forever4hire--disqus
forever4hire
forever4hire--disqus

I hate Mini-Mulder and Mini-Scully so much. They are walking, talking incarnations of everything that's wrong with this miniseries.

I got about 15 minutes in before I paused it to do something else for a moment, then realized I wasn't interested in ever unpausing it. I really wanted to like it, because I love the hybrid fantasy/sci-fi concept, but it's just… really, really bad.

“I am old, not obsolete” makes no sense, considering that the T-800 freely acknowledged its own obsolescence in T2. I believe the exact quote was "I am an obsolete design."

The kid almost certainly isn't Velcoro's. The guy who raped his wife is probably the real biological father. The kid was born about nine months after the rape, and Velcoro isn't certain she was already pregnant. The lawyer's "You'd been trying for a long time?" line strongly hints that Volcoro is indeed sterile. And

The promos had me a bit concerned, because in the brief glimpses they gave us of Colin Farrell's Detective Velcoro, he gave off such a strong Cohle-esque vibe that I thought he might end up being pretty much the same character. So I was relieved when he turned out to be very, very different.

You may be right. Who knows what the writers have up their sleeves? But the ruins of Boise seem to place the show conclusively in the far, post-apocalyptic future. I'd be very surprised if they turned out to still be in the present.

I'm not an expert on such things, but I'm pretty sure the R+L=J theory would technically make Jon a Targaryan, not a Stark.

I definitely get that cognitive dissonance thing when they reference the Avengers. But other than the difference in tone, I do like how the the events of the other movies play into Daredevil's setup. I knew going in that the writers couldn't just ignore the Battle of New York — it's something street-level New Yorkers

On one hand, I'm really enjoying Daredevil. It's like Marvel finally has an answer to the Dark Knight trilogy, which I loved. Up until now, the MCU has taken a very different tone, which is fine, but I tend to like this tone better.

The unwritten bylaw Jax wants stricken seems pretty obvious to me. Remember a few episodes ago, when he floated the idea of patching over the Grim Bastards? Yeah. That's what he's after. I'll be very surprised if it turns out I'm wrong.