situationnowhere--disqus
SituationNowhere
situationnowhere--disqus

I thought it burrowed into her skin.

But why did they do it in the first place? Mockingbird is immediately running away from Sunil and his guards in the very next scene. Why not just….have her go with Simmons?

Coulson is not a Mary Sue because he, y'know, has genuine human emotional reactions, got where he was because of his strength of character, and grapples with issues that don't just go away because the writers feel like it.

Certainly, the roof of the sucker was only half torn-off, at best.

The point of creating that backstory is to work into the story that Chloe Bennett is actually half-Chinese. Hence, American dad, Chinese mother (although in real life it's the other way around).

I figured they were implying Skye's father was a Skrull or some other alien race of shapeshifters, hence his melting skin.

Wasn't there, like, a bomb Whitehall implanted Reina with, or something?

"I don't see where she gets off telling Coulson that he can't keep classified matters from her"

And Fury's organization was a clusterfuck of compartmentalized knowledge, overbearing bureaucracy, and shadowy secrets that allowed HYDRA to easily infiltrate it.

What was up with that weird moment when Mockingbird opened her batons and strolled back towards Sunil, only for the scene to immediately cut to Simmons on the roof and Mockingbird running after her?

Didn't Lucas get actual African language speakers to voice some of the characters in Jedi, like Nien Numb?

Moffat trolls all of his interviews, because he has an obsessive compulsion to communicate entirely through punchlines he doesn't necessarily believe.

Unless we wants to use it, of course.

A majority of season five is available now, after some of the missing episodes were recovered and/or animated. But when I was buying up the DVDs, the only thing available for ages was "Tomb of the Cybermen". And in that, just the way he snaps, "I keep my eyes open and my mouth shut," is radically sharper than anything

Of course, that was the only one available on DVD for seven whole years, so it's pretty much the baseline by default for people watching it nowadays.

Are they? I don't know, every episode is immediately called the worst episode in the history of the show by somebody (who more often than not hasn't seen any classic Who), so I've long ago tuned out talk of that sort.

Which episode?

When I said "bad memories", I meant because it was the final serial.

Says the commentator named "Gabriel Chase".

You're forgetting about that one brief, glorious season when Christopher H. Bidmead was the script editor.