melissaann2009--disqus
Melissa
melissaann2009--disqus

Yeah, I thought the same. Some part of me thought Finn might die at some point in the season, but that somehow he'd get out of this one. I mean I think it's pretty rare that when the writers imply a main character will die that they actually follow through. Usually there's some last minute escape or they put off the

I wondered if anyone else had Last of the Mohicans on the brain during that scene!

I think she stabbed him in the heart, he died pretty quickly. I definitely got the impression that it was was a parallel to Clarke saving him from his knife wound (courtesy of Lincoln) in episode 107, which just barely missed his heart. Pulled the knife out in that episode, plunged it in in this one, each time to save

Yes, a million times yes. Doesn't sit well with me when the show is accused of somehow condoning Finn's actions. I think the writers are trying to tackle some big moral issues here.

Perhaps intentionally disturbing, and a reflection of how horrible things that occur in war or any conflict are often justified/downplayed in real life.

Are they trying to "redeem" Finn? I've had a lot of mixed feelings about how this new Finn negative character arc has been handled. But it seems to me that the supposed glossing over of Finn's actions by many of the characters, and his seeming apathy, are completely intentional, and a reflection of how people actually

i could be totally off, but I got the impression that the reapers are being created by the mountain men from former grounders in some sort of twisted experiment. While most captured grounders are used for "harvest", some (like Lincoln) are being used for some other purpose (did they call it project Cerberus maybe?).