It is not a two-dimensional storyline...
The audience used to be a part of the 'quantum lock' mechanism described. Seeing the angels move was really disappointing.
I wish they hadn't shown the angels moving, they were scarier when we didn't see them move.
Ser Criston Cole is a Dragon rider now!
Hang on... what? Seriously? You mean to tell me that Barry didn't have super speed thinking all along? Then how was he able to use his powers successfully and to the extent that he has? That's the one defining trait that allows Flash to make use of all of his powers, that's how his brain can keep up with everything around him when he's moving very fast and how he can speed read among a lot other things.
Damn can Sara Ramirez sing! This is probably the only musical episode of anything I've ever enjoyed.
I need Addison back. She’s the best character in this show
I need Addison back. She’s the best character in this show
A rather dull return-to-form sort of episode, it was alright. Lucifer didn't realize it but he debunked his own claim before having even issued it thanks to Amenadiel giving an affirmative answer to his questions on Charlie; we even see Amenadiel's conviction later when he pleads with his father to render him mortal instead of his son so Charlie would be spared the suffering all humans go through. Amenadiel is evidence that the "apples" are capable of love, and so the "tree" must be as well.
I suppose this will be one of the last stops in Lucifer's journey of self-discovery, where he will have to yet again prove to himself that he is not as he thinks he is, with the eventual goalpost being making peace with his father once he makes that realization. Oh well, I'm on board, it should be interesting watching his growth.
I don't like that now we're back at Liz asking questions about her past and Red ignoring them. I just think it doesn't fit their evolved relationship anymore...
As for this episode, i quite liked it. The backstory with Red and the woman was very sad.
So that's why they blew all that subtle build-up with Aram and Samar? So she can have an excuse to access Ressler's laptop and he can find out she helped Liz and thus fire her? Convoluted nonsense for the sake of forced drama, come on...
It soon became pretty obvious Samar's brother would be Hasaan and the ending was completely pointless.
the ending was so lame....i didnt see it coming and it was unnecessary
She was very clearly a woman, so I found the twist to be so dumb. They should have casted an effeminate guy, or a much more masculine girl. By 19 puberty is well on its way, and at the very least, a man would have already had his voice deepen. Stupid plot and terrible casting.
Liz gets mad when Reddington lies. She also gets mad when he tells the truth. There's no winning with this chick.
This is one of the best episodes that I have watched so far in this series (if not the best). Brilliant. I loved every second of it.
Why does it feel like every time I come back and re-invest in this series, I end up feeling bamboozled by the end? I find myself having to echo the same complaints I had last season, the show prioritizes looks over substance, add to it the ridiculously slow pacing and frankly irrelevant elements that eat away at the available runtime and my frustration begins to add up. I mean honestly, how much content did they adapt this season? Ten pages worth? Whatever...
I feel I have to ask myself if investing further is a wise decision or not and I hate to do that because I'm a massive fan of Gaiman and especially of this title. I will stick around for next season, if there is one, and depending on how that goes, I might have to drop this puppy. :confused:
It's like they want to have the show be like what comic books use to be. Like they aren't reimaginating the stories to fit some new socio-political agenda.
One of the worse episodes of the show so far. I'm so disappointed. Also it's a bit typical that the interns all have a racial/gender/sexuality differential contrast. Is it some kind of "must" in every show and movie these days? Nothing against it; it's just very annoying when it's so obviously forced.
Piss off. This was not the ending the series or the characters deserved after everything.
I get this is a CW drama, but can we please have one, just one episode where the focus isn't someone's emotional boo-boos? How about some story progression? Maybe character development that takes characters from one dimensional cardboard cutouts to three dimensional figures you can resonate with on some level? Any level? How about focusing on Barry for a change, remember him? He's sort of the main character? He has this whole problem that is of extreme consequence which he has to solve?
sigh Whatever, I digress. This whole season was just one big hallway scene, pathetic writing all across the board. The Flash - if I can even call it that anymore considering how it almost seems like the writers have all but forgotten about Barry - is done, to me at least.
One of the showrunners mentioned that this episode would feature one of the biggest fight scenes done on The Flash. Okay. I sat there and watched it, the cringe and boredom slowly intensifying. What a disappointment. The fight scene, the episode, and the entire season.
*Goofs*
Character error
In the newspaper article about Mike his last name is McKay, but later when we meet Mike's girlfriend she has a box holding Mike's personal belongings and it is labeled McMillan, M. indicating that Mike's last name is McMillan.
The missing person poster lists Mike's age as 26. Zoe Sharp, the first victim, was Mike's birth mother, who had died 20 years earlier (according to Captain Connors) while Mike was still a baby (according to Mike's girlfriend). This would make Mike only 20 years old, 21 at the most.
*Spoilers*
Shawn is able to discover that Mort Crocker is Mike McMillan's biological father due to Mr. Crocker's longstanding prescription for biotin. However, biotin is a dietary supplement used for hair and nail growth that can easily be purchased over the counter. No prescription should be necessary, and someone who has taken biotin regularly should know this.
My god this show has become so bad
The ending was so sappy and corny. That was probably one of the worst episodes. Barry vs the mirror people.
This was fine. They can't all be the best episode. Crazy Dick, Jason needed rebooting all episode, Rose still has anger issues, Raven and Starfire do something, and more of Conner's ass. It was a bit slow and the pacing felt off. I also wasn't happy with them calling the episode Bruce Wayne then having him be a hallucination the whole.
I'll admit, I was a bit thrown aback, if not disappointed, by the fact they disposed of the threat they spent an entire season building up not even thirty minutes into the episode and in such low-key fashion; but I've to say, that frown turned to a big child-like grin the moment the "eye-patch" came into focus, I'm really looking forward to seeing such an iconic character of the Titans franchise brought into this adaptation and I hope they treat the character well and respect his story.
All in all, while it didn't exactly the deliver on the hype it promised with last season's finale, it was a fair episode that offered the show an exciting new story and character development; great casting decision on Bruce as well, a bit old for the role I feel but great nonetheless.
We all know Lockwood is the CW taking a shot at Trump. Not that I like Trump. Being so political and preachy is why the ratings are bad though.
The get the aliens out of here stuff is definitely a shot at the Wall.
On a side note. Now the writers let James Olsen take pictures for once. I forgot he was even the Jimmy Olsen who takes photos.