We learn why to never piss off an Original vampire, Elijah feels the effects of Klaus’ bite, Rebekah makes a choice as does Marcel, and Klaus achieves a goal….
I know I have been talking about why one should never piss off an Original vampire, but I did not truly get it until we saw Klaus in action tonight. His rampage through Marcel’s men was most impressive. Ok, beyond impressive, it was freaking terrifying. It is pretty rare to see an Original on a tear and that was exactly what was up with Klaus tonight. He went to Marcel’s in order to take Marcel down and he succeeded in a spectacular manner. Even though it looked, at first, like he would fail, he wolfed out and tore through Marcel’s people with an unmatched ferocity. He had to have killed at least 20-30 vampires on his own before Marcel picked up that coin and surrendered. Rebekah was truly terrified at Klaus’ ferocity. I must admit that I was wondering if she was pretending to turn on Klaus, but it became fairly obvious that she was not pretending and that she was truly horrified at the violence Klaus was displaying and frightened for Marcel’s life.
In spite of all that, I have to side with Klaus in this particular argument with his siblings. Although Elijah and Rebekah have ample reason to distrust Klaus and doubt his motives, he was honestly interested in bringing his family together to take the city and to raise his child. Their choices and doubts merely served to reinforce his doubts about family and the trustworthiness of other people. Had they chosen to give him the benefit of the doubt one more time, they (and he) would be in a much better place. Given everything, I do get why they doubted him and why they made the choices that they did, but it is hard to blame Klaus for feeling betrayed and alone. And a lonely, paranoid Klaus is not a good thing.
It was nice to get an explanation from Elijah about why he continues to give Klaus the benefit of the doubt despite his many betrayals. Elijah believes that it is the goal of his life to help save Klaus from himself. Wonderful sentiments and a worthy goal, but unless the Originals can break this destructive cycle of betrayal and deceit, this goal will never happen. Which leaves Elijah in a bit of a quandary: how long can a man of honor continue to help and support someone who is as violent and deceitful as Klaus is? On the one hand, Elijah is trying to be there for Klaus and help moderate his impulses, but on the other hand there are times when Klaus goes too far and Elijah needs to take drastic steps to stop him. There is also the matter of Klaus constantly daggering his siblings if they displease him, although that is moot now that Klaus has given the dagger to Elijah. All in all, it is an incredibly messy situation that has no real satisfactory answer.
Then there is Hayley who is a major bone of contention between Klaus and Elijah. She is bearing Klaus’ baby, but she and Elijah clearly have feelings for each other. This is adding yet another log to the fire of Klaus’ paranoia. He is honestly trying to be a good father for his son, but he is being doubted at every turn, hounded by witches, and his brother has the gall to fall for the mother of his child. Yes, this makes an already messy situation even messier. Klaus clearly looks at Hayley as his possession (mush as he viewed Elena as his) and Elijah’s feelings are threatening both his family and his hold over Hayley.
It was also nice to get some background on Hayley and her family. As a result of a witch’s curse (at Marcel’s instigation), her family (or at least some of it) spends most of their time as wolves and turn into humans by the full moon. So she really needs the protection offered by the Originals from Marcel. If Marcel were to get his hands on her, he would have leverage against Klaus and he would have a werewolf from a clan he tried to wipe out.
We did get to see Klaus’ softer side where Camille was concerned. He is using her as a (compelled) sympathetic ear and as someone to record his thoughts and feelings. But she is seriously resisting him and he seems afraid that if she continues digging into what happened with her brother, she will be killed. Methinks that he has honest feelings for her and wants to protect her if possible. Unfortunately, she managed to slip herself a message about him and has proof that he and Marcel are not what they appear. Oops….
I was also happy to see that Rebekah was having none of Tyler’s talk about killing the baby. While she has no problem taking down Klaus, she definitely has a problem when it comes to harming the baby. That is actually the crux of the problem between her, Elijah, and Klaus. All of them want to protect the baby, but Rebekah and Elijah think that they must protect the baby from both Klaus and others.
So, we have next week and then the winter hiatus. Until then!
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Some Awkward. Thoughts
Dunno if you watch the show Awkward., but I do and I love it. Started in the second season (couldn't watch the first for various reasons), but it very quickly became a show that I love to watch. I just wanted to share a few thoughts about the recent events in regards to Jenna and Collin.
First off, I want to say that I do not have a favorite relationship in this show where Jenna is concerned. I think that Matty, Collin, and Jake are each great for her, albeit in different ways. Matty is someone who draws her out of her shell and really cares about her. He is also tremendously loyal to her. She also makes him a better person. The amount that he has changed since he has started dating her is truly astonishing. Jake tends to be a little more boring and boy-next-door, but that lack of drama is really good for Jenna. She can be so wacky that having someone around who calms her down is a wonderful thing. Until recently, Collin has been someone who appreciated Jenna for who she was and really made her feel special. With Matty (and a certain extent Jake), she felt that she wasn't good enough for the relationship. With Collin, she had people affirming that she was good enough and worthy enough for the relationship.
That leads me to my reason for writing. In the first part of the season, Collin was pretty much a good guy. Granted, it is hard to call a guy who chases a girl with a boyfriend good, but Collin (aside from that) basically was. He appreciated Jenna's writing and her talents. He and Jenna are very much alike in that they have very similar interests and thoughts. So, while I didn't like the fact that she cheated on Matty, I could totally see why she did so. Collin is as gorgeous as Matty is (albeit in a different way), smart, a writer, has friends who appreciate her, and talks with her about what he is feeling. Which is why when they suddenly decided to turn Collin into a pot-smoking, drug taking slacker I was very upset. I am not upset by the characterization per se, but rather by the fact that is suddenly cropped up (seemingly) in order to demonstrate how big of a mistake Jenna made.
I resent this sort of blatant manipulation and character assassination which seems to have been done in order to make Collin look bad. Had they said something in the first half of the season about Collin having issues like this, I would not be upset at all. But, instead, the writers chose to completely change a character in order to make him look bad and that is so not cool. Yes, characters do change and develop over time, but this is in no way, shape, or form a natural progression. Rather, it is a sudden and dramatic change for no really good reason. Other shows have done something similar (see One Tree Hill and various contrived Naley "affair" dramas for an example) and I have said similar things about those. I get that shows need drama, but if you are going to do drama, I, for one, would appreciate it if shows could avoid such contrived drama and character twisting. Be true to the characters that fans have come to love (or hate) and let what happens naturally happen.
First off, I want to say that I do not have a favorite relationship in this show where Jenna is concerned. I think that Matty, Collin, and Jake are each great for her, albeit in different ways. Matty is someone who draws her out of her shell and really cares about her. He is also tremendously loyal to her. She also makes him a better person. The amount that he has changed since he has started dating her is truly astonishing. Jake tends to be a little more boring and boy-next-door, but that lack of drama is really good for Jenna. She can be so wacky that having someone around who calms her down is a wonderful thing. Until recently, Collin has been someone who appreciated Jenna for who she was and really made her feel special. With Matty (and a certain extent Jake), she felt that she wasn't good enough for the relationship. With Collin, she had people affirming that she was good enough and worthy enough for the relationship.
That leads me to my reason for writing. In the first part of the season, Collin was pretty much a good guy. Granted, it is hard to call a guy who chases a girl with a boyfriend good, but Collin (aside from that) basically was. He appreciated Jenna's writing and her talents. He and Jenna are very much alike in that they have very similar interests and thoughts. So, while I didn't like the fact that she cheated on Matty, I could totally see why she did so. Collin is as gorgeous as Matty is (albeit in a different way), smart, a writer, has friends who appreciate her, and talks with her about what he is feeling. Which is why when they suddenly decided to turn Collin into a pot-smoking, drug taking slacker I was very upset. I am not upset by the characterization per se, but rather by the fact that is suddenly cropped up (seemingly) in order to demonstrate how big of a mistake Jenna made.
I resent this sort of blatant manipulation and character assassination which seems to have been done in order to make Collin look bad. Had they said something in the first half of the season about Collin having issues like this, I would not be upset at all. But, instead, the writers chose to completely change a character in order to make him look bad and that is so not cool. Yes, characters do change and develop over time, but this is in no way, shape, or form a natural progression. Rather, it is a sudden and dramatic change for no really good reason. Other shows have done something similar (see One Tree Hill and various contrived Naley "affair" dramas for an example) and I have said similar things about those. I get that shows need drama, but if you are going to do drama, I, for one, would appreciate it if shows could avoid such contrived drama and character twisting. Be true to the characters that fans have come to love (or hate) and let what happens naturally happen.
Monday, November 25, 2013
My Review of Vampire Diaries 5.08- Dead Man on Campus
Elena and Caroline relax post-Silas, Bonnie settles into her life as the anchor, Stefan continues to recover from getting his memories back, Damon goes hunting for information, and Katherine searches for information....
So, your best friend comes back from the dead. So, what is the first thing you do? Throw a massive party, of course! Well, that's what you do if you are Elena or Caroline. And of course, it's not a party without a few complications. The main one comes courtesy of a vampirized Jesse. First, he attacks Dr. Maxfield and then his roommate (Aaron). Fortunately for Aaron, Caroline arrived in time to save his life and teach Jesse how to be a vampire. Those scenes were fun. Elena and Caroline are committed to having fun and show Jesse how to do so. Unfortunately for Jesse, he was injected with blood that made him desire vampiric blood rather than human blood. More on the consequences of that in a bit.
Cannot say I am terribly fond of how Caroline is treating Damon at this point. I get that she is a huge Stelena fan and all, but Damon has showed that he has changed since he first arrived in Mystic Falls. While he is not the best guy in the world, he is a better man than he was. From the way Caroline was talking about him, you'd think he was still out randomly killing people the way he used to. I am sure that some part of Caroline's hostility comes from how Damon treated her in the first season. But since then, he has proven himself to be remarkably loyal to Elena and her friends.
I do understand Caroline reaction to Elena killing Jesse, but given the fact that he desired vampire blood, he was a danger to Elena, Stefan, Damon, and Caroline. Could he have been taught to not drink blood? Possibly, but given his reaction to Caroline and Damon's blood, it is hard to say. I know that Caroline was upset to have lost another guy she likes, but it was necessary and ultimately for the best.
I would so not want to be Bonnie right now. Feeling the death of every supernatural being as they cross over has to suck. Between that and her ability to cross between the worlds (which was pretty cool), her life is about to be a lot more interesting. I do wonder why Jeremy was unable to see the people as they were crossing over. Can he only see people he knew on the Other Side or can he see anyone? And I was right, Bonnie cannot be both a witch and the anchor. Since she is now the anchor, she is no longer a witch. Although now that I think about it, another interesting question arises. Will Bonnie live a normal length life or is being the anchor going to lengthen her life? If she lives a normal length life, does that mean that the Other Side will disappear when she dies or will someone else become the anchor?
Stefan is not having an easy time adjusting to life with all of his memories. Katherine is being very helpful in this regard. Giving Stefan the idea to focus on the names of his victims gives him something to ground him and acts as an almost meditative device to help him through the rough patches. It was nice to see Katherine work with him, Nadia, and Matt. Speaking of Matt, he is now free of Gregor who was possessing him. Unfortunately for Nadia, that means that Gregor is now dead at Katherine's hands. Not exactly good for mother-daughter bonding.
So Damon was a vampire caught by the Augustinians. Huh, that was an interesting piece of information. I wonder what they did to him. It was during the 1940s or 1950s, so Stefan (presumably) wasn't talking to him, which is why we have never heard about it before (ok, yes there are other reasons, but in-story, this is why). Given the way Damon reacted to Dr. Westfield, he did not have any fun while the "guest" of the Augustinians.
We'll be back on December 5th! Have fun until then!
So, your best friend comes back from the dead. So, what is the first thing you do? Throw a massive party, of course! Well, that's what you do if you are Elena or Caroline. And of course, it's not a party without a few complications. The main one comes courtesy of a vampirized Jesse. First, he attacks Dr. Maxfield and then his roommate (Aaron). Fortunately for Aaron, Caroline arrived in time to save his life and teach Jesse how to be a vampire. Those scenes were fun. Elena and Caroline are committed to having fun and show Jesse how to do so. Unfortunately for Jesse, he was injected with blood that made him desire vampiric blood rather than human blood. More on the consequences of that in a bit.
Cannot say I am terribly fond of how Caroline is treating Damon at this point. I get that she is a huge Stelena fan and all, but Damon has showed that he has changed since he first arrived in Mystic Falls. While he is not the best guy in the world, he is a better man than he was. From the way Caroline was talking about him, you'd think he was still out randomly killing people the way he used to. I am sure that some part of Caroline's hostility comes from how Damon treated her in the first season. But since then, he has proven himself to be remarkably loyal to Elena and her friends.
I do understand Caroline reaction to Elena killing Jesse, but given the fact that he desired vampire blood, he was a danger to Elena, Stefan, Damon, and Caroline. Could he have been taught to not drink blood? Possibly, but given his reaction to Caroline and Damon's blood, it is hard to say. I know that Caroline was upset to have lost another guy she likes, but it was necessary and ultimately for the best.
I would so not want to be Bonnie right now. Feeling the death of every supernatural being as they cross over has to suck. Between that and her ability to cross between the worlds (which was pretty cool), her life is about to be a lot more interesting. I do wonder why Jeremy was unable to see the people as they were crossing over. Can he only see people he knew on the Other Side or can he see anyone? And I was right, Bonnie cannot be both a witch and the anchor. Since she is now the anchor, she is no longer a witch. Although now that I think about it, another interesting question arises. Will Bonnie live a normal length life or is being the anchor going to lengthen her life? If she lives a normal length life, does that mean that the Other Side will disappear when she dies or will someone else become the anchor?
Stefan is not having an easy time adjusting to life with all of his memories. Katherine is being very helpful in this regard. Giving Stefan the idea to focus on the names of his victims gives him something to ground him and acts as an almost meditative device to help him through the rough patches. It was nice to see Katherine work with him, Nadia, and Matt. Speaking of Matt, he is now free of Gregor who was possessing him. Unfortunately for Nadia, that means that Gregor is now dead at Katherine's hands. Not exactly good for mother-daughter bonding.
So Damon was a vampire caught by the Augustinians. Huh, that was an interesting piece of information. I wonder what they did to him. It was during the 1940s or 1950s, so Stefan (presumably) wasn't talking to him, which is why we have never heard about it before (ok, yes there are other reasons, but in-story, this is why). Given the way Damon reacted to Dr. Westfield, he did not have any fun while the "guest" of the Augustinians.
We'll be back on December 5th! Have fun until then!
Thursday, November 21, 2013
My Review of The Tomorrow People 1.07- Limbo
Stephen has some fun and experiences backlash, Cara tells John about last week, and we see a criminal Tomorrow Person...
Stephen definitely deserved some of the flack he got this week, but some of it was entirely unearned. He did abuse his powers in the basketball game and he did sleep with Cara, so the reactions of John and (to an extent) Jedekiah were completely understandable. Can't say I felt for Astrid. After all, she was the one who encouraged him to use his powers for fun. Then, when she saw him kissing another girl, she went a crazy on him. Maybe I missed something, but I saw no evidence of the massive personality change she was talking about. She was acting like he had killed a bunch of puppies or something. Given the fact that he thought that the party was for the basketball team, I get why he didn't invite her over. And she only has herself to blame for him not kissing her. So while I may feel bad that her feelings were hurt, that is more or less cancelled out by her complete overreaction to the situation. I ain't saying she needs professional help, but she does need to figure out what she wants and talk with Stephen rather than going all psycho on him.
I do also think that Jedekiah overreacted somewhat. Or, maybe it would be better to say that he overreacted to the party. He said that Stephen used his powers to throw the party, to which I say "Huh???" Did I completely miss something? The only evidence I saw of powers regarding the party was when Stephen saved the vase from breaking and the stoner saw him. Unless Jedekiah merely meant that the party would not have happened if Stephen hadn't used his powers in school and gotten on the basketball team.
I was amused by John's actions during the basketball game. Sure, it was seriously petty, but it was also funny. Since Stephen wasn't seriously hurt and no lasting damage was done, it was not that bad. Now, the punching was a different matter. The thing is that Stephen and John represent two very different ways to deal with what is going on. Stephen is trying to integrate the Tomorrow People into society, whereas John has internalized Ultra's idea of keeping the two groups separate. They are also both in love with Cara and she in love with them. This is going to be seriously messy and I really hope it doesn't drag on too long, because love triangles can be seriously annoying.
I was impressed (but not surprised) that Stephen went after the rapist without his powers. Stephen spent most of the episode being told that he was a useless screw-up and he wanted to change that, so he did. He is not perfect, but he is a genuinely good guy who makes mistakes. Unfortunately, he also needs a certain amount of protection at this point, although I hope that changes soon. I can't say I was surprised that Cara could hear him because Stephen has already demonstrated that things that limit the abilities of others don't necessarily limit him. Seeing his dad was really interesting. I wonder what Thatnoss (probably spelled wrong) is/was and why it is important.
In two weeks, the next new episode, so see y'all then!
Stephen definitely deserved some of the flack he got this week, but some of it was entirely unearned. He did abuse his powers in the basketball game and he did sleep with Cara, so the reactions of John and (to an extent) Jedekiah were completely understandable. Can't say I felt for Astrid. After all, she was the one who encouraged him to use his powers for fun. Then, when she saw him kissing another girl, she went a crazy on him. Maybe I missed something, but I saw no evidence of the massive personality change she was talking about. She was acting like he had killed a bunch of puppies or something. Given the fact that he thought that the party was for the basketball team, I get why he didn't invite her over. And she only has herself to blame for him not kissing her. So while I may feel bad that her feelings were hurt, that is more or less cancelled out by her complete overreaction to the situation. I ain't saying she needs professional help, but she does need to figure out what she wants and talk with Stephen rather than going all psycho on him.
I do also think that Jedekiah overreacted somewhat. Or, maybe it would be better to say that he overreacted to the party. He said that Stephen used his powers to throw the party, to which I say "Huh???" Did I completely miss something? The only evidence I saw of powers regarding the party was when Stephen saved the vase from breaking and the stoner saw him. Unless Jedekiah merely meant that the party would not have happened if Stephen hadn't used his powers in school and gotten on the basketball team.
I was amused by John's actions during the basketball game. Sure, it was seriously petty, but it was also funny. Since Stephen wasn't seriously hurt and no lasting damage was done, it was not that bad. Now, the punching was a different matter. The thing is that Stephen and John represent two very different ways to deal with what is going on. Stephen is trying to integrate the Tomorrow People into society, whereas John has internalized Ultra's idea of keeping the two groups separate. They are also both in love with Cara and she in love with them. This is going to be seriously messy and I really hope it doesn't drag on too long, because love triangles can be seriously annoying.
I was impressed (but not surprised) that Stephen went after the rapist without his powers. Stephen spent most of the episode being told that he was a useless screw-up and he wanted to change that, so he did. He is not perfect, but he is a genuinely good guy who makes mistakes. Unfortunately, he also needs a certain amount of protection at this point, although I hope that changes soon. I can't say I was surprised that Cara could hear him because Stephen has already demonstrated that things that limit the abilities of others don't necessarily limit him. Seeing his dad was really interesting. I wonder what Thatnoss (probably spelled wrong) is/was and why it is important.
In two weeks, the next new episode, so see y'all then!
Friday, November 15, 2013
My Review of The Vampire Diaries 5.07- Death and the Maiden
Someone returns, a few leave, there are dopplegangers galore, and we prepare for the next phase....
Amara, Silas, and Tessa are all dead. Unfortunately for Silas, the other side still exists because Tessa used the blood of the three Petrova dopplegangers to transfer the anchor for the other side from Amara to Bonnie, thus bringing Bonnie back to life with some unintended consequences. Bonnie will now feel the death of every supernatural creature before they go to the other side. That is so not going to be fun. I suspect that Silas and Tessa will be back at some point because they are both on the other side whereas Amara is not. So now we have 2 people who can talk to people on the other side: Jeremy and Bonnie. This should be interesting.
I did love watching Silas and Tessa face off against each other. Neither could really hurt the other with magic, so Silas resorted to throwing a poker through Tessa's shoulder. I was a little surprised that Silas was able to interfere with the transference spell. I get that he is powerful, but I thought she was powerful enough to be able to stop him. Although she was casting a major spell at the time, so it is possible that he was able to get in that way. I have to say that I loved Silas' scene at the bus stop. Warped, granted, but it was lots of fun. His ruminations were giggleworthy and the look on the peoples' faces was just funny. When the guy started puking up liquified organs, that was pretty gross but still sort of cool.
Caroline now knows that Nadia is Katherine's daughter. I wonder if she'll do anything with the information or not. I don't know if the gang even knew that Katherine had a daughter, although I guess she would have had to have one in order for Elena to exist. Katherine is dying and only has a few months left to live, which totally sucks for her. It seems as if this is the price for resuming humanity. That and the fact that vampire blood is no longer efficacious when it comes to healing the remortalized person. Unfortunately, there is apparently no cure for what Katherine is going through unless Bonnie can come up with some magical solution. Which brings up a new point. Is Bonnie still a witch? Since she is the anchor to the other side, does she still have magical abilities or is this like being a vampire when you can only be one or the other?
Stefan is going to have to continue to live with the memories of what happened to him over the summer. Elena is trying to help him move beyond it, but it is going to take some time. I suspect that Damon will want to help, but it will not be easy on any of them. Stefan was hoping that Damon and Elena would rescue him, but they did not. Sucks to be him.
So, the next phase of the story is apparently going to be about the secret society back on the college campus. I wonder if Bonnie, Elena, and Caroline will go back to campus or not. If they do, Elena may have to do some fancy talking to get around the fact that Katherine pretended to be her and that she cannot go into certain buildings without permission.
Until next week!
Amara, Silas, and Tessa are all dead. Unfortunately for Silas, the other side still exists because Tessa used the blood of the three Petrova dopplegangers to transfer the anchor for the other side from Amara to Bonnie, thus bringing Bonnie back to life with some unintended consequences. Bonnie will now feel the death of every supernatural creature before they go to the other side. That is so not going to be fun. I suspect that Silas and Tessa will be back at some point because they are both on the other side whereas Amara is not. So now we have 2 people who can talk to people on the other side: Jeremy and Bonnie. This should be interesting.
I did love watching Silas and Tessa face off against each other. Neither could really hurt the other with magic, so Silas resorted to throwing a poker through Tessa's shoulder. I was a little surprised that Silas was able to interfere with the transference spell. I get that he is powerful, but I thought she was powerful enough to be able to stop him. Although she was casting a major spell at the time, so it is possible that he was able to get in that way. I have to say that I loved Silas' scene at the bus stop. Warped, granted, but it was lots of fun. His ruminations were giggleworthy and the look on the peoples' faces was just funny. When the guy started puking up liquified organs, that was pretty gross but still sort of cool.
Caroline now knows that Nadia is Katherine's daughter. I wonder if she'll do anything with the information or not. I don't know if the gang even knew that Katherine had a daughter, although I guess she would have had to have one in order for Elena to exist. Katherine is dying and only has a few months left to live, which totally sucks for her. It seems as if this is the price for resuming humanity. That and the fact that vampire blood is no longer efficacious when it comes to healing the remortalized person. Unfortunately, there is apparently no cure for what Katherine is going through unless Bonnie can come up with some magical solution. Which brings up a new point. Is Bonnie still a witch? Since she is the anchor to the other side, does she still have magical abilities or is this like being a vampire when you can only be one or the other?
Stefan is going to have to continue to live with the memories of what happened to him over the summer. Elena is trying to help him move beyond it, but it is going to take some time. I suspect that Damon will want to help, but it will not be easy on any of them. Stefan was hoping that Damon and Elena would rescue him, but they did not. Sucks to be him.
So, the next phase of the story is apparently going to be about the secret society back on the college campus. I wonder if Bonnie, Elena, and Caroline will go back to campus or not. If they do, Elena may have to do some fancy talking to get around the fact that Katherine pretended to be her and that she cannot go into certain buildings without permission.
Until next week!
Thursday, November 14, 2013
My Review of The Tomorrow People 1.06- Sorry for Your Loss
Russell loses his father, Stephen loses a partner, a breakout emerges, we learn a little something about Jedekiah, and Stephen and Cara get a little closer...
Russell is a damn fine piano player. That was not something I would have expected to learn about him. I have to admit that I was a little amused to see that he used his telekinetic abilities to play the piano, even if it was unconsciously. It was nice that he and his dad had a minor rapprochement before he left in the form of his dad actually smiling at him before he left (assuming that was real and not Russell's imagination). It was also nice to finally get some backstory on Russell since he is the only one of the major Tomorrow People who we have not learned a lot about yet. Using his abilities to cheat at poker was not smart. Understandable, but still not smart.
Stephen seriously needs to have some faith in himself. He is a great leader if he does what he thinks is right and doesn't doubt himself. No, he doesn't have the training that John has, but he does have something else: a life outside of the conflict. Between that and his compassion, he can be a great leader. He does have to realize that not everything is his fault. What happened to Darcy was a result of her actions. If she had not told Ultra where to find her sister or if she had chosen to simply teleport away with Stephen and her sister earlier, things would have been different. Granted, the second choice could have gotten her in trouble, but at least she would have been alive. As it is, her sister is with the rest of the Tomorrow People and Stephen is riddled with guilt.
I was glad to see that Cara is able to see the wisdom in Stephen's approach. Giving up all connections to your human life may be pragmatic, but it cannot be easy to deal with. Yes, yes, I do get that it is better for all involved because it helps to protect the people you care about, but it is still obviously hard to deal with. Stephen is reminding the group what it is like to be human again and reminds them that there is more to living than simply surviving. He saved Irene and protected her while she was in the hospital, he is helping to keep the group informed about what Ultra is doing, and he is the son of their saviour.
Then there is the kiss. Ok, kisses. The first one was completely understandable. Cara and Stephen were caught between two groups of Ultra agents, so Stephen decided to protect them and do something he has obviously wanted to do for some time by making out with her. Completely understandable. Not the best move, but understandable. The second kiss was definitely less so. The two of them definitely like each other, so there is no surprise there, but given that it happened while John was away? Not good. When he finds out about this, all hell is going to break loose. He is not terribly fond of Stephen as it is, and this is just going to make matters worse. Any guesses about where they were headed when they teleported out?
Stephen definitely needs to be careful with Astrid. Between spying on Ultra, working for Ultra, working for the Tomorrow People, and now protecting Astrid, he is going to be a busy boy. I don't know how she'll take the protection thing, but she will definitely need it, particularly if Ultra finds out about her.
If Ultra finds out that Jedekiah is schtupping a Tomorrow Person, it will be bad. I cannot imagine that they will take that sort of fraternization well. I do want to know who exactly she is. At first, I thought she might be his daughter or something. Then she loosened his tie and they were kissing, so I am assuming that she is someone else entirely.
I do want to say one thing about the previews for next weeks episode. The whole "abuse his new powers" thing is an episode I would have expected much earlier, say in the second or third episodes *BEFORE* he knew how dangerous Ultra was. I am really curious how they wil have him justify using his abilities that way.
Until next week!
Russell is a damn fine piano player. That was not something I would have expected to learn about him. I have to admit that I was a little amused to see that he used his telekinetic abilities to play the piano, even if it was unconsciously. It was nice that he and his dad had a minor rapprochement before he left in the form of his dad actually smiling at him before he left (assuming that was real and not Russell's imagination). It was also nice to finally get some backstory on Russell since he is the only one of the major Tomorrow People who we have not learned a lot about yet. Using his abilities to cheat at poker was not smart. Understandable, but still not smart.
Stephen seriously needs to have some faith in himself. He is a great leader if he does what he thinks is right and doesn't doubt himself. No, he doesn't have the training that John has, but he does have something else: a life outside of the conflict. Between that and his compassion, he can be a great leader. He does have to realize that not everything is his fault. What happened to Darcy was a result of her actions. If she had not told Ultra where to find her sister or if she had chosen to simply teleport away with Stephen and her sister earlier, things would have been different. Granted, the second choice could have gotten her in trouble, but at least she would have been alive. As it is, her sister is with the rest of the Tomorrow People and Stephen is riddled with guilt.
I was glad to see that Cara is able to see the wisdom in Stephen's approach. Giving up all connections to your human life may be pragmatic, but it cannot be easy to deal with. Yes, yes, I do get that it is better for all involved because it helps to protect the people you care about, but it is still obviously hard to deal with. Stephen is reminding the group what it is like to be human again and reminds them that there is more to living than simply surviving. He saved Irene and protected her while she was in the hospital, he is helping to keep the group informed about what Ultra is doing, and he is the son of their saviour.
Then there is the kiss. Ok, kisses. The first one was completely understandable. Cara and Stephen were caught between two groups of Ultra agents, so Stephen decided to protect them and do something he has obviously wanted to do for some time by making out with her. Completely understandable. Not the best move, but understandable. The second kiss was definitely less so. The two of them definitely like each other, so there is no surprise there, but given that it happened while John was away? Not good. When he finds out about this, all hell is going to break loose. He is not terribly fond of Stephen as it is, and this is just going to make matters worse. Any guesses about where they were headed when they teleported out?
Stephen definitely needs to be careful with Astrid. Between spying on Ultra, working for Ultra, working for the Tomorrow People, and now protecting Astrid, he is going to be a busy boy. I don't know how she'll take the protection thing, but she will definitely need it, particularly if Ultra finds out about her.
If Ultra finds out that Jedekiah is schtupping a Tomorrow Person, it will be bad. I cannot imagine that they will take that sort of fraternization well. I do want to know who exactly she is. At first, I thought she might be his daughter or something. Then she loosened his tie and they were kissing, so I am assuming that she is someone else entirely.
I do want to say one thing about the previews for next weeks episode. The whole "abuse his new powers" thing is an episode I would have expected much earlier, say in the second or third episodes *BEFORE* he knew how dangerous Ultra was. I am really curious how they wil have him justify using his abilities that way.
Until next week!
My Review of Arrow 2.06- Keep Your Enemies Closer
Diggle goes to find Lyla, Oliver and Felicity tag along with an unintended guest, Moira's lawyer makes a demand of Thea, Roy runs into a little spot of trouble, and we learn a little more about Oliver on the boat....
After failing to help Diggle with Deadshot last season, Oliver is determined to help now. And good thing he was there, because the plan would never have succeeded without Oliver's intervention. I want to know what it was that Oliver said to that guy in the to get him to back off so quickly. I would assume it had something to do with Oliver's place within the hierarchy of the Russian crime syndicate, but it could have been something else entirely. Between that, Oliver's contacts in Russia, and Oliver coming to help Diggle fight his way out, he was absolutely vital to the escape. It was nice to see Oliver makeup for what happened last time, even if his actions when Deadshot was in Starling City were understandable.
Isabelle definitely got under Oliver and Felicity's skin. Ok, she got under more than Oliver's skin, but let's just leave it at that ok? I do wonder if she and other people really think that Oliver is sleeping with Felicity or if that was her way of getting a dig in at Oliver. I do get why people would think that something is going on, but I would not put it above Isabelle to say something in order to get into Oliver's head. She is definitely starting to suspect that there is more going on than then is obvious on the surface, so Oliver needs to be ultra careful.
I was impressed with Diggle's restraint. Granted, he did make a promise to Deadshot about getting out, so honor did prevent him from doing anything, but it still seemed to be a close call. I was a little surprised to hear that he an Lyla were married. That was definitely unexpected, although it does explain a lot about why he called her for help and why he will move heaven and earth in order to help her out if she needs it.
I was definitely annoyed that Thea listened to the lawyer and dumped Roy. I think that, had she explained what was going on, he would have agreed to a break in order to help her out. No, it wouldn't have been easy on either of them, but I still think he would have agreed to it in order to help Thea and Moira. Her excuse for breaking up with Roy was pretty lame and totally transparent. I was very happy that Moira cut that nonsense off at the knees and prevented Thea from making a huge mess out of everything.
Roy did the smart thing when he told Officer Lance about who he was working for. Lance has come to respect the Arrow and knows that people working for him are not bad people. Besides, Roy was helping to bring down bad guys, so it was not as if he did something horrible. Thea's face when she saw Roy in the station was sort of funny. She was so exasperated and then completely perplexed when she realized he was being released without being charged.
Slade and Shado survived the attack on the island, but now they are being threatened again. The Japanese were apparently intent on creating super soldiers and had a serum of some sort on a submarine that was attacked and sunk by the island. That is what the people on the boat are looking for. Sarah was pretty convincing this episode. I am surprised that Oliver is trusting her right now. I suspect that she does something to redeem herself. Either that or she was under duress when she betrayed him in this episode and he knows it.
Until next week!
After failing to help Diggle with Deadshot last season, Oliver is determined to help now. And good thing he was there, because the plan would never have succeeded without Oliver's intervention. I want to know what it was that Oliver said to that guy in the to get him to back off so quickly. I would assume it had something to do with Oliver's place within the hierarchy of the Russian crime syndicate, but it could have been something else entirely. Between that, Oliver's contacts in Russia, and Oliver coming to help Diggle fight his way out, he was absolutely vital to the escape. It was nice to see Oliver makeup for what happened last time, even if his actions when Deadshot was in Starling City were understandable.
Isabelle definitely got under Oliver and Felicity's skin. Ok, she got under more than Oliver's skin, but let's just leave it at that ok? I do wonder if she and other people really think that Oliver is sleeping with Felicity or if that was her way of getting a dig in at Oliver. I do get why people would think that something is going on, but I would not put it above Isabelle to say something in order to get into Oliver's head. She is definitely starting to suspect that there is more going on than then is obvious on the surface, so Oliver needs to be ultra careful.
I was impressed with Diggle's restraint. Granted, he did make a promise to Deadshot about getting out, so honor did prevent him from doing anything, but it still seemed to be a close call. I was a little surprised to hear that he an Lyla were married. That was definitely unexpected, although it does explain a lot about why he called her for help and why he will move heaven and earth in order to help her out if she needs it.
I was definitely annoyed that Thea listened to the lawyer and dumped Roy. I think that, had she explained what was going on, he would have agreed to a break in order to help her out. No, it wouldn't have been easy on either of them, but I still think he would have agreed to it in order to help Thea and Moira. Her excuse for breaking up with Roy was pretty lame and totally transparent. I was very happy that Moira cut that nonsense off at the knees and prevented Thea from making a huge mess out of everything.
Roy did the smart thing when he told Officer Lance about who he was working for. Lance has come to respect the Arrow and knows that people working for him are not bad people. Besides, Roy was helping to bring down bad guys, so it was not as if he did something horrible. Thea's face when she saw Roy in the station was sort of funny. She was so exasperated and then completely perplexed when she realized he was being released without being charged.
Slade and Shado survived the attack on the island, but now they are being threatened again. The Japanese were apparently intent on creating super soldiers and had a serum of some sort on a submarine that was attacked and sunk by the island. That is what the people on the boat are looking for. Sarah was pretty convincing this episode. I am surprised that Oliver is trusting her right now. I suspect that she does something to redeem herself. Either that or she was under duress when she betrayed him in this episode and he knows it.
Until next week!
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