disquscveqaajdkj--disqus
Sp33df0rc3
disquscveqaajdkj--disqus

I came here to say the same thing.

This. The changes to Offred's character are becoming more pronounced as the series progresses and I'm not sure what the value is. They seem to be missing what made the book so good, and are focusing much more on developing the world than on the story.

The book also has more of the lower class present, but it's missing in the series. As someone mentioned elsewhere we've not seen things like econowives and such which help flesh out a lot of this world.

Am I the only one who thought the Roy as Arrow episode was really strong? I thought that was a high point for the 3rd season.

But very likely Jason Todd.

BUT what if this was all a fake out and it's not actually the premiere and that's part of the april fools?

I've seen a theory floated that Chase is both Vigilante and Prometheus, and the rooftop scene was really in his head as his two sides were fighting for control, with Prometheus winning out. Chase has been shown to be psychotic and unstable, so having him have multiple personalities wouldn't be a massive stretch - and

I think the argument would be that they are both trained military personnel, and that the problem is non-military people getting guns, but i don't think that helps much, just a thought.

Marriage, but she dies at the reception.

I love that Rip is the secret fourth (fifth?) member of the Legion. This series is really fun and it's quickly taking over top spot for me, although Arrow was getting there.

I'm surprised that of all the comparisons, no one is using Gossip Girl. I feel like this has Gossip Girl in its DNA - possibly because it tapped into the Betty/Veronica dynamic for Serena and Blair, but it has the same kind of prominent parent dynamics, and it has the same kind of dark undercurrent of secrets and

not only that, but the thing that Ragman compared Prometheus to (dybbuk) is a jewish demon that is the dislocated soul of a dead person…sooooooo…..

I really like that they had the Wally-centric episode about him coming into his own focus on him fighting a Wally-specific villain from the comics.

They look like they'll be showing a battle next episode. Probably need to juggle budget.

I get the sense that Lagertha is constantly talking about her relationship with Ragnar as a way of establishing legitimate rule over the vikings.

better than episode 16? I feel like that episode was a series high.

Honestly? Probably a masterpiece/best version of holmes ever….even including the final shot would have been fine, since Holmes survived in the original stories too.

What about an 1814-set fantasy mini-series? Have you watched Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell from the BBC?

I'm not sure if it's a spoiler so….

I really wanted that to work out :(