By 'Carter died for good' do you mean in like the second episode? Because an incarnation of him was alive at the end of the series. He and Hawkgirl left at the end of the series in 2016 to try and make it as a couple or something.
By 'Carter died for good' do you mean in like the second episode? Because an incarnation of him was alive at the end of the series. He and Hawkgirl left at the end of the series in 2016 to try and make it as a couple or something.
I was hoping for Linda Carter to be the new President. Then we could have had 'On my Earth she ran for President with the other guy as her running mate, not the other way around.' 'I guess our Earth wasn't ready for that yet.' But it probably would have been too late to incorporate that anyway.
Anyone who only follows Legends of Tomorrow would probably have been pissed off at this episode for being so Barry/Oliver focused, particularly at the end. But, then again, I doubt there's anyone watching Legends who isn't also watching either Flash or Arrow, so it probably makes little odds.
Willa Holland is just brilliant - unless I'm imagining it (which is possible), she did a superb slight shift of persona when with her mother, like she was a child again. It might sound obvious, but I swear she had some mannerisms and a certain way of swallowing some of her words that she hasn't had in years… that's a…
Ooh, Walter for Prometheus maybe? That'd be fun.
For Arrow fans 'black Cisco' started out as 'male Felicity' and was awesome (as someone put it at the time, it was like they gave Felicity her own Felicity). But they've definitely put him into an annoying groove that they're struggling to hoist him out of.
That's a good article Vulture have put together.
I'd argue the better terminology is 'time frames', since 'time period' typically refers to recognisably different eras (in terms of culture, society, etc). Because we haven't seen anything outside of the park it's hard to define different time periods for what's going on, so it all practically takes place in the same…
It's saddening to think that the show will likely finish this season when it's becoming not just a great comic book show (and it already held a claim to being the best of those), but a great television series in general. With this creative resurgence, ABC really needs to get mass audiences caught up; over the winter…
Oh good, with the Goosebumps director at the helm I can be sure it's mediocre enough not to bother seeing. I was worried my nostalgia would drag me along; what a relief.
Oh, it makes perfect sense with the story they're telling, the reviewer just pointed it out as fans of Strange may have wanted to see it/him referenced the way Thor, Cap, Ant-Man and the Avengers have been referenced immediately post-movie (okay, Ant-Man isn't quite the same as it came out between seasons, but it did…
The sensible precaution would have been to say 'It worked! But just in case, let's go ahead and wipe her brain anyway.'
Ward was a character who just got better and better as the show went on, to the point where he was one of the absolute highlights… but yeah, I don't miss him. Like with Bobbi and Lance, the show was able to jettison a brilliant character without feeling like it was lesser without them.
What Alex means is that it didn't have a direct in-universe impact on the events of the show - nothing from the film followed through into the show. 'Doctor Strange' as a film did have an effect on the direction this show has gone in (the use of magic in the former paved the way for the use of magic in the latter),…
Oh, they've always had a certain amount of chemistry, but this was the first time it felt (to me) like more than friendship stuff. Sure, they were BFFs (and damn fine ones at that), but their responses to each other here felt more charged than I've noticed before. (That was a good line, in an episode packed with them)
Damnit, I've never been a Coulson/May shipper (thought they were better as friends), but my God was their chemistry potent tonight. I was just waiting for them to kiss, both immediately after Coulson came through the portal and when they were talking about the promise later.
It makes narrative sense; not only is it fewer characters to write into an already packed episode, but it saves having to explain to Barry and Ollie who this woman is called Vixen and with all of Vixen's powers who isn't Vixen.
Yeah that's possible, but it seems particularly impractical to have hosts on differing time scales - what if the guests stay in Sweetwater for multiple days? Or what about [discounting potential timeline antics] someone like Dolores, who has been taken out of Sweetwater - if she returns, will she find that for…
Based on about how many times she's died in the series, and assuming that each cycle is about a month (I think 30 days was how long the guests can stay in the park).
Well even if it's not in time with Delores/William's story, it'd still be in time with at least the MiB or Bernard's stories, right? So it'd have to be over 8 or 9 months? Do either of those stories feel like they've taken that long?