She knows Ramse from her past, she knows thats the day he goes back in time because 1987 Ramse will have told her that she gave him the necklace on that day.
She knows Ramse from her past, she knows thats the day he goes back in time because 1987 Ramse will have told her that she gave him the necklace on that day.
This review reads like you wrote it as a forum post and not as a professional critic.
I don't agree with saving the wife at all. She made a relatively selfless deal but then she tries to reneg on it, and she offered that record up without any hesitation, resulting in a lot of deaths, from Bernie to every last person in that club and whoever got shot at the station.
I liked the episode and Penguin's antics, but if the aim of hte episode was to make me despise Barbara, it succeeded. Nothing worse than someone doing the opposite of what they are told, in spite of everything they have been told, and derailing an otherwise awesome plan.
I don't think the infection is transmitted by water, there must be a dead zombie or two in some of these water sources. My issue with that scene is that there HAD to be a zombie under water, not just for story purposes but purely going into that water which was unclear was a stupid, stupid move for these supposed…
It's fairly clear that Bob was bitten, why else was he crying? He's going to get the tainted meat line.
Che doesn't seem to speak clearly enough to be suitable for that job.
The episode was undercut by the disappointment of watching the running time dwindle to the point that the credits HAD to come up and Lady Stoneheart still hadn't appeared.
I had an issue with Littlefinger's scene, since him not getting tried for Lysa's murder rested on the testimony of Sansa, whom he apparently couldn't predict would actually side with him. I guess the point is that for his love of Catelyn, he made an uncharacteristic mistake by pushing Lysa to save Sansa?
They've explicitly said that isn't the case this season and that the final episode is as eventful as the ninth.
The scene between Oberyn and Tyrion was deserving of an A- at least. For all his privilege, Tyrion cannot make the people he loves love him, except for Jaime, and were he born into a different family like the Martell's, he might have had a nice life.
THey introduced the White Walkers at the end of Season 2 and we've seen them like once since then. Stoneheart will show up at the end of the season as the equivalent cliffhanger, doesn't mean she will be resolved in the next episode.
According to these reviews, every episode between episode 1 and the finale are "table setting". Stories not wrapping up every episode is not table setting, it's an ongoing story.
B+? Most series' pray for a capping episode like that. I always appreciate that AD, despite what one must assume a lower budget than the Simpsons and FG always explores new environments/character designs. It was a solid episode and it deserved an A- at least just for the wormhole sequence.
Also, if you watch the end goodbyes and read Maya's lips, it looks like she's saying "Sorry about the Herpes" to Paul Rudd :P
DAT Vogelcheck skit. Hilarious. I'm glad there was breaking in it, that's what makes it especially memorable. I'd love to see that with a non-cast member to see them just lose their shit.
Kate McKinnon's facial expressions during the camp skit gave me Garth flashbacks
THe office scene was so bad ass, targets a guys femoral artery, kicks one guys ass, spin kicks the other then finishes it up with an 80's action hero one-liner as the first guy pulls the scalpel out of his leg, guaranteeing he bleeds to death, "Oh, he shouldn't have done that".
That was a stellar episode and Roger was ace throughout.
That animated dragon bit was painful, and do we assume something got cut because I've not seen 2 minute+ long credits in a long time.