suitablecustard--disqus
suitablecustard
suitablecustard--disqus

Soya sausages - the food of demons. Eat it and go to hell!

Yeah, it was the realistic approach to it without making it overly comical.

The chance to have him devoured by zombies was definitely a missed opportunity. I kept thinking early on that whatever death scene they had planned for him in context of the show would involve zombies and act as an homage to the death of Captain Rhodes in Day of the Dead.

They could have captured the Governor, dangled him from a tree and had everyone still alive in the prison and able to do so take a swing at him as if he were a human piñata for all the suffering he's inflicted upon them.

A moment that would have been really great if they'd all looked at each other, shrugged and said "Shucks, there went our ride!"

Either way, ineffective.

Beth's defining moment: being handed an assault rifle, emptying an entire clip and not killing a single person.

The woman who tried to use Rick as food for her zombified husband early on in the season.

I guess we all know what the Governor's Christmas card would look like: him happily decapitating Santa Claus as a small cadre of elves and reindeer look on in horror.

Green Lantern ends on a semi-cliffhanger but it was consistently good throughout its run. Young Justice ends with a better sense of closure (in my opinion, at least) and was almost as consistently good as Green Lantern (a few of the early episodes of Young Justice are kind of weak but I think that's mostly due to it

I lost a little faith in DC when they dropped Young Justice and Green Lantern (by then it became clear that no one is really certain on what the hell they want from the DC Nation block at all). It saddens me a little to find that Marvel's animation offerings are faring better.

While I don't necessarily carry the highest of hopes for this show, I think working within the limitations imposed by Marvel is maybe slightly more serious than the (relative) sense of freedom afforded to Joss & co. when they worked on the likes of Buffy and Angel.

The way (Jed) Whedon and Maurissa Tancharoen explained it, Marvel has allowed them a very specific database for what they can mine for story ideas. It's allegedly more expansive than the show's episodes have proven to be thus far, at least if they're to be believed.

They can't even acknowledge that mutants exist, much less say the word itself.

I still maintain that it's going to roll out a twist of Shyamalan-ian proportions when it is revealed that the show has been a sci-fi story all along.

I keep expecting reviews for this show to consist of nothing but unrelated prose, interspersed with lines about how Sonia wishes for someone to contact the authorities with strict instructions to have CBS release anyone condemned to review it, ending the Hostages crisis once and for all.

"That's a mighty fine lake you got there… mind if I turn it into a fish tank of horrors?"

Must've fit the criteria of "didn't have a line of dialogue, so they didn't exist".

Roving band of ninjas - slipped into that camp and slaughtered everyone without so much as the Governor batting his good eye.

Ryan Murphy better instruct the driver of one of those dump trucks full of cash Glee pulls in to stop by Lange's doorstep.