Yeah, his entire character arc has been about him running away from his 'sins'. Returning to New Mexico basically threw him right back in the thick of it.
Yeah, his entire character arc has been about him running away from his 'sins'. Returning to New Mexico basically threw him right back in the thick of it.
It's probably the worst-looking thing in the show, a show which otherwise looks completely fantastic in regards to props, costuming, and practical effects.
To get his son back, I imagine.
His views on race and imperialism changed a lot as he got older, especially after World War One. I recommend reading some of his later poetry.
God kind of seems like a dick in the Penny Dreadful universe, present but just disinterested enough to not give a shit about how miserable everyone is.
"Welcome, demon lady that my son is banging! You can sleep in my daughter's room!"
I want to know what Lucifer's relationship to Dorian Gray is.
Not entirely sure what to think about Ethan's backstory know that we know the whole story, but he's certainly changed a lot since we first met him in season one. Or maybe this is the way he was all along.
This episode was emotionally exhausting. Eva Green is simply incredible at what she does.
I don't see it as a guilty pleasure at all. It's a beautifully made show.
Is he, though?
I think Clare's not quite as superficial or as much of a 'Nice Guy' as he was in the first two seasons, and at this point I think he's eager for any sort of positive human connection. Plus, she's not at all bad-looking.
I have no idea where the hell Lily and Dorian's story is going, and I'm not sure if I like it. Why exactly have they sworn to start a coven of battered women engaged in a war against Victorian sensibilities?
She was, she outright says in the movie that she's carrying Joe's child. She just wasn't showing yet.
So, realistic=fatter.
Got it.