benjamuffin
Benjamuffin
benjamuffin

All the scenes with Arnold were the best parts of the episode, IMO.

I just watched the following episode, and I agree. Hope it keeps up the streak!

"Ma'am, that bit doesn't work without some kind of partition."

I've liked these last few episodes (certainly more than the end of S2), but there are still so many gaping plot holes inherent to this premise/plot. Like, why couldn't Savitar just come back and kill Iris again? I also laughed out loud at the arbitrary "a couple hours" endpoint for when the "time paradox hits."

Damn. Every time Michael said something funny, I laughed and got really sad at the same time.

That's a popular theory about the Latin Love Narrator, but he talks a lot about Jane's sex life in a way that would seem weird for a son, so I doubt it. That line stood out to me too, though.

Regina King missing, too, has been a downside to the shortened 8-episode season. But this season has been so flawless otherwise that I barely care.

Yup, that "okay" in response to Matt destroyed me.

Yeah, I don't love Francesca as a character, and I didn't love this episode. Bobby Cannavale was so, so charming and great, though. I love that guy.

This episode made me (a straight guy btw) want to go on a date with Aziz Ansari.

Or he'll be killed off next week.

This season has been so great, and it's building up to such a climax, that it feels like an ending point for the show, not just the season. I'm kind of skeptical about future seasons. I can't see how any future villain will be as perfect as Slade and Chase have been - after this season, Oliver's identity has been

He is, according to IMDB and Nick Tarabay's Twitter.

…it’s hard to imagine a better combo than Malcolm, Talia, and Wilson.

As many problems as the writers have had with Iris this season - making her arc all about Barry, for example, and not giving her much agency - I've actually really liked how Candace Patton plays Iris's slowly resigning to the inevitable outcome of her dying. It'd be a shame if she left the show right as I started to

This was the first episode for me where the acting actually brought down the episode. I loved a lot of the material in this episode (I particularly liked the texting scene), but a lot of the performances prevented the jokes from landing and the emotional moments from hitting as hard.

I didn't mind the 'fan service' in this episode - I mean, we have to see the Saul Goodman persona be created eventually, so it makes sense that we'd see it now - but I do generally much prefer the Jimmy scenes over the Gus/Nacho scenes (and, to a lesser extent, the Mike scenes).

I loved this episode and didn't even think the glowing heart meant Jane's feelings for Rafael were being rekindled until I read this review. (I figured it just meant familial love, which would've made sense.)

I love this show so much. Everything about it, really - the charming low-key acting, the cinematography, the humor (I find myself laughing pretty consistently even though you wouldn't think of it as laugh-out-loud funny). I'm trying to just watch an episode per day, but it was really hard not to keep going after this

I'm wondering if the Jughead-Betty sex scene was interrupted by the Serpents because the writers weren't sure if they wanted to go through with it - I could still see them going in the asexual direction next season, if they wanted to. It does seem notable that we haven't seen a Jughead-Betty sex scene yet and we've