I'm neither a girl, nor teenager or Asian and I still enjoyed it. Imagine only watching movies you identify with facepalm
I'd bet you anything if Deadpool did the same meta moment, dudebros would praise it.
The episode should have ended after "Let's burn this place to the ground". Perfect last line. Cut to credits.
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.
"Spectacular" "Amazing" Really? It was alright. It felt like a webisode (remember those?) than a pilot.
I don't like that they are turning a mercenary villain into a good guy just to make the series more digestible.
I also don't see it as a positive when a series is like another series. Take Better Call Saul, for example. It's very much its own thing.
How did Ruby go from being a shallow mean b... to being someone who deserves better? Now THAT'S character development.
And Blur closing the episode. Ugh. chef kiss
Filler? This episode has more character development than all the previous ones! Man, you people really want action for 50 minutes? Also, I'm not surprise white people don't like when characters talk about race. It makes them uncomfortable. Same reaction to this week's episode of This Is Us. sigh
If you still hate Skyler and love Walter after this episode... I don't know what to say to you.
The final minutes were some of the most tense moments I've seen in television in recent years.
As someone who complained about the confusing timeline in season 1, I felt personally attacked.
I can't be the only one who is confused about wtf is going on and who these minor characters are.
I smiled when Gina popped up. Then she reminded us how annoying she is. Who actually missed her?
The dinner scene was one of the most uncomfortable things I've seen on television.
It felt rushed. They wrapped things up in 15 minutes and the rest was a flash forward to a Sally play and a spoof movie? No.
the new character sacrificing himself to make time is such a cliché and a cop-out from the writers.
Only cultist Trump supporters wouldn't find this funny. Hilarious AND it has some heart.
Calling out discrimination and preaching tolerance? The X-men have gone woke!
-some clueless idiot.
Technically marvelous but I felt nothing watching this. No thrills, no suspense, nada.
"You are The Bear"
Di Caprio pointing at the TV.jpg
Was the cliché rain necessary, though?
The writers put the characters through the wringer for most of this show, so when they get a win for once, it's so satisfying.
Most meta episode ever?
I loved the shot the writers took at people that want more space adventures like in season 1. "What does that even mean?", lol
That fight scene was so well written because both people made good points.
I thought the mix of comedy and social commentary worked better here than in the premiere.
Does anyone else dislike that they incorporated coronavirus into the show? It takes me out.
The scene between Elliott and Whiterose was just beautiful. Written and performed.
The kids part is still far more interesting than the adults half.
I thought they were going to drag the whole Christianity storyline through the whole season. I'm glad that's over.
I rolled my eyes when they put the costume back on June, thinking we were going back to square one. I did NOT expect that ending. And Radiohead to top it off. chef kiss