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YouChloroformedTheJanitor!
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I'd add Reynolds as Deadpool and Matt Ryan as John Constantine to that list. Also, slightly off-topic, I hope that the Sandman film will have the good sense to cast Tilda Swinton as Desire of the Endless (assuming that she can still take a role that belongs to a DC property). Most of the decisions they've made so far

If you want solid, thoughtful drama, just read Neil Gaiman's Sandman and/or Mike Carey's Lucifer. I don't think anyone watches this show for its complexity, more because it hits the "so bad its good" nail square on the head.
Although, there have been some genuinely emotionally involving episodes, but those tend to be

Good theory, but I think they're positioning her to be the Elaine Belloc of this series. I.e. she's a nephilim whose powers haven't manifested yet. I'm just spitballing, but I'll take any excuse for this show to get closer to the graphic novels.

Don't get me wrong, I want Superman to appear, but they didn't even really need him to show up via actor for him to play a major part. All they would have had to do was have him not still be affected by Myriad and then show a speeding red-blue blur distracting/drawing away the Kryptonian army. It would have been so

SUPERGIRL

Yeah, but weirdly ageless. I genuinely couldn't tell if she was very early twenties or in her thirties. It really didn't help that she and Bruce were basically the same height, either.

I still maintain that one of the bravest things terminator: the Sarah Connor chronicles ever did was killing Derek the way they did.
One moment he's walking down a hallway and then BAM. Bullet through the brain pan. No build-up, no big showdown. He was just dead, and killed by "water delivery guy" of all terminators.
O

"Shouldn't it be 'Dee-stee-el?'" will always be my favourite line from "Fan Fiction".

Not to mention the severe lack of Crowley. If the show had ended in season 5, he would have appeared in a total of three episodes. Three. That's mind-boggling considering how integral he is to the show now and how great a character he is overall.

Christopher Lee for Destiny of the Endless at around Count-Dooku age. Jesus, he'll be missed.
Also, twenty-something Helena Bonham Carter for Death of the Endless (she'd have to play it a little more low-key than usual, though).

Firefly era Nathan Fillion as Nathan Drake. I honestly can't think of anyone, even now who would be better suited for the role.

I think most people here have already covered how I feel about this episode. The only major disappointment being that, considering the director, we didn't get a night-vision POV action sequence of MM demolishing some DEO agents, punctuated by a thudding electronic baseline.
But, beyond that, I'm pretty satisfied, so I

I don't get this reference, but hopefully it'll be a better big-bad than this season's. I think it speaks to the quality of the main antagonist when they announce that he's going to be absent from three episodes straight this late in the season, and not a single person complains.

I think that ending scene was really helped by the fact that Melissa Benoist has the best damn cry-face in the biz (blows Claire Danes' right out of the fucking water). Seriously, whatever other wonky, inconsistent decisions that the showrunners might have made, casting her was not one of them.

I don't think the show was expecting us to be appalled over Siobhan getting fired nor the reasons behind it. Let's face it, they haven't exactly been subtle about how much we should hate her. The appalling part is, firstly, that the Kara we know and love would be capable of ruining someone like that, and secondly, the

Honestly, that's really fertile ground to explore IMO. It goes back to the whole entitlement thing. What he feels for Hawkgirl clearly isn't love, it's narcissistic jealous infatuation. He doesn't really care for her as a person, he only cares that she isn't his. He believes that he deserves her more than Carter, but

The problem, I think, is the showrunner's inability to decide what kind of threat they want Savage to be. With both Avengers and Flash Season 1, you had a villain that could probably have been taken down pretty easily if a grab-bag of superheroes just started whaling on them. But they were so clever, and so

"The emotional beats will always trump the science nonsense"

As a non-american, I assume this joke was supposed to go way over my head.

I was convinced that they had Illyria'd simmons after "4722 Hours". I guess Ward is the Illyria of this series now, which is great, but also lacking the same gut-punch.