I enjoyed the philosophical repercussions of this episode. Really pulls in the whole "I would travel back in time and kill x as a baby" little more difficult when it's a real child
Why...doesn't Meisner have his accent? And let's be honest, just how good of friends were they? I doubt they grew up together, and they primarily only spoke to each other when it was about some mission.
Search for "Portland babies". Yeah, I can already tell this isn't going to be a tasteful episode.
They can hear outside Sean's office THAT easily?? Then why do they ever have private conversations in there?? Anyone randomly passing by would be able to hear every word. And side note, is it just me, or did Sean's office look different than in previous episodes?
That El Cuegle image in the book seems to have been directly and strongly influenced by "Saturn Devouring His Son". The two artworks look almost identical apart from the extra eye and arm. I wonder if the show is suggesting that the historic painting was based on this Wesen. This show isn't big on subtlety, so I don't they were hinting at that.
This doesn't really make sense, though. The El Cuegle said Auggie grew up isolated. So if Auggie were put into a better home, that would have a fair chance of preventing him from becoming a killer. Some people are going to grow up to be terrible people no matter what. But in Auggie's case at the very least, it seems like his future is entirely determined by his upbringing...
Signed:
~SophieFilo16~
man wonder how they are going to wrap up that ending (as in forward).
I just saw a Continuum episode that posed this exact same moral conundru. There a teenager was to be executed before he went onto kill millions.
This was cool but the real solution to this was to just check up on the family and make sure they're ok. Early interventions work. Great CGI in this one though and love wathing Renard getting his come uppance with the gang back in the station
Shout by DelroyVIP 6BlockedParent2017-01-28T23:27:14Z
Diana is so frickin creepy!