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Bruce Wayne
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People on Reddit noticed how the credits repeatedly list an "inconspicuous man" and "inconspicuous woman" with the same actors every time, and how they're very subtly placed in the background of scenes with Angela. The people in the subway seemed to be this same duo. Obligatory shout out to Esmail for the attention to

Oof, no mention of that shootout scene at the end? Not even the ending notes? Anyways, I feel sort of proud to have thought of how Elliot is involving and trusting his audience enough to enlist us in an interactive sequence. Connects back to a similar point you made in your review of h4ndshake. As for the "incidental

Given how this is indeed a show that "fetishizes accuracy with info tech" I'm going with your latter theory as the more likely one

This is brilliant, I can definitely agree. Really quite satisfying that he monologued this one out loud as opposed to last season's mental invective against capitalism.

You write so, so eloquently and your reviews are an absolute joy to read. I look forward to them each week as much as I do the episodes themselves.

Holy fuck.

I agree, but with Tony Curran, the man is absolutely terrifying in his Daredevil appearance. Truly unhinged.

See Tony Curran in Daredevil. Scary son of a bitch.

Holy shit I knew I recognized that restaurant from somewhere

Scarecrow.

Same, even though Leland was the single funniest character in the whole show. His lines had me laughing so hard.

Okay, the points you made were excellent and I really enjoyed the episode, and agree that it's definitely a step up from some of the standalones, but I wouldn't call it straight A material. Sure, it was unique and genuinely tense, with Khan's story having this tragic but beautifully constructed arc, but really, does

To be honest they've been scoring ever since the show started.

I freaked out like a madman at the end of "The Female of the Species" but I've put my excitement on the sideline for now - I don't want to keep negatively judging this show for my own impatience, and I feel that the standalone episodes do still stand OUT every once in a while. And this show just has this gravitas to

OHHHHHH FINALLY someone mentions that show! AV Club LOVES it and I'm really happy they do. It's my favorite show besides Sherlock.

Someone on here suggested Albert Finney a few months back. Sure, he doesn't look the part, but seems to perfectly fit the mold of the "Lovecraftian horror" that Sherlock had mentioned in season 2's "Paint It Black". I've only seen Dance in the Imitation Game and he was far too formal in that to be a compelling Mr.

That was quite a superb episode. The middle bits of the case did waver but I'm mostly talking about the ending half and the majority of Sherlock's side-story. And the case itself did get very interesting - I found it rather thrilling seeing Sherlock own that creep from the company at the end. But that ending