[quote]The show never actually supported that in previous episodes and now this episode explicitly rejected that point.[/quote]
[quote]The show never actually supported that in previous episodes and now this episode explicitly rejected that point.[/quote]
Haha! I hadn’t seen it, but now I can’t unsee it.
Pat has to know where the JSA put their captured supervillains.
Also, “Don’t touch that because it’s the most powerful item in all this place!”
Especially after seeing how much Starman would have benefited from having that!
That’s what I was hoping it would tell us. But the thing is that it didn’t explain that. It explained that the “men of science” caused both the warming and the cooling. Then it said that among the rich who were admitted into the train “many of them [were] responsible.” It didn’t even try to imply that they were more…
Me neither! Can you imagine trying to choose whom to give less than 100k tickets to among 7 billion?! Worst nightmare ever.
I think my main problem with the show so far is that it seems to expect that I’ll connect with the Taily’s cause by default. I probably would have, if I’d watched the movie before the first episode, but the situation of the Tailys here is totally different.
Maybe Sasha wasn’t even using a needle. If we got the segment from his perspective, he might have had an alka-seltzer and a glass of water. You never know in Noah-view.
Salvaste el Velasquez, gracias Supergirl!
I didn’t find them so irreconcilable. Noah probably got to the school super late, and started screaming about not being in the list, but he’s so self absorbed that he remembers himself calmly asking about not being in the list and everyone else being confrontational.
I’ve actually been enjoying most of the episodes so far. Two epic adventures in exotic places out of eight seems about normal duck batting averages under both Barks and Rosa. Then, two Beagle Boys episodes, one with Gyro and Helper (of whom I’m a huuuuge fan) and one with Gladstone (whom I don’t love but he’s…
You mean, than the Lightbringer books? Oh, yes, this show is definitely worse; it’s not even close.
If people are curious about whether a story about a stuck up royal/imperial family upholding a corrupt and decadent system based on slavery and oppression, fighting against a liberator who wants to set all men free and put an end to mass ritualistic murders can be good, and whether a great writer can even get you to…
They did it; they freaking did it! They recaptured the spirit; they recaptured the magic!
Why would you even ask about kids?
What do kids have to do with this?
Eph runs through what he would do to hit the strigoi.
New ally: "So let’s do that”
World: "No!!! Do anything, anything at all BUT that!!
Who needs Nostradamus when you have Idiocracy?
It not just that they all have shades of grey. It's that they also all have shades of hero!
It's hard not to feel bad for Sam because his actions made him deserve it, but his actions were based on the only logical conclusion he could reach with the information he had. You can see the lightbulb turn on when he gets that single extra fact that changes everything and could have even changed his entire life.