domino-disqus
Domino
domino-disqus

When you're immortal, it's only a failure if you give up.

All Jack has to do is take her with him. Otherwise we get into a paradox that undoes the whole series, so once she's out of her timeline, she should be safe.

She has a knowledge of the nudity taboo, but also, she was in the middle of a fight with a monster. There's better priorities than modesty in that situation.

And yet, I couldn't help but think that at several points, Ashi was using the shield to protect S&P and not herself, because she was definitely moving it out of the way rather than protecting herself with it.

And now, Ukraine has banned Seagal from the country.

My main complaint is that the "Give us the room" line usually follows a new person showing up.and saying that. Basically, in the interest of privacy, they're chasing everyone else away rather than just saying "can we go somewhere to talk?"

It's always fun to see people liking a series of comments from years ago. A great way to see who is just catching up on the show now. Or, I suppose, just revisiting the comments.

Dude thought the Irish were part of the Axis.

Given her family situation, I could see Mme Vandertunt actually walking into a door a whole bunch.

It occurs to me, has there been a single main villain that doesn't know the hero's secret identity in any of these episodes? I want to say that Merlyn and Darhk didn't know to start, but found out fairly quickly, and everyone else already know, and thus used that to fuck with him. What about an arc where the point

Does Dutch know that Kriegerowitz is a "Nazi" though? Or even pretended to be one?

What I want to know is WHERE did she get it? That's not something you grab out of the closet that you've been holding onto in case you decided you wanted to turn evil.

Eddie did it first.

Idea. Barry pulls an Eddie, solves the problem, season 4 stars Wally as The Flash.

Yes, that makes total sense, despite her already having a Barry who, while garbage at keeping secrets, hasn't been concealing his identity from her and also trying to murder people.

Having not seen the show yet, I ask the same question that I asked last time. Namely, do they explain why an evil Barry makes any kind of a damn to Kaitlin re: her willingness to follow him?

I actually didn't much care for a lot of this episode. Especially near the beginning when Holmes is all in on Booker being the villain of the episode with only circumstantial evidence. You'd think a brilliant detective would at least consider other possibilities.

Evil jack murdered a relatively innocent robot a few seasons back.

That's my guess. With an interlude where he sets up a better society, becomes king or whatever, etc. ..

This. Is. Samurai jack!