Lothal isn't particularly distinctive as a planet—it's basically the landscape of Naboo. Doesn't seem to be a whole lot of culture to it or anything.
Lothal isn't particularly distinctive as a planet—it's basically the landscape of Naboo. Doesn't seem to be a whole lot of culture to it or anything.
If I remember correctly, "The Plan"—the movie retelling the first two seasons from the Cylons' point of view—reveals the logistics of Shelly Godfrey and her disappearance.
Wiz Khalifa is LITERALLY Chris Traeger's favorite rapper.
Homer really loved that minivan.
According to the Babylon 5 wiki, "J. Michael Straczynski indicated that the premature nova of Earth's sun (the sun's explosion should occur much more than 1,000,000 years in the future) was caused by an enemy force opening jump points within the sun to decrease its mass."
Also from Mass Effect — elcor Hamlet.
I really WANT to like it, and I want it to feel like a continuation of Ultimate Spider-Man's last few issues (which featured all these characters together for the first time), but the dialogue, the stakes, the coincidences involved, the story all fall flat.
SPOILERS
And that's why Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time is so charming.
There is one other clever use of the narrative device—on one of Varric's later missions, he slaughters his way through a bunch of bad guys and his brother apologizes and cries that he was always jealous of Varric, before the Chantry woman interrupts and says he's embellishing to make himself look good.
I'll take that over "Haven't played this game for a month, how am I supposed to do this again?"
The Lost Missions kind of encapsulate the show as a whole—really great storylines that reach for characterization and bigger feelings juxtaposed with weird adventures or flat characters. (This cartoon NEVER made Padme or politics work, despite all its efforts, and Jar Jar Binks remained a strange anomaly.) There's…
A fine, fantastic game soured by an unfinished ending. (Yes, I'm aware of the mods, etc., but still.)
I remember watching that arc and thinking it could've legitimately ended with the general killing all the clones and nobody being the wiser. Heavy stuff.
If they could follow up with Cad Bane, the other good original character they did, I'd be pretty happy too.
That arc included an episode in which the one non-droid character (a small frog-like general) literally tried to kill himself. Surreal.
Yeah, "deciding" to be a vampire slayer with no training was a bizarre choice. If somebody was going to try to be a male slayer first, it seems like it should've been Xander. Heck, even the Initiative guys back in S4 had plenty of problems killing vampires without the advantage of surprise, and they were hopped up on…
So glad someone else hated "Billy the Vampire Slayer." I wanted to like it, but it felt REALLY pandering, and then shoehorned into the main story later on.
Read that last bit in Archer's voice. Great comment/avatar synergy.
George C. Scott or go home.