Robert Jordan.
Robert Jordan.
I thought maybe the heroin was like magic-laced heroin. Like, you shoot up and you're chillin out with Uatu or some shit.
No I never doubted Wesley's loyalty. I DID however get a serious Smithers/Burns vibe off of him.
I just remember the news infotainment show on Fox (Extra! maybe?) would always tout "And next: the boys of Fastlane!" like every episode. I don't think it was meant ironically either. Apparently Fastlane was their only option for TV stars appearing for an interview.
I agree. I mean the basic theme stated by the showrunners is "Who is Oliver Queen?" So the first ep with Oliver vs the Arrow is pretty representative of that. The season lacked the overall cohesion season two had, but even a "bad" season of Arrow is still good.
The best part of the season has definitely been the focus…
Holy Spirit Gum
The episode literally ends with crime god Wilson casting out his adversary (who fell from above). I hope this morality flip is what leads Matt to embrace the devil symbol.
Human bean juice
Yeah but Gilgun is an intolerable tool. So it's perfect.
"Just do the opposite!"
- George Costanza
I suspected Roy and Laurel were banging after their nights out, a la Watchmen.
Oliver: the Arrow is my penis.
As a season about who Ollie really is, it's been really scattered and disappointing. But as a season of Roy Harper, Parkour Sidekick, it's stealth impressive.
Agreed. They're repeating the theme lately like it's an episode of Once Upon a Time.
I'm shipping the Demonic photo and the Salmon Ladder.
Fully agree. I haven't laughed out loud like that at a superhero show since Daredevil beaned a baddie with a microwave.
This might be irrelevant because of pre-production timing versus actual filming, but I think the difference in graphic violence between episodes two and three are reflective of Drew Goddard being replaced by Stephen DeKnight.
To be clear, all the violence has been graphic to some degree, but note the foley work has…
I definitely laughed out loud at the microwave.
I'm willing to believe he's blind to this, that he just kills whoever causes the best drama, but it would be problematic if he did.
Besides, this theory is entirely plausible.
I feel like if they had committed to end Supernatural at Season Five the Apocalypse wouldn't have been so meh.