ety3rd--disqus
ety3rd
ety3rd--disqus

"Sansa’s covert letter was not to Littlefinger after all. It was to Brienne to tell the Blackfish to give up Riverrun and get his ass to Winterfell."

The bit near the end with the sheriff and the two foreign agent guys … that wasn't a flashback. I got the impression that they were there, in the "now," reconstituted or cloned or something. Thus, the shocking musical sting.

Let's not forget her epic turn as Bitch Pudding.

"Gangs of New York"? How about "The Dark Knight Rises," right down to the fight beats between the good guy and bad guy?

If Harold Ramis weren't dead, I might give more of a crap about it being remade. But he's gone and there can't be a full reunion of the original crew, so … have at it, ladies..

Since his role on the new show will be voicing an animated character in a live action show, he may have plenty of time, unless he's present on set live with the other actors.

But Legends of Tomorrow is in the Arrowverse …

There wasn't. Both were dropped in August.

My son and I watched this as part of a big marathon before Godzilla 2014 (http://ety3rd.tumblr.com/po…, and it was one the greatest surprises of our list. It was easily one of our favorites.

I may be wrong, but aren't the three of them connected in some sort of crystal age, timey-wimey kinda way? Meaning, if one of the three of them is really killed, won't the reincarnation cycle stop?

Any word on if this film will perpetuate the myth that Mary Magdalene was a prostitute?

Given the hundreds of thousands of species of beetles, I'd say he's an entomologist.

And I'd get it if he were the only one who said it, but the bad guy (who had dealt with Sheriff Wayne) responded to Rip by saying something like, "Well, maybe Sheriff Palmer should fight his own battles."

So why did Ray bother calling himself "John Wayne" the whole episode if, at the end, Rip and the bad guy call him "Sheriff Palmer"?

Someone needs to make an "AMC edit" (aka "Walking Dead edit") of the Dhark stabbing scene. Show all of them held firm by his magic, show him be menacing, then show Oliver grimacing as cartoony blood trickles over the screen.

Regarding "females in peril," I don't think that's a female thing. EVERYONE on this show gets put through some sort of plot ringer.

How can I trust a movie whose director is a Fizzbin card?

I would have liked more Ahsoka screen time, too, but I don't feel that it adversely impacted this episode at all. Primarily because I watched her for five seasons on Clone Wars.

Anyone else notice that the score used a variation on John Williams' "Can You Read My Mind?" at the end of the rescue scene?