jupiter13--disqus
jupiter13
jupiter13--disqus

I'm wondering if fallout from Barry's actions will be a season-long arc or whether it will be resolved with something like an 'It's a Wonderful Life' episode where the Speed Force will show him the cost of his decision. Or maybe nothing will happen. After all, Eobard Thawne was supposedly erased from the timeline but

Good stuff but I'm a little dissatisfied about Euron and the way the whole Kingsmoot played out. Book Euron has a definite creepy, supernatural and menacing edge whereas this Euron, so far, is just some brash guy who talks a good talk. Granted he did kill the king but that just involved pushing an old man off a

More retreads. Oliver and Diggle try to shoot Dahrk AGAIN, which never worked before and is even less likely to now, and he nonsensically lets them live in what turns out to be another pointless scene. The scenes with Felicity's parents were just painful. I also loved the idiotic rationale of the willing volunteers

B+? Talk about a sliding scale. I worked hard to find anything interesting in this episode. Nuking a town WAS interesting but too little too late. Noah and Felicity, who cares? Thea underground, yawn. Diggle guilty about Andy, fast-forward. Alex dead, barely knew the guy. Felicity's mom shaming Lance into

So…..Barry blurs his face for Wally in a nighttime scene but doesn't bother when he's standing 2 feet away from his boss in a brightly lit office?

So exactly who CAN die on this show? 95% of the significant characters all figure into later Batman mythology. Will Gordon die? No. Will Bruce die? No. Alfred, Fox, Selina, Bullock, Penguin, Riddler? No, no, no, no, no and no. And the more expendable characters, mythos-wise, like Galavan and Fish don't even stay

Yeah, it would be interesting if some anti-Ramsay alliance had to be formed between the Freys and the Starks.

As Roose said shortly before his demise, Ramsay's defeat of Stannis' broken and demoralized army was no triumph. Remember that many of them deserted with horses and supplies after Shireen was burned. There's no evidence that Ramsay is a brilliant tactician or that he could beat a well-provisioned and motivated army.

For all the exciting plot twists some of my favorite moments are watching Jonathan Pryce's work as the High Sparrow. While I'm not always crazy about all of the changes fron book to screen, Pryce's subtle interpretation is head-and-shoulders above the grim, overtly fanatical character in the novels. He always sounds

Coulson really needs to show up in one of the MCU films since that's where he started. Keeping his resurrection secret from the Avengers is getting old. Having the SHIELD team (or at least Coulson and May along with Nick Fury) show up at a crucial moment would be a great bit plus a nice boost for the TV show.

I didn't feel like it was a crossover, just an acknowledgement that they are operating in the same reality as the MCU. I always found it funny when Joss Whedon was asked, more than once, whether Coulson was still alive in the MCU. OF COURSE he's still alive, The Avengers just don't know it.
To me, a crossover would

So is Mick starting to lose the IQ points that he seemed to have gained when he was Chronos? He was acting almost like his old lunkheaded self again in this ep. Pretty odd for someone who has lived longer and had more experiences than anyone else on the ship other than Kendra. He has been more thoughtful and mature

So Rupture was fooled by the hologram? Wouldn't the first thing that Zoom briefed him on be that Flash no longer had his powers? Any good management structure depends on effective lines of communication. Zoom is a poor administrator.

Yeah, I find AoS consistently worthwhile. Given a choice among the comic-related shows I will always watch Flash and AoS first. I like Gotham but it's such a downer that I have to be in the right mood. Supergirl is straightforward, easy breezy fun even though the friends & family lessons get old. Arrow and Legends

Dracula had to remain in his coffin until noon then had limited powers until sunset. Sunrise was still lethal to him. It was more of the mystical/religious symbolism of the sunrise that could kill him rather than the actual rays of the sun.
You see it in the Coppola version where Oldman's Dracula goes out in the

They went out of their way to include her in the last season recap at the beginning of the episode so we were very much expected not only to recognize her but to anticipate her.

Roose's death was too easy. Considering how huggy the Bolton's usually are, Roose should have automatically backed up when he saw Ramsay coming in that close. The Roose we've come to know would never slip up like that. He knows full well what a monster Ramsay is and would never let his guard down.

Considering that they are ancient Egyptians, they sure seem to come back exclusively as Americans for the past couple of hundred years too.
Also, what's up with the leader of the London resistance being an American?

I would like to see Hawkman back in the show just not THIS Hawkman. Since he constantly reincarnates can't he come back as a different actor? There's really no reason the Hawks should EVER look the same since they have a different set of parents each time. Do their metaphysical selves overwrite their DNA? If so it

What with the giant robot fight and Kendra's killer mace I was thinking "Oh good, it's the season finale and we're about to see the last of Vandal Savage" So that doesn't happen plus I see there are still 3 more episodes left with this guy. So he'll escape the Waverider next week and they'll chase him for 2 more