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Episode Thirteen

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The small detail that bugged me the most was that the journals during the investigation were hand written. Why would they not be recording audio or video journals for a tv show? Hell, they could use their cell phones if they didn't want to use one of the multiple cameras or recording devices they brought with them. In the last act of the book, multiple characters stop to write journal entries while lost in a completely dark labyrinth, using up their flashlight batteries...until the batteries run out and then they write in complete darkness. Why? Such an easy fix that should have never made it to the final version. And even though I celebrate the over-arching vibe of the book, once we got to the crux of the story, it lost me. It reminded me a lot of both Hide and These Fleeting Shadows. So let me lead by admitting that I have no idea what's going on with the length of this show at this point. All prior research I'd done into Reign of the Seven Spellblades's run the past few weeks indicated that it was a single- cour affair that would cap off at thirteen episodes, but that's not the case now. Technically, that's for the best. My prior misgivings with the show's choices that brought it to this episode are thus mitigated by the fact that it doesn't have to rush to resolve everything in this entry. So with those pacing problems put aside, surely Seven Spellblades can instead focus on taking a solid next step in this story, right? Misato thinks that the same "Personality transplant" operating systems used by seventh-generation computers to think for themselves are also in the Evangelions. Misato is rarely in the know, and whether or not she is right or wrong on this issue is an open question: Ritsuko does not answer her, and the question is never brought up again. My final recommendation: If you enjoy haunted house horror, found footage, strange scientific/paranormal experiments, and unexplained paranormal discoveries, you will enjoy this book. I had fun with it.

Yes, this episode of Better Call Saul ended the entire 14-year saga beautifully, but are we really ready to say good-bye? Is it too late for a spinoff series about the waiter who pushes table-side guacamole on the Whites and Schraders in the scene in which Walt hands over the “confession” DVD? Surely the kid has a story. No one in the room believes what Jimmy is saying here, but the performance is nonetheless convincing because he needs only one juror to buy it. If there’s one thing every lawyer in Albuquerque knows about Saul Goodman, it’s that he has a talent for getting his way in court. Jimmy scares prosecutors into cutting a deal that would give him only seven and a half years in country-club prison and the creature comfort of a pint of Blue Bell Mint Chocolate Chip ice cream every week. And that’s before he’s ready to play his trump card, the “previously unknown homicide” of Howard Hamlin. The news regarding Zeke’s spinal fluid in the wine compliments another major revelation that’s made over just how drastic his actions have been to control the masses. He’s had a major hand in the current shape of the Titan landscape and these decisions are far past the point of haunting him, but seriously affect those that learn the truth for the first time. You can't show up and expect them perform for you because finally they have an appreciative audience for their wall banging or floating down stairs."

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Suddenly, a house across the street is on fire (probably caused by an exploding woman) and chaos reigns. As guardians swarm the area and Joseph drives off with a terrified Emily, Rita comes to June and tells her she and the baby can go, but it must be now. On the surface, Beau really isn't a complicated man. He lives a relatively quiet life, devoted to his daughter and job. And those traits were on full display here as the search for Emily and Denise ramped up. All the crew members express how they feel about one another which is helpful in establishing a dynamic. I did feel like things take a minute to get going. Without exposition, the author relies on the characters to drive the storyline, so there's some repetition as we get each person's perspective before moving on to real-time events. The series' idea to focus on families has always worked well for them, from the Kleinsasser's to the Bhullar's and now the Barnes family. And adding in the cases of the week was a reliable way to escape the central storyline in a way that allowed it to remain exciting and not stale and oversaturated. Commander Waterford (Joseph Fiennes) and Serena Joy (Yvonne Strahovski). Photograph: George Kraychyk/Hulu

I took some time to process my experience with this one before I even attempted to write a review. I was so disappointed initially, but I wouldn't say that would be a fair assessment of all my time with this book. Better days … Jonathan Banks as Mike Ehrmantraut, Bob Odenkirk as Saul Goodman. Photograph: Greg Lewis/AMC/Sony Pictures Television The maze-like, labyrinthian aspect of the house was interesting. But at one point I felt like I was on a Skyrim quest leading nowhere until...well, literal disintegration. What a bust.Evangelion: 1.0 You Are (Not) Alone • Evangelion: 2.0 You Can (Not) Advance • Evangelion: 3.0 You Can (Not) Redo • Evangelion: 3.0 (-120 min.) ( anime) • Evangelion: 3.0 (-46h) • Evangelion: 3.0+1.0 Thrice Upon A Time Yes, the chosen "cases of the week" did coincide well with the fertility clinic angle, but I'm still left wondering about the prophet Grace, the Poveglia Codex, and the Sixty. While the book was entertaining enough, I felt that at the end of the day this takes a scientific approach to "horror" that, for me at least, is far less interesting than the alternative. I thought I was going to read a spooky good time about a team of ghost-hunters, but was instead shown a few moments that were clearly supposed to be frightening (but weren't), with long intervals of not much happening, and an ending that was overall just okay.

The finale of Breaking Bad did not offer redemption for Walt. He was so far beyond any form of absolution even though he returned to Albuquerque to unwind as much of his meth empire as possible and liberate his partner, Jesse Pinkman, in the process. But it did offer an important revelation in a scene with Skyler, who expects him to launch into another tiresome monologue about how he did it all for “family” and is surprised to hear him confess that he did it all for himself. “I liked it,” he said. That finale image of a gut-shot Walt returning to the lab with the tenderness of a serviceman coming home from a long tour overseas is a sublimely perverse and pathetic fantasy. It cuts to the heart of who he really is, and it’s not redemptive in the least. Sin-yu finds something fishy in the potted plant that Na-yeon left in his office. He finds his shirt along with Hong-jo’s gloves wrapped together under the pot and shows up to meet Hong-jo. He asks her a few questions which has Hong-jo worried, but claims that he’s worried about her. Grandma asks Yi-chan to be very mindful of his feelings and suggests that he should make sure he never breaks Chang-a’s heart. At the same time, Eun-gyeol drops Eun-yu (Se-kyeong) home. He tells her that she has no reason to think that her pain is not big enough.They talk only a little, she admiring his plea bargaining, him joking about getting his sentence commuted to only a few decades for good behaviour. There is quiet and a distinct sense of contentment on Jimmy’s face. Then Kim leaves and it’s more difficult to read her thoughts as she waits to be taken out of the compound. Jimmy is there in the yard watching, and he catches her attention, giving her a Saul salute, two smoking finger guns. It’s kind of pathetic but self-effacing too. She gives him no response, but it’s not clear he needed one. Summing up In the kitchen, Eun-gyeol finds that Eun-yu had started a fire while attempting to make ramen. He takes charge of the meal instead and makes scallion pancakes for the two of them instead. During their interaction, Eun-yu learns that Eun-gyeol is a CODA (Child Of Deaf Adults) and the only hearing member of his family. This is the first time an Angel managed to get directly inside of Central Dogma, which as we will see next episode, causes the Human Instrumentality Committee to become quite concerned. It is not directly stated how it managed to infiltrate the base, but Shigeru's comments seem to indicate that it arrive in air bubbles within a poorly constructed clean room wall, the "87th protein barrier", which was installed in NERV HQ after Sachiel first appeared.,

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