guywhothinksstuff2k
Guywhothinksstuff
guywhothinksstuff2k

I reckon Melisandre i a decent bet, as she's now done what she had to do for the plot. There's even a chance she'll kill herself at the start of the next episode thinking she's failed, not knowing she was successful.

Man, American chat show audiences are just unbearable, aren't they? Constant screaming. Yes, some of these answers are impressive. Calm the heck down.

I don't have any real love for the original films - I've seen each of them about twice, and paid attention about once; they're decent enough films but have a bunch of issues, particularly by modern standards - but I was excited when it was first announced for the implication that it was part of the same universe. I

My issue with Lyla's explanation was just that Noah's ark is far from the best known part of Genesis. She might just as well have gone 'Genesis… Dahrk wants to create a world in seven days!' or 'Dahrk wants to be naked in a forest with a woman then get kicked out for eating an apple!' There's more to Genesis than the

Rob Huebel.

But even in season two there were scenes with a dozen unnamed agents on-screen (and references to agents all over the world), yet often it seemed like there were only six people who could actually do anything in the story. This kind of inconsistency isn't good for building the show's world.

One of the things I've grown frustrated about (since the start of season two, really) is the lack of definition for SHIELD - some weeks the plot needs to treat the group as being just the 8 or so of them, while other weeks the plot needs it to be a team of hundreds. I think it needs to be the latter more consistently,

Oh come on, there was some solid Angelus stuff in there, and the finale was pretty darn good. And Spin the Bottle was a delight (much needed before the arc that succeeded it).

I pretty much assumed a splinter bomb wouldn't work, as they are based on the Diviner and so wouldn't target Inhumans. Buuuut that may not be their actual origin (and they managed to work on the Kree), so maybe it could work.

"But criticism about the project stems mostly from the team being an all-female one"

Touch of Cloth and Galavant are my favourite shows for looping continuously. Not sure I will get tired of either of them. I'll check out Angie Tribeca on your recommendation.

"Oh, what a lovely song…

This was a bizarrely great show. The ridiculous nature of the plots surrounding the varied performances of the cast, all tinged with the ever-present threat of death made for something quite special. What other show could have a café owner faking his death, returning as his twin brother and having to seduce his own

'Elena, grab the Hydra agent's gun.'
'Qué?'
'Graaaab the HYYdraa aaaagent's GUNNN.'
'Qué?'
'Oh, for the love of-'
*both are shot through the head*

Okay, I was kind of bored with the thought of more speedsters showing up… but actually I kinda dig the idea of two speedsters having a relationship, particularly if they dip a little into their passion and have the two, say, making out (or more) while travelling at ludicrous speed. Sure it could be cheesy as all hell,

Oh, it's a decent film and a great performance, I just want everyone to watch A Touch of Cloth. One of the funniest things on TV of the last twenty years.

Ohhh… that's not much more menacing. 'ZOMG the villain's upped his real estate portfolio! Run for your lives!'

John Hannah's best work is still A Touch of Cloth. If you haven't seen it, check it out.

And it looks like he's going to be in more than one episode, that makes it an A surely. (Dream time; main character next season?)

Hive really doesn't have the villain tag line thing down. Last week it was 'Let's spend it.' This week it's 'I bought us a hotel.'