I've never hated a fictional character as much i hate Moon's mother. If I were in her place, I would burn her alive ngl...
Percy Jackson does the floss in this episode
Again blackfacing Annabeth.
You know how fun it is to recognize a character in advance cause you read the books? Like Dionysos and others...
But then there's Annabeth: tall, blonde,....
She's a fucking small brunette here just to cast a Black person in it...
When will people finally learn that replacing anu character with another etnicity for the sakebof having this etnicity is also so fucking terribly racist!
This shit is so racist.
Lady Ae-shin's reaction to finding out the meaning of the word "love" ahahahaha.
Taecyeon is giving us the best villain we've seen in years!
how could a film that bases an entire storyline around a Ratatouille joke not be absolutely fantastic?
that ending was so fucking sad
I swear that mother reaally pissed me off
Oh my God, they playing Sara Ramirez's (Callie) cover of The Story at the last scene and then Arizona getting that message from Callie made me burst into tears i swear.
So I suppose they don't hire brazillians actors to play an actual brazillian citizen lol that accent was terrible tbh
[8.6/10] One hell of a premiere and one hell of a surprise. It delivered what I want from a show like Rick and Morty -- crazy, imaginative, absolutely insane sci-fi experimentation and adventure, with dark introspective emotional and character material to support it. The bits of the sci-fi weirdness, from Inception-like brain journeys to transferred consciousness to battles between disparate forces in space were colorful and mind-bending the whole way through.
But what I really loved about this episode was how it asked (and maybe answered) the question I was left asking at the end of the last episode -- what motivates Rick Sanchez? Is he a hero, as Summer thinks, a demon or crazy god like Morty thinks, or somebody whose motivations are just so opaque and arbitrary that he more or less defies that sort of characterization? The episode seems to give a troubling answer, one that pulls away from the way Rick was softened over the course of S2, but it spends most of the episode teasing you in either direction, making you think he's a hero or on an opportunist or an amoral crackpot or just a complicated guy.
I'm not sure I'm any more clarified on what he wants or what kind of guy he is than I was before (and Morty clearly still has its issues), but I love the way the show leans into that complexity, even amid the crazy science fiction wonderment and disaster taking place all around.
On the whole, this was one thrill of a surprise premiere that sets the stage for the rest of the season, changes enough of the status quo to make things meaningful, and delivers another exploration of what makes Rick tick, and how that affects his grandchildren, without giving any easy answers.
9 more seasons! hahaha I liked this Community "Six Seasons and A Movie" parallel
Every time I see Kane, I can't help but think of Desmond and how I miss his accent in Lost.