That was powerful wipes tears
The end credits should have been silent, though.
Personally, I liked the first movie more. This one is trying to do a lot: not one, but THREE megs, another creature surprise, corporate espionage, swimming at 25,000 feet, secret evil base, dino doggos, uncle with the clicky button going all Jaws 4 with the psychic connection with the shark... (Jiuming made me cringe so much). It's a lot, and not really thought through. Just meh for me.
Ahh the wait for next week will be brutal!! Also.. that waffle party, huh?
No no no…. I can’t wait!!!!!! Againnnnn
Me: this show couldn't get any stranger
Waffle Party: hold my waffles
The interactive aspect of this is nice; however, the story's a bit dull.
At first playthrough I went pretty deep in the choices but got an unsatisfying ending to my taste. dead-end > toggle for other choice in splitscreen > automatic kill and bury dad > call psych > jail
Went back changed some choices and got a better ending but boy, was it sad...found bunny > choose to die with mum
After that I stumbled upon a very complete flowchart someone had made and I was amazed by the complexity of choice and consequences for a video format. Used it to see the "Netflix action scene" ending and that was as amazing as it was meta
All in all some good fun, but don't expect too much story and character development else you could be in trouble.
I watched this to the end because I couldn't believe it could be so bad the whole way through. I was wrong. What a terrible movie.
Far and away the best episode Agents of Shield has ever produced. The only episode that can give it a run for its money is last season's spotlight episode on how May earned her nickname. There's a lesson there -- centering an episode on an individual story, particularly one that centers around one of the better actors in the cast, gives the show a focus that is often lacking when trying to juggle multiple intersecting plotlines at once.
This was a hell of a showcase for Elizabeth Henstridge. The production design team helped. (Production design as a plus in 'Agents of Shield"? I"m as surprised as you are.) The blue tint was a cheap way to sell the alienness of the world, but it totally worked, and the dessert topography really sold the desolateness of the environment and contributed to the sense of hopelessness in that world.
But Henstridge is what made the episode work. She sold the isolation, the small moments of crestfallen loneliness and discouragement, the little joys of success and friendship, the simple humanity of a survival story. Her burp, her wistfulness when she says "My dad would like you," and her conversations with an imaginary Fitz (a nice nod toward Fitz doing the same routine last season) all made her feel like a three-dimensional person in an extreme situation. There's a sense that this is Marvel's take on 'Castaway' or even 'Last Man on Earth', and doing this kind of laser-focused narrative requires a lot of the actors involved. These types of stories are, by necessity, character pieces; Henstridge was more than up to the challenge, and it deepened my appreciation for Simmons.
The actor who played Will was pretty good as well, and while his story could have felt too cliche, it worked in the context of the episode as a whole. Really, this felt like a well-structured science fiction short story as much as it did an episode of an ongoing series, and that's not a knock. Knowing Fitz and Simmons's relationship helped give certain moments more weight and significance, but it could almost work as a standalone piece. That's how strong and self-contained this was.
There was also a legitimate sense of menace from the planet. The zomibe-like astronaut, the tentacle creature, and the dust storms all suggested something frightening and alien about this world. It prompted so many great emotional moments from the two characters stuck on it. Doing an episode like this, so unlike AoS's usual M.O., was something of a gamble, but it paid off like gangbusters here.
The end of this episode was too real. Hit me in the feels.
You know when you scream "what the f*ck" but it's a good -debatable- "wtf"? Well. Hands down this season had an amazing closure
— It’s Gordon, right?
— And you are?
— I’m the guy who kills Gordon.
I thought this episode was very clever! I live away from my family and we communicate this way all the time. The main aspect of this show is that it's a MODERN family and this episode demonstrates this extremely well!
That was simply a masterpiece of an episode!
That was simply a masterpiece of an episode!
Fuck me!
One of the BEST MOVIESI have ever seen. Surprisingly!