"One Year Later" was good, but for me, nothing beats: Apollo in handcuffs, Roslin in prison and Sharon shooting The Old Man! It was perfect. Adama's life hangs in the balance. Sharon is a Cylon. And the government has just been dissolved.
"One Year Later" was good, but for me, nothing beats: Apollo in handcuffs, Roslin in prison and Sharon shooting The Old Man! It was perfect. Adama's life hangs in the balance. Sharon is a Cylon. And the government has just been dissolved.
Right? RIGHT???
Battlestar Galactica Season Three:
This one is up there.
I could also argue for "One Year Later"
As far as Buffy is concerned, I'll have to go with this one:
On a scale of Dean to Sam, how clueless do you think they are?
Look I don't make the MPAA's archaic rules I just point them out.
Also her turn in The Cabin in the Woods.
Best scrapbooking class
Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Season 6, Episode 21: Two to Go.
I'm going with Zane Donovan from Eureka. He went from a (kinda) scrawny nerdy dude to the Hulk. He's like the Trent Reznor of science. (ETA to give the character some credit since the change allowed for his plot-driven transformation from roguish sidekick to roguish hero, story wise).
Caroline Forbes. From shallow, cheerleading, perpetual victim
Seriously, how had no one yet posted this?
Fat Apollo for life. It was interesting character development, until they made him lose all of the weight and regain his cut physique in one episode, ugh.
I believe Klaus is his own plot device. Every time he gets what he wants, he throws a party, drowns his prize in booze, sets it on fire, and pisses on the ashes. For an encore he whines about everyone hating him for their third degree burns.
Not genre but, Claire Underwood of House of Cards both scares and inspires me.
It's an issue of probability theory (edit: I'm lying, it's actually an issue of set theory). Let's say there are 100 people in the world. 10 own a gun. So the chances that Bob owns a gun would be 10%. Now let's say 10 also hunt deer, but 8 of those hunting deer also own a gun, and the other 2 use their hands or…
Yeah, I put her whole Lee/Sam thing into that whole "she can't actually have anything or anyone she loves." Neither of them fully see her for who she is, and they both want to hang on to her and constrain her. Lee is worse about this than Sam is, hence her seemingly impulsive decision to marry Sam — she knows that now…
Am I the only one who thinks True Detective is now completely overrated? I thought the first 5 episodes were amazing, but 6 and 7 have really started to piss me off. I wish it would just get back to Rust mumbling sweet nihilistic nothings, with a couple of awesome shootouts thrown in for no real reason.