Maybe one of those Nazi rocket scientists we hired after the war brought HYDRA to NASA.
Maybe one of those Nazi rocket scientists we hired after the war brought HYDRA to NASA.
Lester F. Freamon loves antiques. The F. stands for fucking.
It retrospect, could have been great.
It retrospect, could have been great.
Mac Beth?
Somebody clue me in… What is Max Rager's connection with the zombies?
The reason Will is seen as a death sentence to the Fitz-Simmons ship is that Simmons been one saying no, because she's not ready or whatever. But she ready really quickly when she met Will. So her "no but maybe later" is starting like a way to let Fitz down easily.
It's closer to an hour, and either way, talking about how the moon was getting heavier could have been cut from the episode without hurting it.
I disagree. At least the TARDIS has been explained in the context show. It's bigger on the inside because the most technologically advanced race in the universe has the technology to make it so. Same for time travel.
The intestines are not inexplicable. They are explicitly Nicholas's. He was wearing a light tan shirt, and the guts were coming out of a torso wearing light tan. Glenn was wearing a different color.
Yes, Nicholas was wearing a light tan shirt. Glenn was wearing something else. The guts were coming out of a torso in a light tan shirt.
But on the other hand, it's brilliant direction to have a bad actor play an incompetent gangster. I've thought Frank was in over his head since the first episode, and VV's natural in-over-his-headness is what sold it to me.
1) You yourself noted that it was odd that they made him leader, when just as he shows up, people start dying.
> readily accept the Governor as their leader even though he's been with them for a few days and his arrival just so happens to coincide with the death of two of their leaders.
They need to make Truble a cop, so that she has access to the kind of legalized brutality Nick does.
Anything Jack Black touches is a disaster.
Nobody is saying that a show is good just because it is novelistic. What (smart) critics are saying is that a novelistic show has the opportunity to work at its own pace, without the constraint of having "something" happen at regular intervals. Regularity is boredom. Regularity pushes shows into maintaining the…
"Given Adventure Time's format it can't promise anything seemingly important to happen that seriously dents the Finn/Jake dynamic." Which consists of adventuring, joking around, and older-brother guidance.
You say that as though Finn couldn't learn to use a sword with his other hand. Or that Jake isn't the natural person to help Finn get over losing an arm. Jake is his big brother!
Nobody else noticed Finn was bubble gum in a previous life?