Boxed Set, Vol. IV: It's always suicide-mission this, save-the-planet that.
A topic for the discussion of Farscape, Smallville, and Due South. Beware possible invasions of Stargate, Highlander, or pretty much any other "genre" (read: sci fi or fantasy) show that captures our fancy. Expect Adult Content and discussion of the Big Gay Sex.
Whitefont all unaired in the U.S. ep discussion, identifying it as such, and including the show and ep title in blackfont.
Blackfont is allowed after the show has aired on the east coast.
This is NOT a general TV discussion thread.
I accidentally skimmed this thread before watching, so I went through the whole episode (okay, not the whole episode) thinking the geese were more literally children. Made the whole neck-breaking incident less goofy fun and more unbelievably upsetting MASH episode. Gah.
The first time, I had the same reaction. Not so much with the goofy at all. Then the geese were revealed to be machines so it took some of the sting away, but still, way harsh, and gasp worthy at the time.
Did that ending between Finn and the Megan bump anyone else? Was that a really weird tone for him to hit?
Yes! Finn's emotional delivery of the line was a tad on the scary side. If I was Megan, at that age, I think I would still be a little wary of him even though he said he was kidding. It undid the "person you could trust" and made him just creepy. Or maybe just completely socially inept. Either way I wouldn't have wanted to work with him after that. I liked the character up to that point.
Or are there so many other bigger unresolvable problems right now.
I still want to tune in each week, so I don't have any unresolvable problems. I nit pick because I love.
Did that ending between Finn and the Megan bump anyone else? Was that a really weird tone for him to hit?
I think it did seem a little weird... We get that he's prickly and traumatized from his science fair experience. But then, he comes back and faces his demons, and... becomes better for it, I guess? Because he did something useful besides watch the equipment? So then he's in a place where he can crack that joke? Only... if that was the goal, it fell flat. Because he wasn't really funny enough to make it work.
If the daughter had been the one to steal the mother's invention, it might have been funnier as a jab... oh, ha ha, don't steal from me, nudge wink. But we hadn't seen a nice sense of humor that was otherwise marred by his scarring experience. We saw an angry, cranky man, so it came out angry-yet-trying-to-hide-it-under-humor.
I thought there was a gym bag line? Colin, you had a line about the clothes being loaners, that you "forgot" your gym bag. I don't think I heard it the first time over me (forgive me) laughing at the shirt.
Did that ending between Finn and the Megan bump anyone else? Was that a really weird tone for him to hit?
I enjoyed that. Threw me off balance a bit, but in a good way.
And the scene was supposed to take off from there with Carter not knowing what to do in a gym and being a complete idiot but they cut around most of it
Oh, we did get all that. We just had to watch from the hall.
pats poor Carter on head
I'm starting to wonder if when Rodney McKay says he grew up in Canada, if it's actually a code name for Eureka.
I agree with not wanting Carter to be dumb. He has to be everyman, I get that. But he doesn't have to be a doofus.
I'm starting to wonder if when Rodney McKay says he grew up in Canada, if it's actually a code name for Eureka.
Out, damned bunny!
I agree with not wanting Carter to be dumb. He has to be everyman, I get that. But he doesn't have to be a doofus.
I thought that it was pretty well established in the first season that, even though Carter might not be a blinding science genius like the rest of the folks in this town, he's still a smart and capable guy, who is good at his job.
The thing with the weight bar was really good. Creative problem-solving. That's the Carter I know and admire.
But the constant re-emphasis that he's not "smart," but then he does something smart? We should be past that by now.
Also, my morning visit to Wikipedia tells me that 111 would actually fall into the "superior intelligence" range. (By one point, but still, a little higher than smack down the middle.) Plus, can't your IQ shift up with age?
Apparently I'm more defensive of a certain sheriff than I thought...
I agree with not wanting Carter to be dumb. He has to be everyman, I get that. But he doesn't have to be a doofus.
And yet? Still somewhat less painful than Dork!Angel. Probably because I can't imagine Carter snapping a teacher's neck or locking a roomful of GD executives in a board room to get eaten.
Stark on the other hand...
I got annoyed at the 111 thing because
by definition
100 is supposed to be average.... but then, I also grew up amongst the kind of toxic gifties who would totally use being only 1 standard devation over as a putdown.
Sadly, after the virtual therapy mishap last week I think Carter has lost much of the at-least-I-have-enough-common-sense-to-not-activate-something-I-don't-understand cred that might otherwise counterbalance some of the absent minded professors around him.
Did that ending between Finn and the Megan bump anyone else? Was that a really weird tone for him to hit?
The tone didn't bother me...it was the plot problems. (Though I can't remember seeing the actor who played Finn before, I thought he was really good.) Finn didn't have a project to work on! That was established over and over in the episode. So why does he have an intern? And wasn't there a problem with evacuating the town...and then people were filing into a bunker? I guess those were just GD people. And I believe standard IQ tests don't score over 155. And, and. A lot of watching with my logic eye closed, but I actually enjoyed all the jokes about 111.