I saw him on Mad Men and said "Hey, it's the guy from Lost!" Nowadays it's "Hey, it's that guy from everything!"
I saw him on Mad Men and said "Hey, it's the guy from Lost!" Nowadays it's "Hey, it's that guy from everything!"
Liz dated Fishbach???
Her signoff post-elimination confirmed this. She admitted to having no clue what happened (and some weird pseudo-smart phrase about people lying amounting to nothing.)
Hadn't heard that interesting tidbit, Even if he would, the character is also off limits now because of the movies.
Well, more like 1/3, since hour long shows aren't actually an hour long, unless you're Kurt Sutter or something.
Yes, watch the whole thing. Just search for the correct order (IE the movie isn't the first event that takes place, etc)
There's just a couple arcs that get a bit wonky when a character comes back or what not.
Like a game of telephone, but a TV show where people's jobs are at stake.
If TV functioned by letting each episode's writer decide the plot (likely with big twists to "make a name for themselves"), we basically wouldn't have TV anymore.
You might be already, but a tip: watch TCW in chronological order
Apparently it was a combo of "it's Ezra's vision of him" and an homage to an old Kenner Yoda toy.
Not sure the Grand Inquisitor was specifically a temple guard, but a very interesting reveal that he was a Jedi in some form. Jason Isaacs nails that role (I first thought it was James Arnold Taylor using his muffled Plo Koon voice).
As always, this show is better when it skews Clone Wars. Probably would have gone A-…
Hope this doesn't take Katrina Law from Arrow. As the show gets dumber, they need the "outsider who points out how dumb the regulars are" more than ever.
I'd pretty strongly disagree. The guy who plays Brian was good, Colin Salmon was hilarious, Noel Wells has to be nominated, Rachel's grandma was great and the woman who was stalked quickly created a character to be interested in. His parents aren't great but they aren't really intended to be, since they're actually…
The first foreboding sign was her saying she has low impulse control, likes to chase shiny objects and tends to think "ya, that's a good idea!" anytime she's told something.
Washington *nailed* that moment. They've really done well to make Jaha and Alie not come off like a BSG retread.
I actually like that the show could explore a relationship that really only makes sense out of circumstance (like an arranged marriage). It's a lot of young people down there and they know what each other has been through. To have a pairing where they just go "I'm tired, why not" makes a lot of sense, really.
Nah, that's already bookmarked for a Season 5 episode of Rick and Morty
Spot.IM?
It's not what she did, but when. She walks out *right after* he records the message for his son (a goodbye message from his end basically). She tells him he made the right decisions, even, and then gets all high and mighty with zero compassion (or nuance). It could have worked to say "Love you Ollie, just don't think…