Enough for them to order a fourth season, certainly.
Enough for them to order a fourth season, certainly.
When he's introduced he says he's deliberately waiting to remove them. I don't remember the exact reason he gives but it's something like they represent unfinished business and he'll get them removed when that business is done.
I'm not sure where this is going, but I sure do like the way it's going there.
And Dan's issue with Frank is very clearly that he's sleeping with Elena.
His shirt is bloody when he comes back from rough sex with Elena. At that point I thought for a moment he'd killed her, but no, she's obviously still alive. I'm guessing it's his blood from her clawing at his back or something.
The closest I can come to a logical explanation is that Manny may be in charge of the brujeria, but that they don't necessarily always consult him when they act, such as placing the bounty. Presumably putting them and Constantine at odds would be due to, I dunno, trying to fulfill a prophecy or something. Somehow…
The whole Manny reveal makes no sense in connection with, well, anything in the previous 12 episodes or most of this one, far as I can tell. Except in one scenario: the one where that wasn't Manny, but something pretending to be Manny. I just don't see comedy embodied angel hijinks like we got last episode with "evil…
Constantine's CGI is so bad it's hard to believe it has had any kind of budget on NBC. Syfy'd probably give them more money, not less.
The Red Bones siege made sense to me. Chayton's an incredibly imposing badass, and he's not stupid, but there's been nothing to suggest that he's some sort of mastermind or expert tactitian. He's a pissed off gang leader with a grudge, a small army, and a bunch of military hardware. And if the CADI hadn't had those…
Apparently I'm slow. There's a number of things that I didn't get out of that first pair of episodes that dawned on me in this one. Like, I got that Tyson is dying of liver cancer but it's not until this episode said "you can't die here" that I got why this meant a trip back to the mainland and that Tyson didn't want…
"I'm here aren't I?" may not be a direct answer, but it's an answer. If her power was sourced from Hell and evil, would she be seeing or talking to a genuine bona-fide angel of the Lord? No, no she would not. Or at least not without a little more fiery wrath. And that's the point of Manny's answer.
The opening arc was decent narratively speaking (although I was consistently irritated by the dialogue's take on laughter) with spectacular, stylish art. I was not a fan of the second arc's art which was significantly less distinctive and much harder to follow to boot. I thought the fight scenes especially were pretty…
I was committed to finishing out Mass Effect 3 as a down the line Renegade. A path which is largely just satisfying in the first two games. But in 3? It means betraying and murdering Mordin, and then having to kill Wrex when he realizes what you've done. That was really fucking tough to do. I love both those guys.
I entirely disagree that the game manages to keep him sympathetic. He's barely tolerable -before- he commits a pointless and destablizing act of terrorism and mass murder. It's one of DAII's greatest sins that it so squanders my favorite character in Awakening. (Not to mention ditches Ser Pounce-a-Lot offscreen…
Yeah, I was willing to believe Boyd was going to back down right up until Avery had to rub it in.
I am delighted by the fact that IMDB has a listing for a character, supposedly in all twelve episodes, that is only known as "Drunk Norwegian" (except for the first episode where he is "Town Local Bar Regular").
Y'all are missing the clear and obvious explanation which is that the treatment is experimental because sometimes it turns people into giant pigs. I mean, duh.
I think there's a pretty obvious explanation for that: if someone outside the country where the show is airing hears about it, people have to be talking about it, which…well, it doesn't necessarily mean it's good but it certainly means it's got some reason to pay attention to it.
To do good, not to be good. It's a one word difference but it's a pretty big one.
It's vaguely possible that she'd not been gone long enough to register as anything being out of order, but I would agree your scenario is more likely.