TB: Polite, dazed, apologetic, yet still dangerous Eric is surprisingly endearing.
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I heard the final scene(s) are a departure from the books. Anyone care to elaborate for us non-book readers?
Torchwood:
I also cannot imagine that the government would capitulate to his threats to sue (little concept called executive privilege, where the official is indemnified from personal liability for rightfully executed functions of office).
This. With whipped cream, nuts, and a cherry on top. That scene threw me out of the program completely. The most Danes would have any prayer of getting would be release and damages from the State government. And that would be a long, long, long shot requiring years of litigation. (Note: Under Federal law, an individual employee can be personally liable for violations of clealry defined Constitutional rights. I'm not familiar with Kentucky law, but I doubt it would make the governor that liable.)
A lesser issue that I could wave off a little more easily as "screw reality, just get the plot going" -- don't those CIA employees have supervisors? Or do ordinary CIA employees have authority over foreign governments?
I did enjoy the bazooka. And Rhys as Everyman.
Fred, it was the 456 Directive. Apparently, that's magic.
And frankly, the British government was probably happy to get Torchwood out of the country.
Vortex, I'm thinking more from the U.S. government end of things. The average government employee around here barely has authority to breathe without at least telling a supervisor what you're doing. So Reynolds renditions several foreign nationals entirely on his own initiative? Does not compute.
Oh, I'm with ya, Fred. Especially since said employee is supposed to be in the hospital.
TB: Polite, dazed, apologetic, yet still dangerous Eric is surprisingly endearing.
I've been thinking how much the actor appears to be able to change his appearance based on how he carries himself. I've always thought he was very imposing - intentionally - based on how he's always looking down and holding his arms. But now he seems almost childlike. But still dangerous.
The Jason story is super boring and I'm now fastforwarding through each scene.
Well, that's another issue -- he needs a crutch and a wheelchair to leave the hospital, but he's able to fly across the Atlantic and drive a couple of hours through the English countryside. Again, kind of forgivable in the interests of getting the plot going, but when the Oswald Danes story line already has my disbelief poorly suspended, not good.
I love meek Eric, the way that the actor uses body language and voice to convey a completely different character.
The Jason story is super boring and I'm now fastforwarding through each scene.
amen. His story is always boring. Plus, the stupidity, it burns.
Also, this Andy as an addict thing is annoying as well.
amen. His story is always boring. Plus, the stupidity, it burns.
I miss season two Jason. He was dumb, but self-aware and heroic. They've regressed him horribly ever since. Although if there's got to be a punching bag this season, better him than Tara and Lafayette.
Speaking of which, kick-ass Tara is definitely an improvement over the last two seasons.