The people complaining about Vanya transitioning to Viktor should probably just stop watching and spare the rest of us. It doesn't take away from the story, the show's literal creator embraced it, why can't that be good enough?
Have people not realize yet that this is a low stakes, stand-alone kind of show?
"adds nothing to the MCU". No shit!
Does everything have to be fucking connected? Lighten up, DUDES.
Star Trek Discovery Season 3 Recap
1% - Enjoying the story
14% - Really throwing the crew diversity in our faces to the point of wrecking the story.
18% - Watching Tilly battle her lack of self-esteem.
22% - Michael decides to whisper for no apparent reason.
45% - Watching wild mood swings that border on clinical personality disorders.
i know who would love this technology. the answer is orange and lives in a white house.
the amount of transphobia in this comment section is absolutely disturbing and sad. y‘all hating on elliot and/or viktor should be ashamed of yourselves.
Thank you, writers. What a brilliant episode about an important subject. And what a great way to tell it. Amy really touched me with her backstory and her efforts; and Jake, as always, proves to be an inspiring male feminist role model.
Sarah as Rachel. Alison as Sarah. Helena freaking out. Cosima crying. Rachel recovering.
If Tatiana Maslany doesn't win the Golden Globe for this, no one will ever make.
I get that Vanya has the self esteem of a rubber ducky but ....not believing what her sister said about Leonard? I didn't think she was stupid. Not even listening to what she said...that's unrealistic for her character. these guys don't have an ounce of common sense, not even combined.
Meryl Streep trying to grab yet another Golden Globe from her very first scene
I'm beginning to think the writing team only had three good episodes in them. Getting predictable and drawn out.
This show is just so good. The scene with the Baldwins was just brilliantly acted. I have never seen anything like it. Honestly, it almost brought me to tears, that‘s how good it was.
That scene with Shiv and Tom and the end was phenomenal.
The disgusting brothers is not something I expected. Such a perfectly lame, unoriginal, and juvenile turn of phrase for those two.
It's practically criminal that we didn't get to witness Bridget asking Logan for a selfie or Greg confessing to Logan.
The siblings spent 10 billion on a legacy brand, to piss off their dad, with funds they don't have - funds that are contingent on their father approving the sale of his business. Nan Pierce played them like a fiddle. Logan knows they overpaid. When he calls them morons at the end and they all just laugh because they think they "got him", it just shows how childish they still are.
The kids' obsession with Logan will be their downfall. I do feel sympathy for them because they are all screwed up from having Logan as a father, but I also feel like all four of their heads together could never be as ruthless, clever, or powerful as him.
“He said, he finds me disgusting and despicable”. Greg is going to turn into a monster by series end.
My feelings about Serena are so drastically contradictory. On the one hand, I love her. She's a strong, smart, confident woman and I cheer when she stands up for herself. On the other hand, she's helping promote these horrible ideals and standards that belittle women and keep them oppressed (herself included) Girl, what are you doing?
Also, people do such horrible, monstrous things in the name of God and religion. And not only in fiction, but in reality too. Such savages. And such hypocrites. Making up any sort of excuses to justify all their wrongdoings and suit their own needs and interests.
But I loved that Canada is depicted as the place where people are rational and kind, in opposition to the crazies that have control of the US. I wonder if the writers did that on purpose or if it's like that in the book . Maybe the author of the book had some kind of premonition LOL
Nooo, not Alfie. I'm gonna miss Tom Hardy. Brilliant perfomance.
I love the show. But all those stares into the camera, and long scenes of nothing are just getting overused...
I'm so upset over that ending. Like not Alma. I'm so sad right now.
I aspire to have as much energy at 74 as Meryl Streep does.
I think we can all agree that Ben was actually talking to like a plate of cookies off camera and not a person in his dressing room. The question is then, who put them there and were they spiked?
Anyone else get Lucille and Buster Bluth vibes from Cliff and Donna?
“I come from television so I was trained to not question a script.”
Everything is not what it seems, so, I don't think Kimber did it, it is too soon to reveal the killer. I expect next episode they'll focus on Kimber but towards the end, focus will shift to someone else.
Meryl Streep and Ashley Park's voices in that lullaby was so great. Season 3 is amazing so far.
“I can’t cry.” “Why? Are you on Xanax?”
Theory: what if the two attempts on Ben's life were committed by two different people, potentially with unrelated motives?
I really liked Jesse and Selena's chemistry.
I love the way the showrunners (probably) recognize the audience's Kim question, and then reprogram the agency from the long-standard "what's going to happen to her" to "what she's going to do" now, which is a refreshing narrative turn that feels both surprising and fitting. I wonder if they slyly planned it with the episode's name as well, turning "Something Unforgivable" that sounded pre-air like something that will be done to drive her away, to a potential act she might commit instead. Also love the flip of last season's last scene, in which Jimmy and Kim now reverse roles; the impact is not as lastingly downbeat, but coming after his "Am I bad to you?" makes it a disquieting note nonetheless.
Lalo's steps echoing to thunder-like noise in the last scene have me freak out for Nacho already next season.
Thank god Danny is gone for sure, but... did the dwindling food scenes before that scene mean that they ate him?
The rare episode that is strong to me because of, not despite, the characters' drama. They even manage to make me feel bad for Dev with that scene between him and Kelly. And the confrontation between Ed and Danielle has been years in the making that it's so cathartic.
The "what have you sacrificed?" scene is one of best written dialog scenes on TV, ever. When this show decides to deliver the lines, they are top of the game. Mad kudos to the writers, and the actors who deliver them so well - tears swell easily. This episode was the best.
In contrast to many comments here I really liked this episode. Especially the part with the (former) doctor. Best episode sofar.
And no I don’t need 100% Mando. I also need these sidestories otherwise it would become quite boring.
sure let's revisit the worst episode of the season but marry it with some of the most moronic action sequences AND have Soong go full stereotype villain
gawd
This was a very good and dark episode. The brutality of having your own mentally il brother killed is on another level. That definitely scarred me.
Do all those plot pieces actually have a purpose ?
We went back in time to restore the timeline. Now we have Soong and his cloning (funny that he doesn't protect his files). Jurati and her personality issues. Rios's Doctor is back in the picture. Raffi's becoming more annoying with every episode. I'm still not sure what's Q's play ? And Picard having a traumatic episode. Does all this actually have something to do with the main issue ?
Oh wait, there was a little bit of Renee Picard in there. And concerning that, I don't know if her not making the mission is the problem or her making it is. Maybe it's something else entirely. I am also confused that Picard didn't seem to know about his ancestor. From TNG we know he's well versed concerning his family history. But neither the date nor the place seemed to be important to him.
I don't hate the show but I'm also not overly enthusiastic. Truth be told, I'm bored. And that's worse than either of the other options.
The T'Kal-in-ket event in this episode sums up the series perfectly.
It's initiated to convince with science and reason.
And ends up being all about drama and emotions.
And about Michael Burnham, of course.
Why would Mare, a very smart detective, steals heroin out of the evidence room, logs it out instead of putting something else in its place and then doesn’t change the distinct bag? :rolling_eyes: That whole thing was sloppy, very poor writing.
Kate Winslet and Evan Peters have nice chemistry together.
I haven't missed Gina one bit!! For me she ruins the show....