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markk114
markk114--disqus

I think this episode may turn out to be better (and certainly more significant) than is being acknowledged. The historicity thing is part of it (and was a nice shout-out for the divergence Dick uses in the original book), but it's the bigger one about the nature of reality. I think the glimpses of Trudy were meant as

That was certainly true for the Childan in the novel. They seem to be moderating that in the series, though.

Its been awhile since I read it, but as I recall from the novel Childan was trying to ingratiate himself with the Japanese couple by telling them what he thought they wanted to hear, while they were trying to reach out to an "authentic" American to share their appreciation for American culture, only to reach out to

And Reinhard Heydrich was also a real person as well, a right bastard fully deserving of his "man with the iron heart" nickname.

You'll get some in the tenth episode, along with a glimpse of what Berlin looks like.

Don't listen to Sean; he misinterprets tension for boredom.

Exactly my thought when I read the above review. The scene does a pretty good job of capturing the awkwardness from the novel, albeit in a slightly more heavy-handed way.

One other thing to keep in mind about the Yellowjacket suit is that nowhere do they establish that Cross only wears the suit after he masters organic shrinking. The opposite seems more likely — at the start of the film, Cross makes it clear that he's mastered inorganic shrinking, so the Yellowjacketsuit has been

I can't explain the big stuff, Tasha, but I have answers for all of the nit-picking:

It's also possible that Pym dropped the dime with BR so as to prod him back into crime.

What bothered me more was the timeline. Howard Stark and Peggy Carter looked awfully good for two people would have been around 70 (and I'm being very generous with that estimation) in 1989. It would have been more plausible if they had knocked it back an extra decade.

All of this talk about why Tony didn't assemble the Avengers in IM3 (or Cap calling the Avengers in Winter Soldier) ignores to fact that they do this stuff in the comics. All. The. Time. Have the people posting here never read an Iron Man comic or a Captain America story? Solo adventures are par for the course, and

Yeah, I already saw that. The most charitable explanation that I can come up with for its exclusion is that nobody involved in compiling this list has ever watched Futurama.

I should have thought to check before I posted the same thing. It's the only episode I ever saw of any show for which "too painful to watch" has been true.

There is no way a list like this can be compiled without including "Jurassic Bark."

Michael Ironside so needs to write his memoirs.

Daryl doesn't need to build light bombs; he just whistles and his crossbow bolt nails 27 walkers dead.

About the flirtation scene between Charlie and Deirdre the DJ — was Deirdre trying to infect Charlie with whatever techno-device Irisa was spreading back in the third episode? I'm not sure if Deirdre was one of Irisa's victims in that episode, but I'm wondering if, between the flirtation scene between her and Deirdre

If a SyFy exec sees this headline, I imagine it will only be a matter of time before we see the new SyFy movie Shark Lightning in a Bottle.