So much hotness in this episode, and it was topped by Asher's explosion after finding the bug. Thank you, Matt McGorry, for having no shame.
So much hotness in this episode, and it was topped by Asher's explosion after finding the bug. Thank you, Matt McGorry, for having no shame.
I don't know what that's a reference to, but it is delightful.
So the best episode so far is the one I don't actually see (due to The Good Wife)? That sounds about right.
I…don't recall. It was the second half of season 6, and you know how these things go. One's eyes start to wander, and suddenly you miss crucial plot details. Sorry for not being more helpful.
From what I recall, the issue is that The Wrong People found out about the rigging, leading Landau (and, it now seems, Peter) to throw Alicia to the wolves.
I'd forgotten about those claims; even so, I am not at all inclined to believe them, given that lying is as natural as breathing to Annalise. What's more, the fact that she has resources like Frank now doesn't mean she's always had them. Annalise killing, or being responsible for the death of someone dear to Wes,…
Given the show and the Annalise-initiated sexual weirdness, I'm thinking not that she is family, but that Annalise was responsible for murdering one or more members of his family.
This season is feeling a lot like the fourth season of Alias; more focused on getting things on solid footing than in being spectacular. And in that sense it is working, but I just want it to get to the part where there's a not-quite a clone of the Headless Horseman.
I've made this same joke, before I remembered that the Japanese character Rita is based on is herself literally a riff on Pandora. And now I just really want them to meet.
I watched the back half of this episode after missing the first half to watch Supergirl, and I couldn't help noticing how that half hour was exponentially better than the hour of superheroics, on all fronts (except possibly the "Melissa Benoist is great" front). Granted, one shouldn't compare a show in its prime to…
If this is Jeremy Jordan being more appealing, I'd hate to see him on Smash . I suppose the acting isn't technically one of the problems with the character he's playing, but god his character was terrible. I hated absolutely everything about him, and I fear they'll actually attempt to make him a legit love interest…
Chan isn't the male (read: romantic) lead, though: as dark as the series pretends to be, he can't be, or else the series becomes one about how Rebecca is actually right to do everything she does. He's a red herring and a plot device—the reason why Rebecca moves—as evidenced by his actual lack of character development…
This may have been the best pilot I've seen this season, and the show is probably the one I'll give the least chance to. Enjoyable? Yes, and Rachel Bloom absolutely carried it. But between the premise, the meds-ditching, the "comedic" anti-semitism (and yes, I know Bloom, like Rebbecca, is Jewish; the scene was…
Puerto Rico—not technically East Coast—or Eastern Time Zone, for that matter—but close enough on most occasions. This is not one of them, apparently, and I had no idea that could be the case. Huh!
I'm confused now. Isn't that the first FAL electric assault—the one where they were locked out of their stuff, early in the season, until Kalinda solved everything? Or is that how everyone's personal e-mails ended up getting leaked in the second half of the season? I'll admit my attention span during either…
Not really, at this point. Given how last season apparently couldn't remember that Florrick, Agos and Lockhart was a legally distinct entity from Lockhart / Garner, with FAL suddenly owning LG e-mails, somehow acquiring a New York office, and Julius being there, the show forgetting which job which of Peter's scandal…
I only saw half the episode before switching over to Quantico—stupid east-coast delays—but it seemed to me that the episode, while far better than most of the second half of season 6, was still a far cry from the show's last premiere. Remember "The Line"? That was awesome.
Same here, but for important sleeping commitments, I would have given The Grinder a shot based only on Morales, so I'm glad to see I needn't have bothered this week.
Wait, Jessica Lucas is going to be in Gotham? Dammit, I did not need a(n entirely superficial) reason to give this series another shot. Stupid affection for Melrose Place 2.0 actors.
Every one of these reviews makes me think that Dillahunt's K.D. is essentially a modern-day retread of his Francis Wolcott character from Deadwood. How accurate would this be?