trevormobbs--disqus
Trevor Mobbs
trevormobbs--disqus

Just aired in Australia.. I have to agree with this review, the body count was high but it was really to no purpose. The murderer ends up saying "if there was any other way" which was just ridiculous. This wasn't a guy who was somehow pressured into killing, this was a guy who deliberately engineered a complex and

Meh. This whole review is based on "but I thought last week Oliver was really brainwashed". Having figured out during the previous episode that he was probably involved in a great big ruse, it didn't bother me in the least to have that confirmed early in this episode. The big surprise was that Malcolm was in on it.

Still catching up in Australia… LOVED this episode. A great mix of action and psychological insight (mostly into Ray and Roy). I'd been feeling for a while that maybe Season 3 wouldn't be able to deliver anything that was as good as the heights of Season 2, but the last couple of episodes have been excellent.

I really enjoyed Brothers, and I'm so glad I played it. To me it illustrates very well how what we think of as "games" have evolved to include titles that are more focused on being interactive stories. I'm actually glad that it's not especially difficult, because it kept me engaged.

Absolutely God-awful. The end of the previous episode and the start of this one confirmed that I no longer care about this show. Why should I, when the writers obviously don't.

Yes, good review. The show does indeed rely on parallel story lines all the time, but two vigilantes with two troubled sidekicks was just a unimaginative and leaden. And yes, in many scenes down in the lair this season Roy has just been standing in the background, hovering. A Roy-centred episode just doesn't feel as

We're a bit behind with the show in Australia. But I just wanted to say… Sherlock was way, way too keen to say "Quagga" at every opportunity.

The reason Glee believes in high school romances is that Glee simply doesn't believe in anyone other than a core group of characters. The show fell apart for me when it couldn't work out what to do when those characters graduated from high school. Is this a show about a high school singing group, or about these people?

This just aired in Australia. Great episode, I completely agree that it was satisfying as a character-based resolution, and a nice change from shows that have placed the focus more on catching a recurring nemesis. I was only about a third through when I thought "I bet this got a high mark in the reviews".

I thought this was a strong episode. The review seems to criticise this plotline as not being specific enough to Elementary. Personally, I care more about whether something was done well, not whether it was devastatingly original. The episode deserves credit for getting the pacing and plotting right so that the

Rather behind on this series (living in Oz doesn't help) but I really appreciated the balance between Sherlock, Joan and Kitty in this episode. I definitely think the series is showing it can handle the change in dynamic.

"So either the rumors, or some variation of them, are true or the writers
just have a massive blind spot when it comes to writing Kalinda and
Alicia’s relationship. We know the latter can’t really be true, because
there was a time early on in the series when their relationship was one
of the best written, though

I agree with the basic point of this review that the pacing is off. What really got me was the whole Legacy album/family song business. Within the matter of a few hours, Lucious and Cookie are talking about it, then Jamal and Hakeem are talking in church about whether they're going to do it, then everyone's recording

So on your second point… you seriously think that they should have thought of all of that while they were in the room with the dead body, and no-one would have had further thoughts on the legality later on?

Aargh. I just hate the suggestion that the episode is a failure because it wasn't giving you much information.

It's an article about American television. Why are the people living in the rest of the world relevant? If you're going to make them relevant, you need to do some research on the ethnicities of actors in television shows across the whole world.

"The script includes some clunky explanation of how they’re all guilty
of felony murder because they were breaking and entering into Sam’s
home and he was technically defending himself. But I don’t know how much
I buy that. And I don’t want to go down a spiral of whether it’s
“realistic” or not from a legal point of

Hmm. Well. I did enjoy parts of the episode, but I also felt a bit unsatisfied. I know the reviews of this season have pointed out how increasingly the Alicia Florrick show and the show about a law firm have been separate, but the very different setting for Diane brought this home even more than usual.

"I really feel she shoulda lost this one cause Prady deserved it more."

Led Zeppelin is actually one of Tori Amos' own favourite acts.