I'm gonna miss Mack. I'd rather have Trip die at this point, he's been useless so far.
I'm gonna miss Mack. I'd rather have Trip die at this point, he's been useless so far.
I usually loathe nicknames for "shipping" couples, but come on how the hell do you go with Timmons instead of Strip? Its right there!
The dialogue went in the tank near the end of the episode. My eyes were rolling pretty hard during the final scene between Whitehall and Skye's father.
"Come again for Judge Fudge?"
I thought it was a fantastic episode. I've always thought Lyon's best scenes were when Monroe was emotional, and he delivered in this episode with some powerful scenes. And the twists were pretty satisfying, particularly with the sucker punch to Tom about his wife. I'd at least give it a B+
I think the hate stems from the pilot being quite good and fans building up their expectations based on that initial promise. The show definitely stumbled in season 1, especially because of how badly they botched Danny's storyline, but now that its on the right track I have little doubt that Kripke can keep the…
At the very least, the last few episodes of season 1 are action-heavy and thus pretty watchable. I'd say go for it, especially with the knowledge that the episodes you see in season 2 will be better. I think its worth it.
It was sad to see Beaver go. I really wanted him to stick around and talk smack to Burke over a few beers. It would've been gold.
Maybe if you'd actually watched the show, you'd know that Chapell isn't trying to make Revolution anything more than it has been this year: a dramatic improvement over season 1. A show can always improve over time, just compare Parks & Rec's first season to the incredible show it is now.
Agreed. My favorite Supernatural episodes were mostly the ones written by Edlund. He's got a talent for imaginative storytelling that weaves into a central plot. I absolutely love what they have accomplished so far this season.
Wasn't impressed by the acting of the mostly unknown members of the cast. Also, ABC really cheaped out on the film equipment they used. It looks only a hair better than a daytime soap.
I'll agree with you there. When the show first started incorporating more firefight scenes I thought it was a welcome change. But now they're getting carried away with it, and I kind of miss the close quarter combat that used to be in the show.
If that was the reveal, then I'm even more annoyed. I think the fling-y nature of the relationship was easy enough to assume from context, instead of spelling it out for us in a convoluted manner with a flashback sequence.
Oh I definitely agree with that. I think they're doing an incredibly good job with Miles' character development right now, juxtaposing all of the things in his ugly past with his current ambition to try and do the right thing even if that thing is ultimately leading him down a similar path as before.
Loved this episode, and I think this season deserves a lot of credit for coming back to what made me love HIMYM in the first place. I'd say it's been about as good as season 1 and 2, with a great overall story but some inconsistent comedy.
Enjoyed this episode quite a bit, with my only issue being the Rachel/Miles flashbacks. They constantly tease about what happened between the two and it looks like a theory I never thought would happen is probably right, but it's frustrating that they didn't bother to reveal anything concrete.
The Merman returns?!
It's hilarious how utterly naïve and useless she is to everyone.
I actually enjoyed this episode a lot while watching it, but I do admit that a lot of the themes found in this were already found in previous eps.
For me, it was the voice that impressed me most. He pulled off the 'gruffiness' of Jeff's voice perfectly, which sold the rest of the impersonation.