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WarLocke posted:It was kind of weird how Root told Reese they'd need 300 of them and when you see the setup in the subway car, there's like, 40 of them. As if this show could afford buying 300 used PS3s. Even if they sold them all afterwards, they'd still have to sink half their budget into making just one or two episodes with that kind of spending. On an actual serious note, the mindless action has gotten so boring at this point I skipped most of it to watch the scenes with the Machine and Harold. It is pretty much the only part of the show that actually interest me now. Edit: vvvv Don't ruin the joke man evilmiera fucked around with this message at 08:48 on May 7, 2016 |
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| # ¿ Nov 15, 2025 17:21 |
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So we've got an episode dealing with vaccines and national healthcare being run by a secret cabal and totally evil, and another one shortly before about how crazy radio kooks totally aren't crazy. Will we be seeing an episode about the PoI people infiltrating a forum known as the Open Republic to safeguard their leader Tim Bobinson?
evilmiera fucked around with this message at 21:47 on May 27, 2016 |
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NoDamage posted:You're not the only one. I thought this entire season was a huge disappointment compared to previous seasons (especially S1-S3). The dialogue in the finale felt forced and awkward. The plot kept jumping all over the place. This show has been previously masterful at building suspenseful plots but ever since the Samaritan storyline took center stage, things have gone downhill. This is all true, but there is still stuff I liked about the finale of the season at the very least. Mostly the completely awesome music when Finch was talking to the Machine, though. I've been one to complain about the season and some of the previous seasons stuff before, but I didn't think this last episode sucked at all, though it was wrapped up way too fast. I do have a question though: Why didn't Samaritan just shut down if it knew the virus was about to be uploaded? Spend a few days offline and the virus issue should be taken care of. Sure, it leaves it in a vulnerable position, but not as vulnerable as being near "death."
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