avclub-c969e5b8448311f0452c2a70e4433a74--disqus
Roman Cruz
avclub-c969e5b8448311f0452c2a70e4433a74--disqus

You'll grow out of it. I've learned to accept the fact that several of my peers went on to be far more successful than I could ever hope to be.

I don't see why people are so bothered by Skye. Everything she did was at least in character.

Er, 22 and you're _only_ entering college? Either the French educational system is slow as molasses, or you got held back four years.

Oh bloody Christ. Of course I know they weren't killed an hour before! They show him putting the organs in a fridge. But before fridging, they also show him  trimming and vacuum-sealing each organ, to the point where they're indistinguishable from animal offal. This isn't like Tobias, who has whole human intestines in

I thought it was the eleventh Doctor falling through his own convoluted timestream to save Clara. Either way, "the fall of the Eleventh" is sufficiently addressed.

It's about as hokey as Matt Smith geeking out on fezzes, bowties and stetsons. And honestly, just as awesome.

What "special reserve"? All the cuts used in that dinner party were from the victims. Again, each murder/target-and-recipe selection was intercut with Hannibal trimming and fridging the parts, by himself. We don't see the sous chefs until several scenes (and in-universe, days) later, where they seem to be preparing

So season 9 is basically 24, the comedy version?

The problem is, we've been conditioned by shows like Dawson's Creek, where the teenagers all talk and act like disenchanted thirtysomethings.

Am I the only one who felt that this episode was Bryan Fuller's tribute to his own cancelled show, Pushing Daises? I mean you have one of the Darling Mermaid Darlings, a discussion on cheeses, and a corpse rising up from a slab.

Didn't they intercut scenes of his kills with the actual prep work he did on the organs, well ahead of the actual dinner service?

But aren't there already two plays based on Ted, namely "The Mosby" and "Ted Mosby, Architect"?

I'm suprised that Megan Ganz wrote this episode. Either significant changes were made to her original script, or all the great work she did since season 2 has been done under heavy Harmon supervision.

Unfortunately, Mojo and Longshot are both part of the X-Men line, which is still with Fox.

Blame Warren Ellis for the fire-breathing. That was one of the prescribed powers that Extremis granted in the comic, along with super speed, super strength, and regeneration.

I liked it. Out of all the changes they could've done, it's the most entertaining. It also gives them an avenue for introducing a space magic-wielding Mandarin in the future, should Feige somehow wake up on the right side of the bed and realize that the damned continuity's rife with space magic already.

The breathing fire is straight out of Warren Ellis' Extremis, not Fin Fang Foom. Sorry to disappoint.

It's not a tiny amount of heat, but more likely very localized heat — but still high temperature heat — which is enough to trigger a shutdown. They then bring the inert suit, Rhodey and all, back to their evil lair, where Killian applies even more heat to trigger automatic pilot ejection. Once that business was dealt

As @avclub-0dcb947006a5907469fe111d7d070e29:disqus stated, Tony could very well have designed the suits with accessibility in mind, and not necessarily durability. Then, there's the fact that his suits, made of a titanium alloy, are being exposed to heat greater than said element's melting point (3,000°F). Remember

Since Myles has already addressed items 1, 3 and 4, lets talk about #2. The reason the Iron Patriot stopped working is simply: heat. Extremis gives its users the ability to generate tremendous amounts of localized heat. The Iron Patriot, being a metal shell that contains tons of electronics, is therefore highly