The first scene takes place in 1993 and has Natasha as a little girl living in the mid west, Ohio. Her character has multi color hair which would be unusual for a girl of that age today, let alone one in the mid west during that time period, especially one who was supposed to be undercover and thus should not be drawing attention to herself.
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.
So it never occurred to Daisuke to use his partners phone to call his own cell and have it bought to him? but I suppose it would have lessened the being out of his element storyline
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.
The artwork on this reminds me of another series, "Helluva Boss", https://trakt.tv/shows/helluva-boss
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?
Great movie, Bronson was the original man with no name, a role later taken by Clint Eastwood in the later Leone flicks.
Was Chekov wearing a beatles wig? His hair did not look at all natural.
Yea in the very first scene we see a Muslim teen wearing a habib but with a short sleave shirt. If a Muslim girl is religious enough that she'd wear a habib, she'd her arms and legs covered as well.
I suspect that Section 31 might still exist and one of it's members is the guy that "interviewed" Philippa Georgiou.
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.
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.
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.
It seems like the people who created this are trying to be a more adult version of Disney, having the main character do a music number in every episode, yeah we can do without the singing.
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.
And they have a cat named Selena, I wonder if they got it from a certain cat burglar. Anyhow this does have it's moments as it isn't intended to be serious.
I like the FBI agent trying to claim that there's no such thing as the Mafia or organized crime, and getting funny looks from Japp, Hastings and Poirot for claiming that. Of course that's because at the time their boss J. Edgar Hoover was black mailed into having his agents stay away from the mafia. It wasn't until the guy died that the FBI started investigating the Mafia.
Also known under the title "Killer Karaoke". I guess to not confuse it with another movie that was also called Premika. The actress playing the lead, Gena Desouza, had appeared as a guest at the New York Asian American Film Festival in 2018 when this movie screened there. I found it to be a fun and goofy movie. And let's face it, if you were to ask which country makes the highest percentage of horror movies that are also comedies, it is Thailand. If you see a horror movie from that country, there's a good chance it's also a comedy.
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.
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.
Nice that we get to see more of Hank Pym here.
In the comics, Namor is known as being the world's first mutant, his mutant ability being the wings on his ankles that enable him to fly. He also refers to himself as a mutant in this movie, making it the first mention of mutants in the MCU.
Nice call back to the Warriors movie, during the night scene in Paris, you got a female DJ on the air broadcasting to the assassins where John Wick was last seen.
We see Skurge the Excutioner using machine guns against Hela's forces, which is something that did occur in the comics, the cover of Thor# 362 shows Skurge doing this. The story arc this occurs in is after the one involving Malekith and the Dark elves as shown in Thor The Dark World where the elves invaded Earth and Assgardian forces stopped them. Another Assgardian, Harokin, got the firearms from soem U.S. soldiers and brought them to Assgard where they were given to Skurge so he could hold off Hela's forces.
The Borg Queen's personality seems to be more human after her link up with Jurati, more emotional.
There's a scene in this episode that has the most unlikely cause of a wardrobe malfunction that I've ever seen, and for this series that says a lot.
So no one mentioned that the "Prime Directive" was violated in this story. And let's face it, Kirk has done this a number of times, forced Federation (aka Western) values on another culture.
Amusing to see some attempts at sexual harassment by Mr. Chekov, some things just don't age well.
Elf egoistm at work, wanting a guy's superior sperm while calling him an inferior human.
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.