hewhoscoffsatdanger--disqus
he_who_scoffs_at_danger
hewhoscoffsatdanger--disqus

Solid story-telling is being burried under style. The musical montage was particularly ineffective. Episode looked cheap.

Putting on the act that he needed to at the time was all he ever did with Abraham. He's at least as loyal to Negan as he ever was to Rick regardless of whether he has a plan to kill Negan.

Is it the writing of Negan, Jeffrey Dean Morgan's portrayal of Negan or a multiplication of both which makes TV Negan so lame?

Every time an entertainment writer awkwardly shoehorns a reference to the recent rise of fascism in America into a review, all I hear is a vigorous, wet slapping sound. What is that?

Let's also be serious about this: Ghostbusters was its own thing entirely. It's a sci-fi supernatural comedy whose four-way buddy humor hung mainly on Bill Murray's inimitable charm and whose constituent parts could not have been fused together but through the pens of Akroid and Ramis.

Since I started hearing about this I keep coming back to the idea of a version of Sunshine Cleaning with ghosts. Perhaps with McCarthy and Whig as the comedy center of the thing. It could totally be done.

Aaan', how.

You'll love again. I think a certainty is that season two will include more Ian Quinn and Gravitron. There's a lot of ways it could go good.

I liked the part where Ward killed the dog.

I think they were just pumped that there was this whole filing cabinet full of files just sitting there. You know how it is when you've got one of those classic steel filing cabinets. You think, "Man, I just know that thing is FULL of files." and the adrenaline kicks in.

Not to pre-spoil anything, but I read one guy in the comments here or elsewhere speculate that Coulson is going to turn out to be Mahr Vehl. The final scene of this past episode lines up nicely with that theory.

So the item can act as a coatrack for the discussion.

Man Thing reference? Two words: Howard The Duck.