jrodri86--disqus
jrodri86
jrodri86--disqus

When the Hawks said they weren't coming back I swear I could hear the sound of a choir of celestial cherubs singing a mesmerizing lullaby resonating in my ears.

In which part did I say they have to work together? These is are not some random events, a full city was nuked and thousands died. A major character of one the shows was killed. If they're going to build a whole TV Universe around several shows then they could at least try to show some cohesion between them by at

Meh… I can't help but agree with Dhark, just nuke the fuck out of everything. It's not like the so called heroes give a crap about it anyway… Although, given how this season was planned, they could go full nuclear and the flashbacks are still gonna be there, like radioactive roaches, haunting the watchers.

Well, Laurel's dead was barely mentioned and Barry's trip to National City wasn't even brought up (although that one is justifiable because the crossover wasn't planned at all). Both shows are supposed to be placed on the same universe but they surely do a lousy job at showing people that.

This episode just felt weird to me.

Snart lost his hand earlier this season and they were able to
reconstructed using the ship's medical bay. But I'm guessing he had to
die because the plot mandated it.

Ii was a good episode despite The Lame Masters's super thorough brainwashing technique…. Carter didn't say a thing, Kendra was tied up most of the time and Snart kicked ass. God stuff.

Well to be fair I think The Flash/Supergirl crossover wasn't actually planned at it just happened all of sudden. Hence, why Barry never tells anyone about his adventures with a (insert Cisco impersonation here—>) super hot blonde alien who eats ice cream and has awesome super powers.

One would think that if Laurel died before Barry lost his speed there would be some sort of new about it on The Flash, whether they come from some TV channel reporting her death or from Barry telling the rest of the team how the funeral was.

Came here to say this. Heck he even went to see Ollie while he was visiting Laurel's grave.

This show never ceases to amaze me. It's wonderfully acted, masterfully shot, well scored, it has an awesome soundtrack and it's not afraid to show all that greatness every week. Why no one watches it and why it hasn't gotten the level of recognition it deserves it's beyond my comprehension.

On one hand that might be the closest we are gonna be to get an iZombie/The Flash crossover. On the other hand, I couldn't help but chuckle every time they said Tony during this episode cause I kept imagining Tony the Tiger was the one coming for them. Poor Tony is one of the lamest villains the show has had.

Which is why I stated that it will all come down to which version we're going to get from Norman. So far so good, I'm not been a fan of Norman's Norma, she's too cold and barely scratches the surface of what the real character really is.

With Norma dead now it comes to Freddie Highmore to carry the weight of the series. Don't get me wrong, I think he has done a great job but Vera Farmiga was the soul of this show. It will all come down to which version of Norma is born from Norman's imagination.

From the same creators of "My name is Barry Allen and I'm the dumbest man alive" and "You've failed this city" we bring you: "Hi, I'm Kendra Saunders and I'm absolutely useless in terms of plot and character development".

Props to Matthew Rhys for a wonderfully directed episode and to Keri Russell for her outstanding performance. Unfortunately, and I hope times proves me wrong, this show hasn't been completely ignored by the Television Academy members throughout the years and I think it won't be different this time around.

Those employees had to be way to drugged with the pills or highly trained cause they certainly gave a flying a fuck when Dhark shot a guy and snapped a woman's neck right next to them.

Grodd is quite a fearsome villain in the comic books, it would be nice to see him as villain.