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Khan Vitton Lulurouge
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I don't think that the character and actor of Luke Cage are the weakest part in the series. But god Mike Colter's acting is wooden and bland. His 'inspirational' speech this episode was delivered so meh and he kept speaking in that calm manner when it was supposed to be hopeful and encouraging I wondered whether the

Good that Taye Diggs has another cookie to nibble on.

So Spiderman in episode 1-2, Daredevil in episode 3 and Captain America/Iron Man in episode 4. When will I see Luke Cage? And will the action ever start to roll?

Finally a bad guy who does what I'm always wondering why tv villains aren't. Just blow the good guy up. No complicated schemes.

I feel like Ford's endgame in Westworld is to become god. Him looking at the steeple talking about the new game that he has in mind and his conversations with his child host version. And the MIB is a host programmed to be the devil stirring things up in his god game.

Damn I didn't think Pops was supposed to be a Obi Wan so his death actually caught me off guard.

It's Doctor Who with inconsistent time travel rules, weird CGI and two dick jokes in the first three minutes.

The weakest MCU series premiere so far. For a pilot the episode was too slow paced and didn't hook me up on its storylines and characters. Mahershala Ali was ok but reminded me of a discount Wilson Fisk.

Narratively it was a good way to make the audience choose sides with the hosts and bypass a pilot's flaw of lacking characterization and backstories for being invested in characters. It also emphasizes what that amusement park is supposed to be. A place where the darkest desires get acted out without real life

It was smart but also kinda predictable after seeing all the flies in the first minutes. I knew Dolores was gonna smack a fly in her quest for sentiency.

Can't wait for more. A few minor issues like disjointed overdramatic editing and the repetitive/obvious question about the hosts' sentiency. But it was a great hour of television and after 1 episode I think HBO has produced something really great and compelling to watch again after Game of Thrones.

Just ask the freaking kids whether they're afraid of him and the answers will flock in. Team Angelina is going for an all kill. Brad better channel his old Fight Club days.

It was utter shit but I want to see Mariah Carey and Taraji P. Henson being shady together so badly that I will keep on watching.

So you could pretty much sum up season 2 as a big trailer for season 3. Practically nothing happened in plot progression, questions were only answered superficially and still many and even more unanswered questions. It's still one of the most interesting and compelling shows out there but expectations and resolutions

Now I understand why people freaked out when Richard Burton/Elizabeth Taylor and Laurence Olivier/Vivien Leigh divorced.

They should have aired the two part season finale at once. I'm getting really impatient with so many open questions remaining and watching side characters having angsty monologues about loneliness instead of getting to the good stuff.

Damn the last 15 minutes of this episode got me off the rails. Now the only thing left to be done is to watch the finale and enjoy its landing. The Tyrell mystery will be the turning point whether it will be a fantastic or just a good season. If they nail it the build up anticipation will release itself as the icing

Thank god this episode didn’t end on a cliffhanger like the last one. Which turned out to be nothing anyway since Cisco and Darlene don’t really see her hitting him with a bat as something big. Yet that cliffhanger made it seem like some big change event for Darlene’s arc. It brought nothing than an awesome camera

No Elliot this week and I'm surprisingly ok with it. Darlene didn't surprise me with the killing but I wished it would have been a more established character than the retcon-like Susan Jacob.

Although I found 17 minutes sitcom reminiscing a bit long I still enjoyed the very well done 4:3 screen ratio, classic special effects and shoddy green-screens that were common in 90s sitcoms.