroy is fitting in better, and overall I thought it was maybe the funniest of the season so far.
Honestly, there weren't any other lumberjack comments on the first page, so it didn't come up. It was just a little random comment I felt like commenting, but I'm glad you got super angry about it for no reason.
Don Draper becomes a lumberjack?
I loved it. I love that it was optimistic. I love that they're still in Alexandria for a bit, agreeing to work together to combine their best attributes. I love that all the major characters lived. I love that it was still so tense even though no one had to die. I'm totally satisfied, honestly.
This episode was gold. The dinner sketch was a work of art, as was the cop sketch.