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Its worst that that - the show has brought in a boldly designed Inhuman character (Lash) and then Sava spent a good part of a previous review complaining about the hair line of the character and how that was designed…..

Actually, they have three super-powered members (Cap. America, Scarlet Witch, Vision) currently.

Well, this season was touted as the Secret Warriors, and in that comic, Hydra is the main enemy. I would have loved to see Rosalind be outed as one of the various characters that are part of that plot line, but it wasn't meant to be (particularly since the actress has a staring gig on a different show).

Daisy hasn't gotten a lot of scenes in the last few episodes, and she has been sort of busy. I am glad they have addressed that "budding romance" as lightly as they have. Also, they have been aiming that way since Lincoln was introduced.

Wait, you don't know how Daisy feels towards May, Mack, Lincoln, Coulson, Fitz, and Simmons? or How Simmons and Fitz feel about each other, etc.? What would the show have to do to make those feelings more clear?

This is a show about a global (now underground) spy agency - doing intimate character driven stories is most certainly NOT going to work for this.

Hear death was shockingly staged, but "out-of-nowhere"? She had just decided to side with Hydra's enemy even though she is the head of an organization deeply infiltrated by Hydra - that is a huge plot reason for Hydra to want her very much dead.

The way to get a good grade from Sava is to make the show like what he wants it to be or to 'surprise' him, so give him some nice Kevin Tanchearon directed action sequences (which he likes), or an episode like Gemma's stand alone which upends the plot. Otherwise, he goes back to being critical of the show for not

Killing Ward has been part of the game plan for Coulson since episode 2 of this season, when he sends Hunter off on his solo murder mission. But yes, Ward meant this to be fridging himself, and says so in the very episode. The issue is thinking that firdging is somehow an inherently bad plot device. In this case,

Yup, KILL, MURDER, DESTROY! is a very clear choice.

When Daisy spoke about Ward falling for a powerful father figure, you could see Coulson seeing how Daisy had fallen for a powerful father figure herself - him, without her ever saying it.

I am fine with her not having a lot of visible injuries, but she looked too relaxed for someone who had been forced to feel terrible pain.

I think Agents of SHIELD knows what it wants to be, but what it wants to be is a lot more complicated and difficult to pull off than what the Flash is.

She has a staring role on another series that is soon coming back on the air - she is fine.

Eric Goldman over at IGN is no fawning fanboy of the show, though he clearly respects it in a way Sava does not.

Yes - in the majority opinion of the commentators here, Sava's opinion is wrong and he should feel bad about it and we are merely voicing those opinions, repeatedly.

I loved Rosalind and I am sad she is gone - that being the case does not make it a bad plot point - the agency Rosalind heads was just outed as being actually run by Hydra, and she now inconveniently knows the truth and has chosen to side with SHIELD. Hydra wanting to kill her makes perfect sense - that Ward would do

The reviewer for the Flash likes the show he is reviewing and judges it based on what the show is. Our reviewer doesn't like this show, and reviews it against the show in his head.

You really think Sava has any method to picking grades for this show?

(he was being sarcastic)