I never really felt like Kalinda was supposed to have an American accent. It's seemed ambiguously international, which kind of fit in with the mystery of her character.
I never really felt like Kalinda was supposed to have an American accent. It's seemed ambiguously international, which kind of fit in with the mystery of her character.
There were a lot of groan-worthy moments in this episode, but all is forgiven because a) we finally saw Damon make the brave, selfless choice (with the death of the Devil as his reward); and b) that final beat is one for the ages.
To be fair, she used the Spear of Destiny to do it before they split it up into four pieces, and we've been explicitly told that the power of the Spear of Destiny is to permanently reshape time without causing significant and damaging ripples.
He left to manage the NYC office during Will's big expansion binge during the "LG" era, and was never heard from again.
One of my few complaints with the second episode was that Barbara was conveniently nowhere around when Marissa had her coup de grâce moment with the names for the class action that sealed the job for her. There are enough legitimate and substantial points of contention between Diane and Barbara that the show doesn't…
Yeah, it's jarring with characters we watched for seasons without ever hearing those words. But for new characters like Adrian, it works incredibly well.
It's just great to have a really surprising and exciting investigator again. "The Good Wife" never really had that after Kalinda left, or arguably since her character got sidelined.
Lucca was never really a real character, since her primary awkward role was to be a substitute best friend for Alicia after the whole Kalinda fucking Peter/Julianna Margulies resenting Archie Panjabi thing. I'm kind of interested to see what she's like when she doesn't exist to service Alicia's story.
Best part about this season is that Margo is being given more to do that just deliver acerbic one-liners (though those are still on-point!). There's always been a Type A personality lurking under that air of amused detachment, and it's nice to see it starting to peek its way out. Summer Bishil deserves great material.
I didn't get the impression that the law was some magical fix-all but rather a series of small common sense items that everybody could live with; a little better than nothing but watered-down enough that the gun lobby wouldn't unleash it's attack dogs.
I think it's a legal thing. "Realtor" is a registered trademark of the National Association of Realtors and can't be used without its permission. So that extra syllable may be the show's way of getting around that without a non-protected mouthful like "real estate agent".
That's why she had to die.
"Listen, Georgie. I got some thoughts on the, uh, criminal justice system…"
It definitely seemed like her powers came back with that banshee scream.
They couldn't kill Bonnie, because then Elena would have woken up and they don't have Nina Dobrev until the finale. I'd like to think there was more to that, but there probably wasn't.
Her attire for the first two seasons was all about visible cleavage, no matter how implausible. It's 15 degrees outside? You can bet the top few shirt buttons still won't be buttoned.
Would have been nice if she'd invested some of her vast resources in sealing off the reactors before the meltdown occurred, instead of focusing them all on turning everybody into digitally-harvested pod people, though.
Devon Bostick did a great job portraying Jasper's sense of relief upon learning the world was going to end. He wants his suffering to end, but now he's freed from the burden of having to end it.
And then there's Mick's philosophy:
"I like beer. It gets me drunk."
On "Sunny", it's hilarious to see Sweet Dee stripped of all dignity. But that doesn't work for Mickey, because she knows what a low-life she is and unapologetically owns it. But Sabrina not only has an inordinately high opinion of herself, but a lifetime of wealth and privilege that has validated that opinion. So…