My point is that isn't a spoiler, it doesn't say who dies, just that people do. And that shouldn't be surprising/unexpected in this show. This isn't Community we're talking about here.
My point is that isn't a spoiler, it doesn't say who dies, just that people do. And that shouldn't be surprising/unexpected in this show. This isn't Community we're talking about here.
Spoiler? Have you been watching the show? That tag line is a foregone conclusion, not a spoiler.
The admiration morphing into envy was likely related to the heightened anxiety. When she says she loves him, she says she doesn't know why, she just does. That must have been hard for him, because he doesn't know why she loves him either. His fear that he's not good enough for her, in bed or otherwise just took…
I think making it happen so soon after them getting to a good place makes it worse her. She just spat out desperate "I love you"s and let herself be completely vulnerable to him and he turns around and does this. From what I understand of the books, this betrayal is a bit extreme, but not completely out of character…
I think the reviewer would like a more balanced episode of plot and character development. The transitions were really choppy again, so the story didn't flow naturally like it had been the last 4 episodes. I totally agree with you that almost everything that happened is good, it just didn't feel right. But, as…
So, if magic is more powerful with pain, why does battle magic require calm/lack of emotion? Did I miss the explanation or did they just nerf that?
I thought the show did a pretty good job of setting up why Margo and Eliot would be into it, it's show Quentin's reasoning for letting it happen that I'm at a loss for. Just that befuddled? That may be coming next week. It certainly makes you empathize with Alice when you don't understand why the hell he would do…
Jason Ralph is bringing an earnest sweetness/openness to Q that is drawing jaded people to him. I get why Margo, feeling abandoned by Eliot would be into that during her emotional hangover. I also loved how unambiguous/unapologetic the show was about Q and Eliot having sex. What I can't quite figure out is why Q…
Why does Eliot want to help? Eliot is very attached to Q. Q questions this in the second episode, Eliot says he bonds quickly, time is an artificial construct and then promptly propositions Q. I wonder how weird this is about to get for them.
It makes sense not to show her glued to her computer, I just wish they had given Richard a line at the end of last week inviting her to the chat room. In retrospect, it's obvious that's what happened, but it's pretty confusing as shown. I wonder if there's a scene to that effect in the digital trash.
To the reviewer, I think Penny jumps into Q's mind because he knows he can. Q is so oblivious to his surroundings, he never remembers to "pull his blinds" like everyone else does, so he's pretty much an open book to Penny. Plus, Penny's self-righteous indignation over the contents of Q's unmasked thoughts and dreams…
I watch the show, DH doesn't. I had to work last night, so just caught it on the SyFy app. We're laying in bed, he's playing some game, not watching/half listening when, "You haven't touched your penis yet!"rings out like a clarion call. I'm going to have to show him the Bechtel test dream to make up for it. Does…
Upvoted for use of 8.5. NO MORE!
Who knows./?
I think that calling what Julia and Richard did "killing someone" is an incredibly reductive statement and frankly pretty insulting to anyone who has ever faced a terminal illness and said, "You know what? That's not how I want my sun to go down." It also is a great argument for what the show was going for, that…
I don't think we're far enough into the story to conclude the writers are doing what you seem to think they're doing.
I miss Margo, Eliot channeling pragmatic Margo is close, but no cigar. Alice has a serious Bob the builder complex, she's going to fix everything, consequences be damned. I'm guessing that's going to be important later. I like the frenemy vibe between Penny and Q, and any excuse to pair up Eliot and Alice is…
Eliza/Jane wasn't teaching at Brakebills. The actress who play Sunderland(teacher) looks a lot like the actress who plays Eliza/Jane. Eliza/Jane was the "specialist" they called in the end of the second?third episode to wipe Q's memory before his expulsion.
The movie really only has a snowballs chance in hell if they cast young Han right. I honestly can't think of anyone I'd even like to see try.
I'm only a dolphin, ma'am….
Now get off my lawn.