swanpride--disqus
swanpride
swanpride--disqus

It wasn't a "lazy device" though, it was a way to end a story arc which would just distract from the larger narrative. She wasn't killed just because Coulson liked her. She was killed because she knew that Hydra has placed their people in the ATCU and would have done something about it had she lived, which would have

Couldn't agree more. That's what I love about Marvel, they have something for every taste.

Didn't you see the puckered skin? Also, they only needed to make her scream and then could take a break so that Fitz would worry why she fell silent.

It's a little bit crowded here, but we are a nice bunch and always ready to share.

It is not fridging when it simply concludes a storyline. Fridging is one of those tropes which are constantly used wrong. It can only refer to a character which only exist so that his or her death motivates the hero. That was not Rosalinds function in the show, though, it was just a bonus after her storyline had run

Do we? I don't trust Thomas one bit.

A critic which basically starts every review with "this isn't like this totally different show I like much better" is terrible at his job. As is one which concentrates on one or two elements and downgrade the whole episode based on "I didn't like that the show made this move, I would have done it different" instead of

I recommend Spoiler TV. Better reviews, nice comment section. You don't even need to read said reviews, you can simply comment at the poll.

The show is rarely that obvious.

So…basically the reviewer is pissed of because he thinks that the show "Fridged" a character. I suggest to look up what the terms actually means…hint, it doesn't refer to layered female character which gets taken out of the story because it is time to move forward to what is actually the main plot of the season. Not

It make sense to me…after all, we tend to say 9/11 instead of "the day the twin towers were destroyed by a terrorist attack". Everyone knows what those numbers mean, even though they are not particularly descriptive. I can see that an alien attack might turn into "the incident".

I have to go back and rewatch the scene…but I think he said something to her which freed her from his influence forever. I think one of the lines he uttered could be interpreted as him ordering her to not listening to him any more. And if that order still stands somewhere in her mind, it wouldn't matter what he said

Honestly, I hold Twilight against nobody who worked on it - safe for the cinematographer. I was kind of impressed that they turned the books into something watchable.

Point is it wasn't shields decision, it was the decision of the council.

Why should it? There was once a plane whose whole top was ripped off which was safely landed. Only one victim, and that was the flight attendant who got sucked out. It is possible to land a plane with an open door, pilots are trained for this kind of stuff.

Yep…I am writing the round-up for Spoiler TV and the only question I had to deal with was if I should give it an A+ or an A just in case something even better comes later this season.

Yep. And if you pay attention during the first episode, you can see Coulson's hand in the lab.

Agent Smart enough to not wear a cape

I also liked "Hello IT department who only calls me if there is a problem."

I can't be the only one who keeps thinking that it looks like the Eiffel tower.