spawnofclue--disqus
Spawn_of_Clue
spawnofclue--disqus

Maybe salmon-flavored?

I look forward to reading reasons #2.

"You may have heard, or even subscribed to, the belief that this moment, with David waiting underwater indefinitely, is the “correct” end to the film."

Painting water lilies and stuff? I guess. But he murders so well.

Mike could climb a tree and be out of the sound guy's range. We'd lose Mike's mic.

Spike/James Marsters used to do that. He'd say "Hi, this is Spike," but in his real-life accent.

How are we to know whether people used to be friends and whether this was a recent development?

It really cemented him as a character.

That process does not seem energy-efficient :) All that choreographed moving around somehow comes across as a bad "Thriller" tribute on YouTube.

Coal-bending is a boutique earth-bending technique. Even metal-benders think of them as posers and hipsters.

I suppose one could bite *him*…

I don't think the show would ever do it; there just aren't that many zombie traits in this particular conception, and making her unpale would leave her too close to regular, run-of-the-mill person.

The not-backing-down and the heroic knee to the huge zombie's face went a long way toward making Major a little more concrete as a character.

She's effectively giving every other zombie perfect zombie radar, while having none herself; it puts her at a disadvantage.

Let us dispense with the Piz hate.

It's like "The Last Man on Earth": just keeping adding people and watering it down!

Another cut with a lot of bite to it was to Major's unconscious body on the skateboarding ramp while people went about their business around him. Yikes. Very harsh. I liked that a lot.

The cut away from Peyton's babbling made me laugh.

The last one—zipping across a seemingly empty intersection—had me nervous she'd get City of Angels'd and that it would be played for humor. I was almost too anxious to enjoy the smiling.

Regarding the repeated conversations, I get no pleasure of any kind from the whole "This is all my fault" thing. "Arrow" does it a lot, too. A bad guy does something bad and all the good guys start blaming themselves and self-flagellating. (DD has a better claim on this than most, with the Catholicism; still, it's no