seanflanders--disqus
Raven Wilder
seanflanders--disqus

They blew up Max Rager's labs, though, so that depends on them having thought to grab some beforehand.

It's too bad she only accessed the preschool teacher parts of the brain and not the sex fiend parts of the brain.

Anyone else wish we'd gotten the Savitar reveal months ago, so we could've had a lot more of Grant Gustin killing it as Evil Barry?

Plus they can both vibrate at super high speeds . . .

Next season, I want them to have Wally and Jesse on a date, when a speedster shows up and introduces himself as Johnny Quick, their son from the future.

When present Barry got amnesia, Savitar got amnesia, too, but he was still physically present, with the same suit and everything. And we saw this episode that, when Barry does something differently from how he did it the first go around, Savitar's memories get updated.

Or he could just decide to go off and do his own thing somewhere else.

Or maybe Savitar created an Iris time remnant, so he could kill her and thus cause his own existence, while still keeping Iris around.

Well, the suit was shrugging off not just gunfire, but blasts from Harry's laser cannon, the one he used to take down King Shark with one shot. I'd say it's one durable suit.

My theory: Caitlyn was right that Savitar couldn't bring himself to kill Iris, or at least not HIS Iris. So after grabbing her from Earth 2, he stowed her away somewhere and grabbed a different Iris from another universe, killing her so that Barry would still be tortured by it.

Oh my god, that would be DELIGHTFUL.

I can imagine Oliver being pissed that Snart knows his secret identity, which Snart would explain with, "Your friend Raymond has a big mouth."

It's weird, from a utilitarian perspective, if you're going to murder children, murdering ones who have cancer and might not live much longer anyway is probably the better option, but on a gut instinct level, killing kids who have cancer just seems so much worse than killing healthy children.

I liked Cat's dumpster scene with Kara, but other than that the character has never really sat right with me. They write her like the classic comedy archetype of the arrogant grandstander who doesn't realize how in-over-their-head they are, but the directing, the performance, and other characters' reactions always

"Annie, are you okay? Will you tell us that you're okay?"

For its first two seasons, The 100 dealt with one of my favorite themes in fiction: loss of innocence. We had a bunch of young people dropped into a situation they were never prepared for and forced to make increasingly horrible choices in order to stay alive. That gave everything that happened some really potent

Before the Culling in Season 1, they said the Ark's population was something like 2500 people (so 2600 if you count the 100 who'd been sent to Earth). Then 300 people got culled, and a whole bunch more died in the dropship that crashed and from the damage done to the Ark. Then they crashed the Ark to the ground, and

Didn't they at one point land on Earth or an Earth-like planet that had been destroyed by nuclear war and rendered uninhabitable, so they picked up stakes and moved on? Wouldn't take much to say they landed here sometime during Primfiya.

I don't know about moral center. He's the guy who, the instant he earned some clout with the other delinquents, turned into a douchebag popular kid who dismissed Harper as "low-hanging fruit".

Doesn't Jasper's suicide storyline go against your whole claim there? He's a character this season who ISN'T pushed into killing one and ISN'T focused on survival, quite the opposite in fact.