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Fattyspice
avclub-f29de078649d5dcc1ba12a84d1757670--disqus

He'll probably go to visit Detective Lance in the hospital and get arrested on the spot. Its the Arrow way.

There also needs to be a Person of Interest season 3 review, considering that those are two of the best seasons of TV I have ever seen.

A…arrowed?

Detective Lance strongly reminds me of Samuel Vimes from the Discworld Series. I would love to see him go up against a dragon.

Because the people who get paid to write these shows are the same people who call people like us when they need help fixing their computers. Its the way of the world.

I don't give a fuck what anybody else says, the two best shows on TV right now are a CBS 'procedural' and a superhero drama made by CW.

I've thought that Sara/Sin would be a great couple. I can never tell if they're actually going for that in the show.

When this show started, it was trying way too hard to be like Nolan's Batman. It moved away from that, and embraced its over the top comic nature, and now it has come full circle to having earned that vibe.

Well in this case she actually had a purpose: she wanted to save those people. In the season finale she just wanted to get her papers…or something like that.

"If you elect me to be your GHOST MAYOR, I promise that terrorists will be allowed to hijack the airwaves in a grandiose stunt only twice a year, tops."

The tension in this episode was so sharp that you could use it to cut the hand off an evil scientist.

In most other shows, the last few minutes would have been a complete mess. Arrow on the other hand manages to touch on three important plot points in the last two minutes, and does so competently and compellingly. As usual, I can't wait to see where things go from here.

edit.

Personally, I think that this has been HIMYM's best season in years, and this is the best episode thus far.

People think that Moffat is a misogynist because of how he writes his female characters. I'm not sure what the British tabloids have to do with that.

They've made such a big point thus far that Mirakiru makes people behave erratically that it would have been even more ridiculous for Roy to approach the situation rationally.

Characterization? Characterization? What characterization is there in Sherlock? What arcs, what emotions are explored using the unique template of this character? I've only seen the first two seasons, but from what I've observed, there is literally one and only note of characterization, and that is the same

There is nothing more cerebral than dismissing a show out of hand merely because it utilizes a certain style of storytelling. That model, by the way, is far more similar to the format of Doyle's work than that of Sherlock.

Thank you for the clarification. I read all of those stories when I was thirteen or so, and many of the details are very hazy.

Elementary is far more cerebral in tone than Sherlock. It really isn't even close. In order to appreciate Elementary, you must look beyond the procedural format and examine how the elements of each case have been used to shed further light on the characters of Holmes, Watson or their friends. In every single episode,