lironmiron--disqus
lironmiron
lironmiron--disqus

...And Maria Hill died for this! :’’’’(

But there was always someone to root for. There were worthy people to root for since Season 1 and while we rooted for them, we watched Sansa grow as a person. The ones we rooted for in Book 1 died but were replaced by other worthy ones (who mostly also died) and, especially, there was always someone who has so ridiculo

To be fair, high born men didn’t seem to have much of a say either, if Daemon is anything to go by (until they build their own private army, at least).

I haven’t read the source material either, but the king did mention that blood magic was practiced in Old Valyria.

But she was destroying her fingers before she was first asked to visit the king.

The Tusken tribes of different territories have different cultures. Clearly, the tribe that controlled the area around the Skywalkers’ farm was dedicated to raiding and pillaging. It’s normal that he’d assume that they’re all like that, since he was so isolated. I doubt that the people of Lindisfarne gave much thought

and yet, the gang’s colorful bikes and pristine outfits would have still worked for me IF they had gotten them -after- getting employed by Fett.

It will definitely not be a one-off, but it might be a one-off for this season.

“Where is the mayo on that hamburger?”

The man has no irises and no pupils. I don’t think you can get much more blind than that!

Uhm, yeap. You got it. That’s pretty much it.

That description of the Shadowlands makes me think that Stargirl happens in the same universe as Warhammer 40K.

I would have put The Shield even above The Leftovers.

This is the episode where Courtney became a superhero for me. Not an apprentice hero, not a junior superhero waiting to mess up and learn, but an actual bona fide full fledged Superhero.

It think it was healing him. It was just not finished yet and he used his energy to open the portal instead of to complete the healing.

I actually even doubted for a moment that Courtney herself would cross. This show has given enough swerves that I didn’t completely put it past it that she’d save the other two and get stuck for another episode.

and the one member who is still (sort of) alive, when confronted by a kid, already said that he did not take part in the killing and never would have.

Heart. Broken. :’’(

Pat’s car has a rocket engine, so he probably did drive all the way. What confused me was that he had a car to drive while Mike still had the robot at home to repair. Weren’t the car and the robot one and the same?

I wouldn’t even call it a “trope” for this show. It seems that they really want to present “killing is bad” as such a basic, obvious, fundamental, and universal truth that, as you so eloquently put it, “it goes without saying.”