jack wagon
jack wagon
"They ran over my dad's camera!" is up there with "It belongs in a museum!" in the pantheon of really stupid reasons to get yourself killed.
Ugh, this show has so many really stupid moments in it, I've gotta find a site where the discussion isn't just fanboy/-girl squeeing.
Ugh, it was awful. They had three separate "person storms out of room in a huff, someone else says 'I'll go talk to them'" moments. It's like they have this book of Arrowverse Tropes with a mandate they use at least seven of them per episode.
Yeah, casting as a black woman as Hawkgirl made her storyline soooo interesting…
I agree. Winn has a snarky smugness this season which completely clashes with the socially-awkward timidity they established as his character in season 1.
Wow, you people were so enchanted by the Flash/Supergirl crossover that not a single one of you noticed the complete absurdity of them bringing Siobhan to the Super Secret DEO headquarters? And not only that, they let her walk around UNESCORTED past their prisoner detention cells?
What? They recognized her before Banshee even used her power. It was ridiculous.
Imagine how many impressions your tweet would have gotten if all those media organizations had actually, you know, retweeted you instead of just stealing the photo for their own tweet then adding a largely-ignored "via" credit…
Just to follow up: they did not, in fact, rectify the episode order when putting the show on Netflix.
It can be two things.
Oh my god was this a garbage episode. Making the "Speed Force" a sentient being was akin to introducing midichlorians in Star Wars. Why???
2 Dead 2 Pool
Oh, and one more thing: wtf is with the vertical televisions. How on Earth(-2) did screen technology develop vertically rather than horizontally (which makes sense based on our eye placement)?
I enjoyed this episode for the same reasons as everyone else, but does it seriously not bother anyone else how non-sensical the very basic concept of doppelgangers is on this show?
It was the one thing the show did that really surprised me. There wasn't a whole lot else story- and character-wise we haven't seen in other shows/movies.
It would have been far more satisfying if he had been flayed alive and hung upside down outside the castle, and only THEN having to face the dogs.
I was hoping Jessica's immunity had something to with one of Kilgrave's suggestions to her: at one point he tells her that he wants her to choose. Before the virus reveal, I had thought he had inadvertently created her immunity by giving her the choice to obey his commands or not.
He could kill with a radio; the hospital scene made this clear. It was one of his upgrades.
Wow, now I won't spend hours having to scroll thru movies on Netflix!