scarletlettered
scarlet_lettered
scarletlettered

I didn’t take it that way at all. It seemed that the connection was made quite explicitly by way of Lucifer’s jealous subconscious—which immediately ad desperately set about finding a way to get to Canada to “rescue” Maze from this inferior human version of himself.

The broadness of Michael’s response to existential horror kept me guessing throughout the episode that it might be just an act. I’m still not sure it wasn’t.

Wow. That sounds amazing.

God, right there with you.

I’m actually not ready for them to recover their memories. I’m curious to see them rediscover each other in this new “Team Cockroach” dynamic. I also think the effect of recovering 2-3 centuries-worth of Sisyphean memories might be game-changingly big; it wouldn’t necessarily reset them to the characters we knew and

No, we’re all already in the Bad Place.

I know, right!?

I feel like entrance to the good place should require some capacity for empathy. For a genius, Kamilah seemed amazingly oblivious to how damagingly she and their parents treated Tahani.

I have to confess, I find the fact that Jason is a running “Florida Man” gag pretty endearing, but I have relatives there.

How could that ever be wrong, Miss Eli?

I’ve been one of those vanished commenters—in part because it’s college football season and in part because (despite trying to import my disqus account) I’ve been banished to the greys. But Lucifer and Laferg’s Lucifer reviews are two of favorite things. So I’m going to try to do my part to support AVC’s coverage of

Michael accidentally invented Purgatory!

Not the medium place. The Boundless Void.

Hey, I have no fear of a black planet.

Oh God. Speaking as an historian of that era, the "Catholic Church" thing was actually incredibly wrong and stupid. Sixteenth-century Lutheran authorities simply seized all the local (i.e. medieval) churches. In countries or territories that turned Protestant in the sixteenth century, it's actually the Catholic

The Fome seems kind of small for a family of 4. I think they need to get that tunnel door open so they can add a couple bedrooms and another bath.

It seemed like some buried adolescent rage coming out. After growing up without her parents, to find one of her most beloved family members and have them turn out to be a supervillain could lead to some poorly repressed, explosive disappointment.

I'm really looking forward to seeing him in the ice-skater skirt.

If only Kara could kiss away Winn's douchiness.

I hope they've actually thought out Astra's motivations and plans, because it feels like they're making it up on the fly. I agree with the reviewer that the eco-terrorism angle is so vague that it's impossible to tell whether Astra had any justifications for her actions or not. That she and her husband killed a guard