Well, pretty much a mix of both, since the framework is the result of both hard science and the magic Darkhold mcguffin
Well, pretty much a mix of both, since the framework is the result of both hard science and the magic Darkhold mcguffin
To be serious for a second, it seems that it's a deliberate (and pretty perfect) choice to make her androgynous, I think Amber Nash even said so in an interview.
Hey yeah, it's been a while since we've seen Katya. Not that she's one of my favorite characters, but I like her and she could be great in this setting
The fact that it was the same guy that was struggling to hold the smoke in both times was what made the joke for me. Man this episode was fun!
Another hilarious episode, I'm really loving this season so far. The bit about Cheryl's "quasi-incestuous" family is my favorite new running joke.
Yeah, I think that has been established quite well what with the kid that Jemma encounters, and then Hope and basically everybody. This world for all intents and purposes is basically like the real world, which has some real disturbing implications
Maybe they will keep the framework working, but even then it will pose some serious moral dilemmas.
Apparently it was, the subtitles said Bakshi
Those are actually pretty sound explanations, makes total sense. I forgot that the SHIELD takeover was before Captain America, for some reason I just kept thinking that it happened around the time of and like in Winter Soldier
But that's no real argument, 99,99% of the people in the framework are programming and not real people that were inserted into it. Based on how the framework works there should be an in-universe explanation for the Avengers not being there, and I hope they can address that, even if it's just with a throw-away line
Ward also never had a regret fixed, he is only programming after all, he just turns out to be alive and with Daisy because of the consequences of the corrected regrets of the people inserted into the framework
The programming never fixed Daisy's or Jemma's regrets, since they inserted themselves into the framework. They basically just got the established life that their computer programmed counterparts were living inside the framework
Nope, there is absolutely no reason to believe that, it was a one-time deal. If not the framework would constantly be readjusting itself
This is just ridiculous borderline racist "PC" nonsense imo, how is that a problem?
May - saving the child in Bahrain
Fitz - having a relation with his father
Mack - having his daughter back
Coulson - living a normal life
Mace - being a true hero
Eh, come on, you can hate Hunter for different reasons, but Bobbi and Mack clearly had a friendly chemistry and not a romantic one
Ok, I didn't know that, but it really shouldn't matter, the Daisy in the show was never shown to be a potentially good director, nor was it ever shown that she even wanted to do that
Honestly, I think that would be pretty dumb, it would be falling back into the old trap of forcing her to be the "most important and great character" like they used to do. I really don't see why Daisy would make a good director
I will, I'm planning on binging the whole show again soon. Of course the show now is infinitely better than early S1, but I still don't think it deserved to be reviled to the point it was. It really wasn't a horrible show like many people said, I remember being somewhat indifferent at the beginning but I certainly…
I also don't understand the real "hatred" that AoS S1 got, even before the Winter Soldier twist I remember that it was a more then decent kind of "superhero procedural", with great effects, although the Coulson Tahiti storyline was dragged out too much. The fact that I binge-watched it may have mitigated some of the…