No. It isn't. Some things are not subjective at all. If you knew what he did you wouldn't be asking that.
No. It isn't. Some things are not subjective at all. If you knew what he did you wouldn't be asking that.
Agreed - Eccleston & RTD.
Yea, no. Mengele was a butcher in a concentration death camp. That's rather different from Jax.
I am thinking that this is the fault of Moffat instead of the BBC. They don't have to show the corpse on-screen - they could just have one of the characters see the corpse and show us their reaction to it.
The Ponds are aging faster to people who see them if they spend a lot of time traveling with the Doctor. If they leave on Wednesday, travel for a year, and come back on Thursday, then from the perspective of their friends they aged a year in just one day. Of course that makes sense only if they actually spend years…
Nope, last week's episode sucked, this one was OK. They definitely could have done much more with Jax. RTD would have done more, and made Jax much more of a reflection on the Doctor. We would have gotten a few glimpses of what the Doctor did during the Time War, the difficult choices that he had to face, and it…
No, I got that from the English context. It's just that it was already spoiled for me by the phrasing in Russian. It wasn't implied for native Russians either - like I said, "blacks" doesn't have any racial undertones in Russian.
That's cool - as long as the movie is not as racist as the game. Or not as racist sounding. I tried playing the first game in Russian but I just couldn't - they kept talking about the blacks coming to get them.
Yup. For the first time in a while a W13 episode didn't suck. In large part because Claudia was barely in it, but also for the reasons you mentioned. People were much less dumb than usual, the mystery was not obvious, etc. Although I would like to know how exactly the electronic security of the warehouse was…
You mean if you had a rideable dino (on a spaceship!), you wouldn't ride it if you had the chance?
Nope. This episode wasn't awful, but it wasn't that great. I don't see it being that memorable. For the most part it's a bunch of forced moments strung together. Starting with Rory's father getting abducted and the Doctor forgetting that, and ending with the completely pointless dinosaur ride. This was more like…
Close enough to a scratch. Unless it cut an artery, he wouldn't bleed out. It looked like it cut some muscle - the sheathe muscle that's on the outside of your thigh. It will hurt like hell, but it's not that dangerous, relatively speaking.
Yes. It could be random. It was just coincidentally used on the girl next to the guy that was in a coma. There is no way (that we know of) to predict who is an Alpha and who isn't. There is no test. Except that this device may be serving as a test.
Yup, a pretty great episode all around, except that the character that stood out the most for me was Stanton Parrish from Alphas. What's he doing as a Coyote on Grimm?
Well, he has been around for 200 years. Plenty of time to accumulate gobs and gobs of money and use it to found a medical company.
OK, after watching the 3rd episode this season I've made a conclusion - the current production/writing team on Alphas is not as good as the one last season. There are a number of problems with the episodes so far. My main issues are:
No, nobody in the hospitals knows what these things do. Therefore they use them willy-nilly on anybody for whom such a device would be appropriate. On whom they would use a normal stimulator. People in the hospitals don't know who are Alphas.
I assume the same way that becoming nervous stimulates your sweat glands. Or hungry stimulates the saliva glands.
It depends on the situation. I see three options:
YAY! Awesome show, want more of it.