So we have a family where the father had his son try to poison all the outcasts a couple of decades back and only one member of that family is still known to be alive. Wanna bet it turns out to be the only "normal staff" member of that school.
I've noticed that Trakt only has 7 seasons listed while Netflix has seasons 7 - 10, having just recently dropped the first 6 seasons that
originally aired on FOX. Did Netflix make further episodes since I don't see them mentioned anywhere else?
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.
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.
I like how when a new pirate is introduced, they show that pirates wanted poster on the screen and then that pirate grabs or rips it off the screen.
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.
Oh damn, Thing hiding inside a skull, cracked up at that.
Am I the only person that thinks the main character resembles H.P. Lovecraft?
After the fight with the guys that Marc was trying to get info from, when Marc comes back and two of the guys are down, he looks surprised and Steven is saying from the mirror that he didn't do this, and since he lacks fighting skills, that would be true and there may be a possible third personality involved. In the comics Moon Knight does have a third personality, Jake Lockley, and that may be the case in this series as well and that Marc and Steven are not yet aware of this third persona. And the Egyptian Gods don't really seem that wise seeing taht they just accept Harrows claims without any proof when his people are digging up a site just a few miles away. Also, it's not the time for Gods, just for men, do they know that the Thunder God Thor is running around out there?
The artwork on this reminds me of another series, "Helluva Boss", https://trakt.tv/shows/helluva-boss
Note that this was the first time that a character in the series used the Haku ability as Shanks used it on the sea king. Also we're introduced to a former member of Gol D. Rogers crew and another member is mentioned but appears in the following episode, however them being former crewmen of Gol D. isn't revealed until episode 400 of the anime. And if you noticed, I called him Gol D. Rogers, not Gold Rogers which is what the navy and world government publicly calls him as the World Government doesn't want the rest of the world to know of the existence of people from the D clan and that they still exist.
It didn't hit me until the last episode but this series also introduces the Swordsman character, Jack Duquesne (Jacques Duquesne in the comics). In the comics this character was the one who first trained Hawkeye and they've always had a connection.
If you were teaching a film class, this would be a good film to show.
I suspect that Section 31 might still exist and one of it's members is the guy that "interviewed" Philippa Georgiou.
This movie is pretty much a rip off of "Last House on the Left". Same plot with one difference at the end.
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.
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.
Known in the U.S. as "Case Closed", apparently because fans of the "Conan the Barbarian" character raised a big stink over the name, saying that the only Conan they will allow is the barbarian. They seemed to have overlooked Conan O'Brian.
I was thinking when I first saw clips of this that the artwork looked the same as another series, "Helluva Boss" (https://trakt.tv/shows/helluva-boss) and then I noticed it's from the same creator.
Was Chekov wearing a beatles wig? His hair did not look at all natural.
Did anyone notice that there are two moons in the sky, meaning that this takes place on a planet other than Earth?
Apparently this doesn’t take place on planet Earth as we see two moons in the sky.
You're supposed to be a phantom thief but most of the criminals you've come across have seen your face, and there's no kind of repercussions from that? I guess the writer stole the idea from the Black Cat character from the Spider-man comics, but at least that one wore a mask.
I didn't know that Cat's Eye was in the same universe as City Hunter but all the series here are from the same writer, Tsukasa Hojo. From the Cat's Eye wiki:
In contrast to Angel Heart (which is set in alternate universe, despite sharing City Hunter characters), both Cat's Eye and City Hunter series are set in same universe. The titular City Hunter character, Ryo Saeba, is acquaintanced with them. He also has rivalry with them because he was helping police capture Cat's Eye. Despite their rivalry, they have great teamwork fighting against criminals. The sisters come to Ryo's rescue in City Hunter the Movie: Shinjuku Private Eyes when Ryo has trouble defeating his enemy.
Okay if Rose is Jericho’s sister and Deathstrokes daughter, then why was she never mentioned in the fastbacks?
Who are the real monsters here, those who look different from other people or those who look like normal people but are actually monsters on the inside?
As I'm writing this, the series is up to 179 episodes based on a manga that has only 48 chapters. Considering that 2 chapters make up one episode when going to anime, that means there's a lot of filler in this series, which was something that the pervious series was often criticized for.
The zombies in this movie display more intelligence and cunning than what you see in other zombie movies, using objects and wepons to break into a home and trap people, where in other movies zombies are pretty much mindless and easily fooled.
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.