I'm honestly getting sick of the show. Every season is so freaking repetitive. How many times will there be a crash of some sort while recovering a transplant???? How many times are we going to have some love triangle? It all seems so forced and excessive. Looking forward to them finally finishing the series
This show is becoming very unbearable and dumb!
This show has been infected with the Corona Virus. Seriously that’s the only explanation for terrible season finale, horrible acting, that stupid Good Samaritan, and Zeke coming back to life. WTF??? I was hoping they got rid of Zeke...in fact it would be good if they kill off few other characters. I hope season 3 is Corona Virus free with better writing & acting.
Who else wanted to slug the "good Samaritan."
Everything has to come to an end.
What a wonderful way to end the story, at times they made me believe that this was not going to end well for the gang but there is always hope and a plan B or C.
I still haven't gotten over the fact that Nairobi died, she was the lifeblood of this team, the way Tokyo sacrificed herself for them was incredible but more than necessary to add the touch of perfection to this story.
I really enjoyed watching this series and it was good that they did not wait to extend it any longer than necessary.
This is not a movie about dragons and the world of Kumandra. This is about Earth, this is the real world. We are divided, groups of people completely hating each other inside the same nation.
Unfortunately we are facing our own Druun, our plague. But as in the movie, this isn't our biggest problem. The real enemy is our inability to work together as a community, to put aside political views and really trust each other, working together for the best of everybody.
Beyond the important and necessary message, the movie is a fun adventure, the world building is great and the technical aspect is what you would expect of a Disney movie.
10 minutes in the movie and I was supporting a character I hated my entire life.
Didn't enjoy this one. The best bit though was Dan meeting God
I've seen every episode and this is probably the worst one they've ever done. Wish I had my 40 minutes back
After every episode there is a different person who I consider to be the worst one of the family.
what the hell happened to TWD?!!
it's getting sillier by the episode.
they lost it.
You bleed like any other man.
I'll kill you, I'll rip your brains out.
BOYS!
Nah we're cool.
Yeah it's cool bro.
Yeah bro.
This is, perhaps, the best tv series episode ever created! The acting is extraordinary, the filmography is tremendous, the soundtrack is terrific! And that end, that end is majestic! This concludes the most and smallest epic TV series I have ever seen!
Nephilim! I hope they know what they're doing. Things didn't work out so well for Jack.
[8.4/10] I feel like this episode isn't going to please most people. The critical crowd is going to be annoyed at it for indulging in fan service at times and wrapping a lot of character relationships too quickly. The more casual fan crowd is going to be upset that this episode was full of yakking and sparse on action or narrative momentum. But honestly, I really liked this one. I have to imagine that the next four super-sized episodes are going to be filled to the gils with action and high drama and excitement. In the prelude to that, it's really nice to get a series of quiet moments to reflect on where everyone has been to get to this point, and the uncertainty of the future, amid the other grace notes that "The Rightful Queen" provides.
Those are the two big ideas at the center of the episode. On the one hand, you have this sense of everyone both assuming that they're doomed but worrying about what the future holds. More than one character declares that they're all dead. And yet at the same time, you have Dany and others worrying about who might have a claim to the Iron Throne or some slice of the Seven Kingdoms. You have Tyrion and others worrying about who might become (or remain) Hand to the Queen. And you have everyone from Misandei to Sansa thinking about what the world looks like when this battle is over. There's the sense of an inevitable, mortal threat, but also of concern for where things stand after they've picked up the pieces.
But there's also a sense of marking how long the journey has been to reach this point and how much everyone has changed along it. Arya is grown, with her own skills, directness, and desires that mark a sharp contrast from the aspirational little girl who went with her father to King's Landing. Jaime and Tyrion are both much different men since they were "The Golden Lion" and "The Imp" who previously set foot in Winterfell ("the perils of self-betterment"). Hell, even the likes of Podrick has become a capable warrior (and classy singer to boot.) There's a boatload of taking stock in this episode, of remembering where everyone's been and the distance between here and there.
What's more, there's tons of nice little moments. Lyanna Mormont gets a nice scene with Jorah, Gilly gets a little time to shine, and Edd gets a chance to reunite with his Night's Watch brethren. That's all on top of Tyrion's little gathering by the fire, which makes the most of the hang out vibe this episode summons when the time is right.
All-in-all, this feels like one of those Game of Thrones episodes we'll remember beyond the bigger clashes and contretemps the series usually has in store. It's a slower episode, but one that deepens our understanding of where these characters at psychologically and developmentally after nearly eight seasons, and lets us wonder about what the future holds right alongside them.