dwolfrva--disqus
DWRVA
dwolfrva--disqus

Not to mention that we saw the construction ring around Geonosis in Rebels (when we first learned that the Geonosians had been exterminated). Now, suddenly it's gone—so the Empire wants to hide whatever was being built there. Then Click Clack draws a rough sketch of a sphere with a smaller circle offset inside of it.

Great reference. I agreed, and was glad to see that Ezra went that route after the inconsistent Dark Side tendencies he was showing earlier this season.

"Hera: “Let’s load some of these [poison gas] canisters as proof for the Senate.” Correct me if I’m wrong but… what Senate? Wasn’t that essentially dissolved?"

This is a great remix… that was first posted last year.

Yeah, it wasn't Dooku that killed Savage… it was Sidious. I understand forgetting details, but a professional reviewer who is being (somewhat) critical of the series should at least make sure that he fully and accurately remembers the subject matter that he's criticizing.

Sorry, if you didn't get Ezra's Dark Side tendencies, you haven't been paying attention at all. Kanan explicitly told Ezra back in S1 (when they lured the Grand Inquisitor into the cave full of creatures after discovering the hyperspace tracking beacon on the Phantom) that Ezra had used the Dark Side to control the

This "debate" ends by simply saying "Alderaan."

Agreed. I was mildly uncomfortable with the Inquisitor impaling Kanan with his lightsaber during that dream sequence. I would've preferred that to happen "off-camera." Other than that, I was okay with the darkness of it because of the dual message of a child confronting his/her fears and reality not being as bad as

I realize that these shows involve a popular sci-fi universe for adults and that they are capable of being mature/artistic, but reviewers should always remember that the target audience is adolescent children. It's not only okay for the shows to be quite literal at times, it's necessary.

I agree about what you said re: the crew's contributions. I also liked it to reinforce the idea that they are all rooting for Ezra during his Jedi training and assisting him in whatever small way they can.

Yeah, it was Burton that had Batman kill indiscriminately. Like here, for example, where Keaton's Batman attaches dynamite to one of Penguin's goons and pushes him down a hole, where the dynamite explodes, presumably killing him. https://www.youtube.com/wat…

After a "no, not here," which is a crucial difference than a pure "no." But I'm not saying that the book version isn't an incredibly complicated scene and at least arguably a sexual assault. I'm saying that anyone claiming it was portrayed on screen as it was written in the books is seeing something that simply

I wish you were correct, but you're not. The show lacks the "do me now, etc." lines from the book. The only thing Jaime ever got from her was "no" and somewhat of a fight. You are simply applying your preexisting knowledge to the scene rather than watching for what is on screen.

Well, if you're starting from the notion of "Cersei is a manipulative slut who tricks poor Jaime into falling in love with his twin sister," then it's hard to have an actual discussion. Not to mention that your comparison is an outright strawman. No one is claiming that deviant torture is a societal problem, whereas

And who is to say that Ted even wanted to marry her? He didn't marry Tracy until SEVEN years and two kids later. Perhaps he'd be fine just having a monogamous relationship with her.

I agree that it should be applauded for not having Robin and Barney make it, but not for the reason you suggest. Their marriage didn't fail because Barney didn't change. He did change, at least while they were married. We saw nothing suggesting that he cheated on Robin or grew frustrated with monogamy. Their

Because at the very least, the people at the campsite would have fired on intruders if they were all being massacred. And it seemed like some of the campers had gunshot wounds to the stomach, but I may be wrong on that point.

I thought the final corpse that shot himself in the head was the one who decapitated and labelled the other two bodies. That seemed totally unrelated.

His motivations this season aren't any different than last season. He was looking to keep Woodbury (and his zombie daughter) safe, and he believed that he was the only one capable of doing it. Any action prior to the second death of his daughter was clearly tied to either stopping outside threats or preserving his

Yes on both points.