I'm sure I'm not the only one wondering this.
I'm sure I'm not the only one wondering this.
As others have mentioned, the end seemed rushed but overall I liked it. I have an interest in history so the story motivated me to look up the Decembrists, the Chinese situation and Spring Heeled Jack among other things. I think the story works better if you have a grasp of the bigger picture of what's going on (and…
From that set photo I expect Emilie de Ravin will be screaming "My babeee!" at Robert Carlyle. I will be really disappointed if that doesn't happen.
If he's a member of Q section and not The Q as in head of the Quartermaster section or a brilliant engineering whiz kid who earned the top Q job then I'm fine with it. He just looks young to be running the Quartermaster section.
Fortunately the Collective has a great health care plan.
Wait a minute. Someone actually thought the supercommittee was going to accomplish something?
It bugged me that they shipped off Kate like that. The show is rough on female characters not named Helen Magnus (I wonder what's going to happen to Will's girlfriend).
I just finished Heart of Iron. I didn't even realize it was the next Book Club selection.
The Darth Vader one was funny but I'm surprised management signed off on it since it basically says the store is run by the Galactic Empire.
When Olivia chased the shapeshifter, my first thought was any agent she found still alive was the shapeshifter. That was just blatantly making the character act dumb to advance the plot (the shapeshifter needed to escape).
It was just of several things that bugged me. Of course as soon as it was mentioned everyone should have known they would end up in the building. By the first break it looked like it could just as easily been a random episode of Burn Notice.
I gave up on the episode as soon as someone mentioned the Russians don't go into the building because of the Bulgarian (said quite clearly) dealer living there. It looked like it was going to be a run of the mill vigilante procedural episode.
As someone who's watched way too many police procedurals I was aware of this. It was a often used on Law and Order to show a person wasn't killed where they were found by the redoubtable Dr. Rodgers or the medical examiner at the crime scene.
Yup. That was the first thing I thought of too.
Every time I look at Rumpelstiltskin I see Dr. Rush. Maybe the show is really something that Destiny is making Rush experience while he's in the Chair.
Damn, I actually understood everything in the article. Pay attention in your math and science classes, kids. You never know when something will pop up again.
I would disagree about the Klingons. Saying no more Klingons is like saying no more movies with Nazis as villains. They're an adversary of the Federation and some sort of conflict is inevitable. But instead of rebooting Kang, Kor, or Koloth they can create a new Klingon adversary who is different and distinct.
Chuck is actually on before (it's NBC's lead in for Grimm), but yes putting three shows targeting the same audience on at the same time doesn't seem very smart. Lots of people like me can only watch one, DVR one and have to choose one not to watch (I don't watch Supernatural so it's not a hard choice for me).