I'm pretty sure the writers either just forgot or thought that streamlining the bad guys was less complicated (for them) and thought that no one would notice.
I'm pretty sure the writers either just forgot or thought that streamlining the bad guys was less complicated (for them) and thought that no one would notice.
I thought the bedroom door went to the bedroom (the one Syd went through).
I had the feeling this episode that he was made to look more like Stevens in a suit than in previous episodes.
Assuming that they are both the same Lennys..
They are ancient. But before S1, everyone assumed they were just a myth. Ned didn't believe the guy he executed, the NW were surprised when the bodies came back to life.
I think we are meant to assume that Betsy has no arms.
He doesn't "get pissed" at her. She walks away. She's too dangerous to live if she is beyond his control.
Wasn't it Atlas something?
EDIT: as noted below.
She's heard about it all her life and been taught that she has to stop it. Now she finds out that she is it. That would be significant.
Well, the kid is dead, and Black Skys are probably super rare and hard to "make," so it wold make sense for them to want her back.
As others have said, I feel like the most reasonable thing would have been to explain that Frank's (coincidental?) presence at the park, perhaps recognizing some of Blacksmith's men, turns the drug deal into a shoot out. But we don't get any indication that any of Blacksmith's men are in fact there, do we?
Since the black sky is an ambiguous weapon, there is no reason there can't be more than one. And remember, Stick killed the boy.
I just assumed that Stick wanted to turn their weapon against them. He became attached but then realized the rest of the Chaste would be unenthusiastic with the idea, so he sent her away. He only has to kill her when she abandons him and the risk of the the Hand finding her is too great.
I think he said "incident," and Ultron might make more sense. The papers were from April and these episodes are taking place in the summer heat, so months, I guess.
"How long ago was Frank’s family killed? Are we talking months or years?"
The title of this review is misleading.
Punisher's monologue aside, the writing has been pretty weak so far. This season is really lacking the pacing and development of season 1. Instead, it is crammed with cliche scenes (almost everything with the priest, the Irish, and the cops seems either rehashed or forced), non-sensical subplots (Foggy at the…
And everything we've seen from Trey would suggest that he is exactly the sort of person who would go out of his way to create a false alibi. This is a show full of nuance and ambiguity and I hope the reviewer next season spends more time thinking on that nuance and less trying to give definitive readings on ambiguous…