lchris--disqus
lchris
lchris--disqus

Now these last 2 episodes were a return to POIs A-game. Reassortment in particular was one of the most paranoia inducing eps I've seen from this show. That scene between Elias and Harold was a display of two great actors at work, and an example of how important Colantoni's Elias has been to this show. That

I think he just got another phone. One that Harold wasn't using to communicate with him.

There's less suspension than you may think. With the increase in AI and surveillance in the real world, they've actually been ahead of the curve. And a lot of the technological stuff that seems beyond belief is actually true- there's a lot of attention to detail. There's quite a bit of exploration into the morality,

I would say more like halfway through season one. Prior to that Cure Te Ipsum and Witness are must-sees. During the first couple of seasons, it was mainly a procedural with serialized elements (a very well done procedural) but it evolved to the point of being serialized with procedural elements. Even when it was

I think the showrunners even said or implied after the S4 finale that we hadn't seen the last of Elias. I thought the the shortened season might have changed that though.

I think if the show had been allowed to run its natural course, most of them would be killed by the end. I think the showrunners even alluded to that 2-3 years ago. My prediction at that time was that Bear would be the only one standing at the end, living with Grace. Maybe Harold too.
But now that they've said they're

I think this was far from just a case of the week episode. First of all, they pulled another misdirect tying Samaritan into it (which I'm sure a lot of people saw coming). Second, it brought Elias back which can never be discounted. Third, Bruce is back next week, so this storyline does continue. And last, the case of

This show has always been the best with the misdirect episodes. I was also expecting the last shot to show the Machine getting a win. They're doing this so well that we have absolutely no idea what's to come (which is pretty much the case since the beginning). I'm surprised they only gave this one a B+. I thought it

Leonard mentioned that Penny's parents were coming the next day; they just didn't get to the next day in this episode. Maybe her family will be there in the season premiere.

It was mentioned that Penny's parents would be coming the next day, they just didn't get to the next day in this episode. Maybe they'll be in the season premiere.

It's pretty telling that the only relationship I cared about in the end was Diane and Kurts'. What, Alicia can't have a happy relationship so no one else can? Run Grace, run!

Yes, we don't need to know what happened behind the scenes. But when we're treated like idiots (they thought we wouldn't notice they hadn't had a scene together for years, or that horribly done final split-screen scene?), that deserves something. That's a reason to stop caring about a show.

I always found it odd that she never mentioned GG in any of her interviews since then, so maybe things didn't end well. Too bad, because Sookie is really the only character of hers I've liked.

And I think Paris was off to med school in the last episode.

I suspect you don't like dogs. Paul Anka a 1? In what universe?

It's odd that he would say what a big family the CBC is, and then not know that Corner Gas was on CTV, not CBC.

Terminator: Sarah Connor Chronicles

I'm glad I'm not the only one who thought the Alicia/Kalinda scene was CGI/split screen. I found it incredibly awkward to watch. If they think we'll fall for it again, then they really have no respect for the viewers. I think I'm done.

And I don't know if I would write Elias off yet:

One of the best parts (and lines) of the episode: the Machine putting John back into God mode.
Machine: "Can you hear me?"
John: "Hell yeah"