Robin should have listened to her initial instincts.
Robin should have listened to her initial instincts.
Watching this episode made me remember how much I hated Barney's over-the-top romantic gestures to Robin. I've always found them just a bit too much and forced. No wonder I couldn't get on board with their romance.
The writing was on the wall.
Wasn't Felix introduced as someone who was stepping outside of his boundaries by trying to create that bird? What if Maeve was the one individual at Delos who gave him that chance to do exactly that . . . and he is reacting to this?
You say that a lack of answers lead to an uneven episode of "Westworld". Did you expect answers? Did you expect every episode to provide answers? You do realize that you're watching a serial drama . . . right? Not every episode is going to provide answers to the audience in a straightforward way. This isn't…
I had no problems with this episode. But then, it's just me. However, I did find Wyatt's holier-than-thou attitude a bit hard to swallow. Especially in regard to Rufus. Apparently, he doesn't seem to understand the concept of coercion via threats of death.
have no idea how the President would even go about it—but while the writers do their best to give it weight here, it makes Kirkman look inept . . .
I get the feeling that you want everything to be revealed as soon as possible. Which tells me that you might not have any business watching, let alone writing about serialized television drama. May I make a suggestion? Find someone else to take over the duty of reviewing "Westworld".
In fact, I’m so far down the queer subtext rabbit hole that I thought, for just a moment, Cobblepot and Nygma were going to kiss at the end of the episode. Alas, they settled for a hug, and now we’re stuck with the boring romance brewing between Selina and Bruce.
The problem for me is the pacing. Agents of SHIELD, for the most part, knows exactly how long they can play something out. Questions get answered one or two episodes after they're posed in the first place. The Flash, on the other hand, moves (ironically) at a snail's pace and drags out certain plot lines much longer…
Not buying your shit.
Funny. My sister (and I) believe that "The Flash" has become the better show and that "Agents of SHIELD" hasn't really been that good since Season One.
Perhaps there are many Disney execs who support Trump.
nd yes, Daisy’s collusion with Yo-Yo was sending consternation through the assembled team, if by “assembled team” you mean “Mack and his inability to accept the current situation, or even what making a promise to someone entails, apparently.”
Are you a moron or what? Warner Bros. said no such thing. It said that their comic book movies could use a little more improvements. Honestly, I can say the same for Marvel - especially in the past year or so.
Season 2 was absolute shit and the worst one I have seen on this show.
No, it’s something much more personal: It’s a reference to Daisy Johnson—now known to the world as “Quake”—who has become the unseen specter haunting her former teammates. She’s abandoned her makeshift family, and that loss resonates with all of them, standing in symbolically for the larger loss of identity they all…
You act as if your opinion is a fact . . . which it is not. And I cannot help but feel that your true feelings about VOYAGER has a lot to do with your sexism. This article is garbage.
Ah . . . the mysterious suitcase. I still remember that shitty episode from "LOST".
The real problem with Season Two of "OUTLANDER" for me was . . . Paris. The episodes in Paris sucked . . . at least for me. I'm sorry, but I didn't care for two-thirds of Season Two.