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PatternRec
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Is that the NYC storyline?

I agree with you here. I love Ilana and want her to be happy, but Lincoln was very clear about what he wanted for a long time and Ilana wasn't able to give that to him.

POINTS!

I suspect they changed it because from a sci fi writing perspective "pheromones" seems kinda like an eighties explanation. In any case, I'm glad they didn't give any further explanation of how it worked because that would have been just more pseudo-science.

"What? Was Murdercorpse already taken?" :D

I don't know his Daredevil arc so that didn't occur to me, but my other thought *was* that he would probably show up in Luke Cage or in Iron Fist.

Better get some blues or you'll forget how to breathe. You don't want the community worrying about you…

Same. Great job.

A lot of people are saying they wanted Kilgrave to survive because Tennant was so good. I agree that he was fantastic but that character had to die. Not just for what he'd done, but because of the danger of his abilities.

I thought they set up IGH as the season two baddies pretty well. They could also bring Nuke back since he has a history with both Trish and Jessica, and a traumatic one that pushed him over the edge.

Could be. It's hard to say for sure because one of the things JJ does well is not insult its viewers with simple characters. We often meet people who seem horrible (Robin) or pathetic (Malcolm) or something other than what they truly are until we get to know them better, and even them it doesn't insult us with pat

I think the Robin character is supposed to be mentally ill, and I think it's a good portrayal of it. She loved her brother, even if her poor emotional state didn't allow her to be humane towards her brother.

Bossks, I agree about being able to sympathize with her when she wasn't being toxic. Also see my other post in response to Caroline above for more.

I think it's a pretty accurate portrayal of someone with mental illness. The weird leaps in logic and the inability to respond in an appropriate emotional way to a situation. Unfortunately MI is not something easy to understand or process for most people, so the audience's reaction to an actor doing a good job playing

Ruben seemed pretty chill about her, and not just in an "I need her to take care of me" way. I got the impression he genuinely loved his sister and accepted her warts and all. I never got the sense that Ruben wanted away from his sister the way Jessica or any of Kilgrave's thralls would.

Her abuse comes from a relatively powerless place and isn't really focused the way some of the real villains of the piece are.

Does Samberg have a reason to slight Hader?

I haven't watched this movie in a long time, but doesn't this have the scene where Luthor is talking and Harley's like "Blah blah blah… yawn!"