So what were the bad guys trying to do here and who are they? Other than "we have a secret base, we're taking in people as slaves to work for us to do something I don't know what". Also it's implied that they have bases elsewhere but I never saw them mentioned anywhere else.
The ending is different from the original comic source, in the comic the Adaptoid thinks he destroyed Captain American and runs off. Next we see of him in the comics is when he takes on the X-Men.
Real smart dude, you enter a military base that has dead bodies all over the place, you see a locked room with something inside banging on the door and you open the door to see what's in it, not once thinking that whatever killed a bunch of armed soldiers could be the thing behind the door.
Incorrect description. This is not an adaption of the media franchise The 7 Deadly Sins (七つの大罪 Nanatsu no Taizai) which is completely different from this series.
Can I point out that computer viruses don't work like how it was shown in the first scene.
Great movie, Bronson was the original man with no name, a role later taken by Clint Eastwood in the later Leone flicks.
Title is spelled with 2 "V"'s, not a "W".
Is it me or did Darkness aka Lalatian's boobs look bigger than in previous episodes?
Way too many details in the episode descriptions, it looks like a lot of spoliers.
I'd love to know what that thing was, the thing covered by a digital pastie shaped like a penis, but when put down it started running around like an animal.
I love how the teacher gives a sexy pose every time she starts an exam.
The series plays like one of those ero videogames that are popular in Japan. The first 4 chapters are the set up, then from there various story arcs that take place involving the main male character with each of the different girls but taking place during the same time period which would be confusing if you weren't aware it was playing out like a videogame where you have different routes. I don't see this as ecchi since there are no fan service like panty shots, there's a lot worse series in that department. I also didn't agree with the male lead joining the pervert photography club, but he ended up screwing up their plans whenever he found out about them targeting anyone
I believe this was the first time in this series that a three part story actually used the part numbers in the title. Previously with a story that went more than two parts, each part had the word "arc" instead of part followed by a number.
The male lead looks and sounds like a young John Cena. If Cena did a role where he needed someone to play his college aged son, this dude could do it.
Time travel via hot tub, I suspect the people making the “Hot Tub Time Machine” got the idea from this episode since the movie came out 5 years later.
Nice easter egg reference to the “Akira” movie.
Now I’ve seen it all, a sea serpent with a pamadour hairstyle.
At this time, June 2019, series is airing on Asian Crush.
This series takes fan service accidents to a whole new level, completely ignoring the laws of probability. Most people couldn't make up the kind of wardrobe malfunctions that occur in this series.
Of course the most useless member of the group is the one that likes to trash talk.
That music used in the club sounds like the same music used by the excercise machine in the Aqua Teen movie.
I was amused at the “Stargate” easter egg.
So Hazel gives his and Cha-Cha's guns to number 5 so that Diego can get cleared of the murder of Patch, it doesn't seem to have occurred to him that the guns being in their home will just make the cops more certain the Diego killed Patch, and implicate his family as well.
So the old man who hires Desert Punk is only 56? That's a hard 56, I'm 60 and look younger than that, that old man looks like he's at least 20 years older than me.
Note that if you look for this movie on Netflix, the title there is “Oh My Ghost 3”.
Lupin is in Harlem, during the mid 1970’s and all over the neighborhood most of the people you see are white, rarely a black person.
Reminds me of the old Gary Anderson series from the 1960's that used puppets, series like "Thunderbirds", "Stingray" and "Captain Scarlet". It was interesting to see those puppets being made to attempt marital arts moves and sword fighting. And the main character showed himself to be move than expected at the end of the first season.
“The ocean has no tides”. Someone’s never been to the beach.
In case you're confused, all the services I've seen that carry this series has this episode as episode 26, not ep. 3. The rest of the series follows in order, but a number less until you reach episode 25, thus episode 4 is now episode 3, ep 5 is 4 and so on.
Certainly the best Korean "Western" if not the best Asian Western overall, it's a blast to watch. Be sure to watch the original (Korean/DVD) cut instead of the international (Netflix) cut. The international version leaves out a couple of scenes at the end which tell you what happened to some of the main characters.