thethinham--disqus
theThinHam
thethinham--disqus

Walton Goggins?

So many Ninjas, so few appropriate lighting levels. I'm excited.

I was the exact opposite. Its only two words, but, well, he sounds like a kid. A sheepish, cheeky sort of kid … which is exactly how I envision Peter Parker.

Walton Goggins = instant watch.

I looove the eyes moving - it might look more cartoony, but adds a lot of expression to an otherwise blank face.

I'd watch that.

I know! My discreet work browsing was ruined.

No worries, you're just fighting the good fight for linguistic prescription against the internet.

I saw that mistake just as you typed your response and now I can't fix it without rendering your pedantry useless. So I shall defiantly leave it as a medal to your speediness.

I thought I was too cool to get excited about Spiderman after the third reiteration but then he showed up and I was like AAAAAAAAAAAAH.

Watching this with absolutely no context was one of the best decisions I have ever made.

Agreed. They were nice as occasional flourishes, but have become a lazy way of tying a bow on an episode. I'll let the first one go because at least a Carol cooking montage to something upbeat is sort of new, but the second felt particularly unnecessary - particularly at a time when silence could have been used much

The score for this episode was really nicely done. Melissa McBride has been consistently one of the strongest (if not the strongest) member of the cast, but the writing for Carol felt pretty inconsistent this episode.

Ditto, I'm a few weeks behind but avoiding spoilers this morning became basically impossible.

You could basically make a whole inventory on this topic from that show alone. So many wasted characters killed off in dumb ways, but that death in particular was so frustrating. I get the point that they build up these rescue stories to instill you with a false sense of hope, only to cut that down because the world

Yeah, it gets forgotten in the wake of others that followed, but that death had a pretty major resonance on the rest of the show.

Especially as so many other characters have become more and more like him, particularly Rick. Shane was just ahead of the curve….

Yeah, I agree that the death itself was an interesting story, and I don't begrudge how it was done. On a rewatch I appreciated it more. But at the time, to me, it just felt intensely frustrating and yet another way to avoid having to start answering questions.

Ugh. Daniel Faraday on 'Lost'. Mostly because it was just so frustrating! He'd become my favourite, and he'd finally got his head together enough to take some command of the situation… So obviously he had to go. Can't go answering any mysteries early on 'Lost'.

I was rolling my eyes at yet another settlement needing help with a terribly unlikable wang inexplicably in control, but then Jesus just straight up said the guy was a dick, and I was happy that at least the show knows its pattern.