Oh yeah, I've seen them all (and own them on DVD, it's largely a good show).
Oh yeah, I've seen them all (and own them on DVD, it's largely a good show).
This was ugly and mean spirited.
?
As it is, the Oona Chaplin story feels like a one act piece that never comes to much of a resolution.
Nah, you're not alone. I felt it was poor.
Ed Blomquist is described as “a cow, basically. Which sounds like a judgment, but is simply his classification in the animal kingdom.”
This was good, to a degree, though I think it would have been a more solid experience if it could have just stuck to fewer concepts and explored them more thoroughly. Though they certainly make fantastic television, I'm against twists for the sake of twists, as a rule. The reveal doesn't just need to be shocking, the…
It was also about twenty minutes shorter than the other two episodes, so I think some stuff got dropped on the cutting room floor.
He was terrible. And I found the scene sadly quite prosaic, all megalomaniac gloating, and silly logic loops.
I don't know if it's a combination of lack of (interested) staff, or if this stems from some kind of budgetary concern, but I've noticed that the AV had more and more missing shows on its docket ever since Todd left. I'm not just talking about the loss of Grimm, Supernatural or Ascension (though the absence of…
I think the actress who plays Garza always did her own stunts — even back in season one, where she only got two or three lines across the entire year she was doing her own fight sequences.
Didn't Kiera's son get erased from the timeline at some point? Now that there's a future where Kellogg rules the Earth — and since it appears that only one future can exist at a time — the future that Kiera comes from no longer exists.
Was it his wife then? I can't remember.
Depends which season. The one in season 1 — which kickstarted the show's Reaper mythology — was evil, and the one in Season 2 — which featured the show's first angel — was also evil.
I got the impression that he was meant to be a little bit delicate. His reactions were really heavily emotional tending towards the histrionic, and he looked like he was all puffy with rattlesnake poison.
I just don't understand Eko in '?'. I get that he's having a religious experience, and that he believes that a benevolent higher power has directed him to the Pearl in order to teach him something.
"That's clear?"
"It will be once I crack the encryption."
"English, Raven. Speak English."
I dunno. I liked Beth's death. She stabbed Dawn meaning to die, sacrificing her life in an attempt to free the other members of the hospital from Dawn's tyrannical system, in a way that (theoretically) prevented reprisal due to the codes of that system. The system worked on closed loops and balance — medicine for…
You're criticising Oliver's writing, right, and not the show? I can see your point. I've only briefly skimmed his writing here, since I tend to not find his arguments particularly persuasive. He's previously suggested that Korra's third season represented a clever investigation of Anarchy, when really it boiled down…
They lost three. They got one back, but that was during pre-production on the finale, which limited what they could do with the time available (in terms of casting and story arcs).