Hells yeah Boxleitner ftw.
Hells yeah Boxleitner ftw.
Remember that season 1 episode where the teenage girl became a telepath and Ivanova and Talia fought over her? She totally freaked out when reading an alien's mind (Natoth). This suggests that telepaths can't be quite as effective in the subtle stuff hired telepaths have to do.
Gethsemane is one of those episodes where I can sympathise with all the criticisms anyone might have, but I kind of love it. I think a lot of that is just Brad Dourif.
Wait you think Marcus would have lived if Ivanova stayed?
As much as I love the elevator scene, I never understood why Londo didn't just offer G'Kar some kind of deal or exception to that rule. Like, if G'Kar helps him survive, he'll release a bunch of prisoners or provide some kind of humanitarian aid somewhere or something.
It is the scene that translated my feelings on the show from like to love. Tragi-comedy is my favorite thing.
I liked the show, not loved it, am not sad or happy it's canceled.
That is supposedly happened IRL.
ugh that is the lamest boss fight. AC2 is my fave PS3 game ever but there is not-bad dialogue that happens during the fight (lol my video game is making fun of Catholics) but you have to purposefully fight terrible to avoid beating up the Pope so quickly you miss it.
Prince covered it and made it not terrible
I really came to hate the wildlings after last night.
I generally side with them- I mean they are stuck out there with freaking ice zombies and they seem to be the only group of people that understand the whole structure of Westeros society is messed up.
Remember that one of the reasons we pity Tyrion is because he doesn't get the credit and responsibility due someone of his intelligence and ability.
Yeah Catelyn's dying image is of her son being slaughtered and then staring at her with regret and helplessness as he dies.
Did they not do the same after Ned's death? I think so but not sure.
I love that the very last thing she did with her life was make sure to stick to keep her word- she vowed to kill Frey's wife if he didn't make her deal and she kept her word, even if it took her last breath and an innocent person was killed.
Well she said straight-up in the beginning that they were gambling everything on this Frey thing, so if you're gonna go all the way might as well go all the way.
"Has anyone that's ahead please tell me yes or no, that the Starks get some sort of vengeance."
Jon Snow, Tyrion and Jamie Lannister, Daenarys, Arya, Bran and Sansa Starks.
7 major "protagonists" right there.
Yes I definitely think the Vorlons were genociding because they didn't have Kosh to moderate them. The whole set of events from Kosh's direct involvement to death to genocide to final conflict was the cycle of things having to hit bottom before resolving.
Sebastian gives a whole speech about how he regrets his arrogance and that the Vorlons re-educated him but the way he plays it- I don't fully buy it? As if he still believes what he believed as Jack the Ripper, just that his original strategy was wrong.