One word: iZombie. It is based on a Comic book, after all.
One word: iZombie. It is based on a Comic book, after all.
Okay, to get this out of the way once and for all: There have been shows with female superhero leads before, most of them made by DC. You just don't remember them because, aside from Wonder Woman, they were all awful!!!! (Look up "Bird of Prey" if you don't believe me).
She is not even the first "female lead comic…
The pilot was a big let-down for me. To get this out of the way: I really like the actress. She is adorable. But she is easily the only thing good about it. The basic story makes no sense whatsoever (really you could drive a truck through all the plot holes). Every decision they made for the character is insulting,…
Of all the scenes in this pilot, this was the one which enraged me nearly the most. Who the hell are they trying to kid, calling a grown woman a girl is just as insulting as calling a grown man a boy. There is nothing empowering about infantilizing yourself.
The worst scene was the "Why do you think this? Because she…
Someone pointed out early in the show that SHIELD likes to recruit people who don't have many attachments. We know that Coulson has no family and the few connections he had otherwise were lost when he died. For Skye, SHIELD is her family. Fitz only has a mother, Jemma's family is in England and the closest connection…
Diversity is not having one of each kind in every given show. Diversity is thinking past the white male lead and telling stories about all kind of people, and having different shows which address a different group of people. Agent Carter is already addressing the plight of the woman at the workplace, and of the…
The funny thing is that Ward was actually supposed to die at the end of season 1…but Dalton's "bad guy performance" was so compelling that the writers decided to keep him around.
Honestly, I don't think that the show has a lot of work to do, it is the audience which has finally get out of this mind set to look for faults in it because it has trouble to adjusts its first impression. Other shows are fibbing more, have most pacing problems and questionable scenes in any given week, but they are…
No, you are not. The story makes zero sense, most of the characters are utterly unlikable and it rides the "we have a female superhero" angle so hard, that it comes off as sexist. The only good thing about it is the actress they picked. But that doesn't rescue anything.
It actually does better than Flash, because the gender ratio is way more even.
Every watched Psych? This remark just reminded me of the episode "Black and Tan, a Crime of Fashion".
Well, it's a touchy subject for Fitz. After all, he got betrayed twice already, once by Bobby herself, and he knew that she and Jemma were keeping something from him. Plus, the delivery wasn't even snappy, it sounded more understanding than anything.
Wasn't she Asian? Either way, I doubt that she is truly dead either. They left a giant loophole for her to come back once the actress is done with her other obligations.
Two? I count only one, at least until we see Andrews body.
I honestly don't get why he had to take over for anyone. Why can't he be badass on his own and perhaps invent his own supercool weaponry and hero identity.
I actually don't think that it was as strong as the first two. Too much wheel spinning going on. Thankfully the last ten minutes made up for it in spades.
Either it is because Daisy changed the old-fashioned way, or it is because she actually managed to stand up to lash in their confrontation, but most likely it is because Daisy is embracing her abilities and is ready to use it as a force of good. Joey might be safe for now because he hasn't made a decision yet.
So…this episode killed three white people for real, but the most important thing is that a black character might have died even though from the set-up it is pretty much clear that he is still alive? And how does Mike count into an "unfortunate trend of killing black characters" when he is still alive?
I know that…
It's only three…Ward creating Hydra while Hunter and May is looking for him is one.
Everything related to the Inhumans is another one…Daisy, the ATCU and Lash are simply different players within it.
And Simmons is the third. It is actually pretty cleverly made, because it allows the show to spend a while episode on…
Who was most likely her last connection to the outside world and betrayed her. If she had any acquaintances of note, they were all part of the Rising Tide. The closest relationship Daisy has to anyone is the connection to Coulson…and visa versa, since Coulson has no family and gave up on the love of his life.