Roslin shared the visions with Caprica, Athena and Hera and she did have Hera blood, but it has been quite awhile.
I think she was just tuned in enough to Hera and maybe still taking the vision inducing juice to sense when something was wrong.
A topic for the discussion of Doctor Who, Arrow, and The Flash. Beware possible invasions of iZombie, Sleepy Hollow, or pretty much any other "genre" (read: sci fi, superhero, or fantasy) show that captures our fancy. Expect adult content and discussion of the Big Gay Sex.
Marvel superheroes are discussed over at the MCU thread.
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.
Roslin shared the visions with Caprica, Athena and Hera and she did have Hera blood, but it has been quite awhile.
I think she was just tuned in enough to Hera and maybe still taking the vision inducing juice to sense when something was wrong.
I'm really intrigued by the concept for Kings, what with the alternate-universe/modern setting and the Shakespearean story-devices. I was flashing on Baz Lurhman's Romeo + Juliet.
The worldbuilding in this show is astonishingly strong. The writing is solid, the characters well-drawn, and the acting is good across the board. And there's really nothing else like it on TV right now.
Huh. I saw a note somewhere talking about it--I wonder if it was on John Rogers' blog, since ita saw it too.
That Ian McShane is on the cast speaks well for it, but the marketing is exactly not the sort of thing to get me to tune in.
Suela, that's where I saw the rec.
I was flashing on Baz Lurhman's Romeo + Juliet.
Richard III with Ian McKellen, for me, once I found out the premise.
the marketing is exactly not the sort of thing to get me to tune in.
Do you think explaining the alternate universe thing would turn off more people than on? Because it piqued my interest mightily. Before knowing that, I thought it was a story of an American soldier earning the indebtedness of a European monarch. And that wasn't doing the show many favours.
I could tell it was an AU America thing from the ads.
I must be the market!
From those one or two NBC spots? How?
Well, it looked like America - except it had a king.
I failed to get the "looked like America" thing. They all look like America. Or, well, Vancouver.
How many shows on regular tv aren't set in the USofA? Even Flashpoint seems to try to hide that fact that it's in Canada.
Flashpoint shows Canadian newspapers and the Toronto skyline. I was quite startled by that. But too many Americans for the accent to pervade.
In my head, NBC is more likely to make a series about an American soldier abroad than an alternate reality. The truth would never have occurred to me.