Thursday, October 17, 2024

Hope built for the Future

I wrote this poem a long time ago. Typed it out once and had no other copies not digital not on paper. I could not find it on my computer. I finally typed it up. That is to say instead of preserving the copy as the only copy I held that piece of paper in my hand and copied this beautiful poem from it, directly. In the exact same spacing and format as I had typed it out originally The only difference is the last line as I typed it up here is TWO lines on the copy I originally had.


But this DEMANDS sharing. Because this is a song that should never be forgot(en)!


Built on Hope (working title)


There is a hope buried deep in our hearts.

There is a love that is burning to shine.

There is belief waiting to bring...

all of these things to our lives.


There is a song that is longing to start.

There is a trust deep within us.

Tho some shut it our, we're here

nonetheless. And one day soon...

We'll be heard!


There's a pain on the land from a long time ago.

There's a wonder and sorrow, but still there is

Hope. There is nowhere to turn; where this hurt is not

Seen. But there is one place to go,

Where some still believe.


I've seen a place once, I think in a dream,

Where some added Joy to their wonderful peace.

Clutched close to their hearts, peace longs for release.

For what Good are such gifts When held just for the BLESSED?!

Sunday, October 13, 2024

CW Flash Reviews

 The Flash: The Race of His Life Season 2, Episode 23 Promise of a GREAT Future  10/10

This story is brimming with potential and strangely enough it is Tom Cavanagh who seems to shine the brightest here. At least his versatility and emotional range is showcased brilliantly. One thing that season 1 Wells proved is that on the rare occasion Dr. Wells and Joe were together on a thing you snapped to and paid attention. And throughout most of this season Joe has treated Wells with more respect but they never saw eye to eye on anything. And this was a glorious moment where Joe and Harrison were literally telling Barry the exact same thing, a united front. But also when everyone was gathered at Barry's house trying to figure out what to do, and deal with what everyone (else) had jsut witnessed, we saw a new side of Wells. Harrison Wells being silent, stunned and emotional, almost subdued but there was more emotion on his face when he wasn't saying a word than anything other than talking about his daughter has ever brought to the surface. That was some stellar face acting. Having inhaled seasons 3 and 4, it seems almost like a promise of a new Wells to come...shadows or a precursor to H. R. Wells.
Joe West finally says out loud something he hasn't admitted to anyone but Barry. That he'd been wrong to assume Henry Allen's guilt. Even while rotting in prison for a crime he didn't commit Henry never lost his light. As the height of treats for comic fans we see the REAL Jay Garrick. And he actually is. Middle aged, silver age of heroism. Oh, and a doppelganger of Barry's father who was just murdered. Barry, having defeated Zoom simply by taking the villain's advice of being prepared to kill himself, runs broken back in time...and freaking breaks time. Up Next: Flashpoint!

The Flash: Armageddon, Part 1 (2021) Season 8, Episode 1 It's not an 'Error' It's a hint

I'm starting to think people are idiots. 

The history of the Royal Flush gang doesn't line up with season one, because it's not supposed to. It's a hint or a foreshadowing that the timeline is different. And it is a hint that things are screwed up more than would seem at first blush. But also a hint about more than the fact that Joe is dead and the Reverse-Flashpoint is going on. In the first episode after this Armageddon arc Bart and XS go back in time and change the history of the Royal Flush gang so that they showed up when Barry was still in his coma. In this episode people are already living in that altered timeline. The episodes are shown out of chronological order and this was nothing more or less than a clue that something had changed and that Bart and Nora accidentally changing things was coming. Also ever since Crisis on Infinite Earths they are living in a different timeline than the first 5 seasons anyway. Earth Prime is a post Crisis timeline with old world and new world differences. Season by season continuity is 'insufferably inconsistent'...because the timeline has undergone two major overhauls and been mildly changed twice. Ray Palmer shows up mostly to show that Brandon Routh didn't completely fall off the Arrow-verse map when he left the Legends. Which is nice to know. When Sarah and Ray left Arrow during season 4, it was easy to think they were no longer part of the show. Then in season 5 we learn "oh they've been having thier own adventures." Ray was here to prove that didn't happen. The inter-connectivity of these episodes, that is the connection and tying things together in a way that makes sense is actually pretty strong. Despite the Arrow verse being mostly shut down. It's nice to know leaving the show isn't leaving the franchise. And for never having been a member of Team Flash, Ray has always been one of Barry's closest friends and allies. Ultimately this entire arc proves one thing: that the Arrow-verse shrank...but is not gone. And some people display their ignorance when shredding the Flash for it's obvious inconsistencies. When literally any inconsistency except Thawne's timeline changing between season one and two of the show happens because the TIMELINE has changed and things are literally supposed to be different.


The Flash: A New World, Part 4: Finale (2023) Season 9, Episode 13

Finally someone stands up 7/10

First, season 8 was supposed to be the last season. That's why it had both Thawne and Damien return and be completely redeemed. And THAT is why season 9 was not an impressive final season but a lackluster rush job.  With 4 episodes left in the season, the writers were told it was coming back for a season 9. And they had to rewrite the ending. Until Letcher's Thawne was revealed to be a good guy,. the WRITERS thought season 8 would be the finale. Which is why that was such a hack job. That being said, the reason this finale didn't disappoint anyone, is because no one had any particular expectations for it. The season had been pretty hard to follow. And I don't mean twisted, I meant hard to just plough through and sit down with. A lot of this episode was a CGI battle full of the same nonsense of the last 3 years. But you can't be a series finale without culminating the last few seasons of the series. It is not the fault of anyone in charge of making this episode that she show lost any sense of itself somewhere in season 7. Personally I loved all the references to Harry Wells and  *his* main antagonist, the season 2 villain evil speedster Zoom. In fact, if Grant Gustin hadn't gotten co-vid and had to be isolated, there Would have been a huge pay-off/ final confrontation between Barry and Zoom. There are something's that are beyond literally anyone's control. Something Barry ahs been using as a crutch since Thawne Wells literally asked for hi9s help at the end of Armageddon... And is just as true for those behind the scenes.

For almost two years Barry has had a giving into darkness, hopelessness defeatism about the world. He has essentially become the very thing he taught Oliver Queen not to be: A man who uses his personal tragedies to justify every walk on the dark-side he ever takes. Philosophically this could be because the two people in his life who pulled him back from that darkness every time he started down this road who basically said 'You taught me to be better, so BE Better' shook him out of this despondency are now gone. Harry Wells and Oliver Queen. But considering how the Flash is supposed to be a symbol of hope and light and believing in a better future, it was scary and almost depressing how often and how quickly he assumed there was no other way. It's like as soon as it was confirmed he was the paragon of love not the paragon of hope, he no longer had to pretend to be hopeful OR full of light. The amount of time he spent marinating in how many people he's lost over the years was overdone. And felt more like a Bruce Wayne thing to do...dwelling on it so much I mean. Paradoxically it was like the more emotional heart to hearts he had to convince bad guys to find the goodness within, the less he believed people, normal people and meta-criminals that were not super villains were good. The less he actually believed anyone could change or that there was another way to fight darkness except to be darkness. Which is itself Oliver's statement to Felicity right before he decided to come back as the Green Arrow "The only way I know how to fight the darkness is to BE darkness and I don't want to be that person anymore."

Arrow: Elseworlds, Part 2 (2018) Season 7, Episode 9 Oliver finally figures it out! 10/10

Oliver wasn't around for most of Barry's adventures and he has always seen Barry as someone who laughs everything off running around without a care in the world. Here, after seeing RF's taunts for himself he finally realizes Barry's carefree attitude is a REJECTION of everything bad that's happened to him, not an *absence* of bad things happening to him. Barry's attitude is a refusal to live in darkness, not an absence of difficult circumstances or things to take seriously. Going all the way back to when The Flash first showed up in Starling City in season 3 of Arrow, Oliver always dismissed Barry as someone who could afford to be happy all the time because he never had anything that could bring him down. And while Oliver had walked in Barry's physical shoes in the Flash portion of the crossover, that probably only reinforced his belief that Barry's life is a sappy, emotional and smooth ride compared to his own. Everyone likes him and he has a team and family at his back. Now, walking a bit in Barry's Mental shoes, seeing Reverse Flash shred Flash for 'being so weak you couldn't stop me from killing your mom' Oliver FINALLY gets that Barry could have been...well more like himself actually and simply didn't let himself be dragged down into that darkness. He'd met Thawne briefly, fought against him at the end of Flash season 1 but never really understood who Thawne was to Barry. He'd heard, once that Barry was stuck in some personal issues having something to do with Dr. Wells, but that was it. And to hear Oliver *validate* him, rather than simply be there for him was probably the greatest compliment Barry could ever have been given. For Barry, that was paradise. Barry Allen in the Green Arrow get up looks and for a brief moment even sounds like Roy Harper. Which was a pretty amazing thing. Roy was at Oliver's side for 2 years, his only protégé on the team and died/disappeared to protect Oliver's secret. And after they got back from Arkham and were safe in A. R. G. U. S. Barry was the one giving the advice for a change. Which is always awesome.  --- 1 out of 1 found this helpful.

Monday, October 7, 2024

Superman and Lois Reveiws part Two

Superman & Lois (2021–2024)  8/10

The Answers are built into the Narrative 14 May 2023

(originally titled "the most glaring problem has an obvious answer"

Well the most glaring question/issue people have with the show other than the fact that it's as much about Clark and Lois as a couple/as parents than it is about Superman saving the world... which is also built into the fabric of the show. It isn't confirmed until the end of season 2 but this series takes place on another Earth in the multiverse. While the heroes of Flash don't realize this, we as the audience knew at least 5 other Earths did survive the Crisis of Infinite Earths. In the season 2 finale General Lane mentions that Clark is the only Super-powered hero on this Earth. Meaning there is no native Flash and no native Supergirl. 

They kept a continuity of things that could be read either way. Diggle's comment about fighting alongside Superman could have been possible on Earth Prime since post-Crisis they have always lived on the same Earth. This Earth's Oliver Queen did know them, and is as dead as ours. There is no native Supergirl on this Earth, anymore than there was on Earth-1. The lack of any mention of Supergirl was conspicuous -- because of the assumption that this was Earth-38 Clark and Lois now living on Earth Prime. You'd actually have to watch the last episode of Arrow to see why some Earth's merged and others didn't. Tal-Rho and General Anderson are original characters...but Tal-Rho is unique. General Anderson is a proxy for any human authority-figure who doesn't understand that Superman is anything but Superman.
Lana Lang Cushing is the single most annoying character in the show. Superman can have kids. Traditionally Superman cannot procreate with humans because what we think of as Kryptonian physiology, is incompatible with an Earth humans for making offspring. In Supergirl Lois and Clark could have a kid because they were on the asteroid of Argo City when Lois became pregnant. No yellow sun means no powers, no powers means Clark is essentially human and they can get pregnant. I bet a lot of people watching this show were wondering how Lois and Clark could have had kids if there was no mention they'd ever gone to Ago City. It's never actually stated is even a thing here. Maybe Generals Lane and Anderson wouldn't be surprised to learn Superman can biologically have kids. Anderson was surprised Superman had a human Life...at all. Ultimately this show is part of the multiverse...but our heroes, THIS Superman and Lois are not connected with the heroes of the other shows. Diggle mentions having fought alongside Superman which actually still works because Team Arrow is a group of self-made heroes without superpowers. They established our characters and developed a fan base before telling us, they let us go with our assumptions for a while but this is not Kara's cousin and his fiancé now living on Earth-prime. It's THIER doppelgangers on Earth 12, 19, 21 or Earth 9. General Lane gets RESPECT in this show. Which is above the call and a particularly rare kind of awesome. (No Henshaw & no J'onn Jo'nzz )
The last few minutes of the Crisis on Infinite Earth's crossover showed that Earth 12, Earth, 21, Earth,19, Earth 96 and Earth 9 and a version of Earth-2 with Star-girl survived crisis. The merging of the multiverse was people and things from Earth-38, Earth2 and Earth-3. Most of, but NOT the entire multiverse was destroyed. Which explains Why Sam and Lucy Lane are such completely different characters from the show Supergirl. Although the old world-new world differences Supergirl and Barry spent a few episodes getting used to could have explained that. Almost everyone goes over the top in both drama and emotion in season 3. Far more real-world problems, which I was fine with but a lot of people had trouble with. Tension/dissension that feels like it's mostly there to make something of the production. For once most of the discontent, assumptions, arrogance does not come from Lana Lang Cushing. She actually seems pretty chill A particular conversation with Sarah on. Instead it comes from everyone else. 

3 out of 5 found this helpful.

Superman & Lois: Uncontrollable Forces (2023) Season 3, Episode 2  8/10

Harrison Wells Moment (and other good stuff) 25 April 2023

I will be laughing at myself, who am a major CW Flash fan for almost missing the Harrison Wells moment near the end of the movie. But let's start near the beginning.

Family stuff is more on point. Because it focuses at least a little bit on John and Natalie, each hanging out with people thier own age. There are two continuing plots throughout the first several episodes: Bruno Mannheim's mission and Lois' condition. I am no authority on the realities of breast cancer or how well/poorly this was handled going forward. But while Lana and John Henry are at the town hall working together toward a common goal, an assassin that comes in to stop Lana's investigation and this assassin FREEZES when it sees John Henry. I couldn't figure out why-- until the last moment of the episode. In a late episode of Smallville Icicle's son puts on Dr. Fate's helmet, takes Martian Manhunter out in 2 seconds and proceeds to wipe the floor with Hawkman, Stargirl, Green Arrow and Clark Kent. J'onn phases in and the villain is understandably confused. "I KILLED you." J'onn Jo'nzz, played by Phil Morris says "I'm Mars sole survivor. There's a reason for that." And that's what this felt like. A 'you should be dead; why aren't you dead' moment. It actually took me a minute to realize why the assailant was so confused. John Henry Irons on this Earth IS dead and was already established back in season 2 as having been killed by Bruno Mannheim or someone close to him. Possibly even working for him. So one of Manheim's guys seeing John Henry helping Lana out, seeing him assisting in the investigation would be like seeing a very dead Harrison Wells of the Flash walking around and committing another murder. Or possibly even more like Harrison was solving a double homicide. 
Other than being a confessed murderer, the first Harrison Wells the team knew was in a wheelchair and declared dead 4 years ago. and versions of Harrison Wells are WALKING down the street every day on the flash. If Tina or another colleague of Harrison saw one of those dopplegangers...this would be thier reaction. 

Superman & Lois: Head On (2023) Season 3, Episode 5  7/10

I Miss Tal-Rho 25 April 2023

In season 2 there was a main driving plot of the story other than either Lana or Clark's family. Superman had a brother he was learning to trust and rely on, who like Magneto or even Malcolm Merlyn on Arrow was shown as nothing but bad and then gradually humanized. Clark also had someone who should have been a friend and an ally who didn't trust him. Lt. General Anderson. Superman didn't talk to his -the corollary to Director J'onn J'onzz in Supergirl- any more than needed and actually did keep a lot of things from until it was almost too late. I think mistakes and misjudgments happened on both sides and LOVE that Anderson got a chance to apologize before the end. But Tal Rho and the actor that plays him was the most compelling and enticing part of the entire season. And certainly what drew me back for more. His accent, his past, his pragmatism, his acerbic attitude and his DESIRE for redemption in his brother's eyes. Like season 1 Wells in Flash he didn't care about people, he cared about his family. He was what Black Siren was for the last 3 seasons of Arrow. And I'm starting to think we'll never see him again.

I mean we know where he is but I want him back as much as his brother does. He would bring a balance and an objectivity back to the shows dynamic the lack of which makes this show a daytime drama. And if we don't either bring him back or give him some kind of send off it would be disappointing to an epic degree. I guess objectively speaking his run was done for a while. But they can bring him back just once more a changed man or with the proverbial 'harbinger of things to come' right?

Superman & Lois: Complications (2023) Season 3, Episode 11  9/10

Bizzaro's cure is set up 13 June 2023 Warning: Spoilers

A pun I guess. Because it is set up very well and thoughtfully, but it is also set up to fail. And if you're paying attention you can actually see why. Superman's blood is restorative. In season 3 of Smallville, Clark learns that his blood can cure severe liver disease and even cancer. Bruno stole a little bit of Superman's blood to start his cure and it seemed to work. But Bizzaro's world isn't just a world with a red sun. It is an inverted world. Even the physical laws are opposite. He grows weak from XK, uses Green K like a drug. He's weakened by the Earth's yellow sun because he was raised under square Earth's red sun. Most of the characters other than Superman himself who learned about this are either dead like Anderson or living on Square Earth like Tal-Rho. But you can actually see, and more importantly there actually is an established reason that makes sense in context for why the miracle cure doesn't work. And I don' think that happens too often.

Superman & Lois: Injustice Season 3, Episode 12  7/10

Jordan is not his father: He's Jon-El 22 June 2023

Seriously if Jordan Kent was real and I met him on the street, I'd walk up to him and say 'Hello Jon-el". It's the only reference he would get. But he doesn't have Jon-el's history. He didn't have an attention grabbing, only interested in your son once he has powers Kal'el for a father. He has a father who cares about him, who actually did raise him right. And somehow he's managing to push EVERYONE away while still claiming that everyone else is making everything about them. Johnathan and Sarah's self-interest is normal and realistic for thier age and actually a perfectly understandable reaction to thier unusual lives. I don't like seeing it, but it makes sense.

The reason I rate this episode as high as I do is because everything else about it is stellar. Seeing Luthor again, for the first time. Sam Lane being an involved family member who is as hurt as Clark and Lois to see Jordan becoming the attention grabber that he is. Wally West over in CW Central City was never this much of a showboat but even when he was a little bit he wised up pretty fast. And to have Jordan basically oozing disdain and callousness seems... like Jordan isn't the person on drugs to have taken the show down this particularly dark rabbit hole. I say it that way because he's giving a more convincing portrayal of being 'on drugs' than Tom Welling's Clark Kent did when he discovered Red Kryptonite. A substance that by its nature removes Kryptonian inhibitions and promotes aggressiveness.

"Mr. And Mrs. Kent are calling my house. They're really worried. It's like, they think he's on drugs or something." "Clark would have to BE on drugs to be on drugs." ...Chloe and Pete in a season 2 episode Smallville noticing Clark on Red-K. The class ring that was supposedly a ruby was a red meteor rock. It was a pretty cool way for Tom Welling to shed Clark's upstanding morality for an episode. But this is 4 episodes in a row without any apparent explanation whatsoever. It's exhausting. 7 out of 10 found this helpful. 

There is ONE episode I cannot actually post an Imdb review of. Not because I use profanity or whatever but because I agree with almost every single one of the characters in the episode and literally NONE of the viewers watching it. I'm focused on different points sure. And I couldn't talk about the subplot of the episode, that of Lois' breast cancer because I couldn't speak to that anyway. But I got shredded for posting the 'bleeding heart' or 'close-minded' post I originally made. And while I cna see past that to try again, I can't leave myself out of my own review enough that what I'd say would even make sense unless the person reading my review has actually seen my face and knows why this matters to me or anyone like me. Although I will say the 2 line summary and the title are named for the sub-plot of the episode. It's an important stone as far as Clark's journey with Lois' breast cancer and Lois' own acceptance of its reality and implications. And actually they do a far better job of handling it here than in any episode up to that point. It jsut gets drown out in the plot that has me asking in John Henry has amnesia again and has forgotten he's talking to Superman aka Clark Kent. I mean he crossed lines before he tried to kill a man in cold blood and attacked Clark to get him out of the way in order to "do what needs to be done, getting rid of this monster" near the end of the episode.

Superman and Lois Reviews Part One

 Superman & Lois (2021–2024)  8/10

The Answers are built into the Narrative 14 May 2023

Well the most glaring question/issue people have with the show other than the fact that it's as much about Clark and Lois as a couple/as parents than it is about Superman saving the world... which is also built into the fabric of the show. It isn't confirmed until the end of season 2 but this series takes place on another Earth in the multiverse. While the heroes of Flash don't realize this, we as the audience knew at least 5 other Earths did survive the Crisis of Infinite Earths. In the season 2 finale General Lane mentions that Clark is the only Super-powered hero on this Earth. Meaning there is no native Flash and no native Supergirl.

They kept a continuity of things that could be read either way. Diggle's comment about fighting alongside Superman could have been possible on Earth Prime since post-Crisis they have always lived on the same Earth. This Earth's Oliver Queen did know them, and is as dead as ours. There is no native Supergirl on this Earth, anymore than there was on Earth-1. The lack of any mention of Supergirl was conspicuous -- because of the assumption that this was Earth-38 Clark and Lois now living on Earth Prime. You'd actually have to watch the last episode of Arrow to see why some Earth's merged and others didn't. Tal-Rho and General Anderson are original characters...but Tal-Rho is unique. General Anderson is a proxy for any human authority-figure who doesn't understand that Superman is anything but Superman.
Lana Lang Cushing is the single most annoying character in the show. Superman can have kids. Traditionally Superman cannot procreate with humans because what we think of as Kryptonian physiology, is incompatible with an Earth humans for making offspring. In Supergirl Lois and Clark could have a kid because they were on the asteroid of Argo City when Lois became pregnant. No yellow sun means no powers, no powers means Clark is essentially human and they can get pregnant. I bet a lot of people watching this show were wondering how Lois and Clark could have had kids if there was no mention they'd ever gone to Ago City. It's never actually stated is even a thing here. Maybe Generals Lane and Anderson wouldn't be surprised to learn Superman can biologically have kids. Anderson was surprised Superman had a human Life...at all. Ultimately this show is part of the multiverse...but our heroes, THIS Superman and Lois are not connected with the heroes of the other shows. Diggle mentions having fought alongside Superman which actually still works because Team Arrow is a group of self-made heroes without superpowers. They established our characters and developed a fan base before telling us, they let us go with our assumptions for a while but this is not Kara's cousin and his fiancé now living on Earth-prime. It's THIER doppelgangers on Earth 12, 19, 21 or Earth 9. General Lane gets RESPECT in this show. Which is above the call and a particularly rare kind of awesome. (No Henshaw & no J'onn Jo'nzz )
The last few minutes of the Crisis on Infinite Earth's crossover showed that Earth 12, Earth, 21, Earth,19, Earth 96 and Earth 9 and a version of Earth-2 with Star-girl survived crisis. The merging of the multiverse was people and things from Earth-38, Earth2 and Earth-3. Most of, but NOT the entire multiverse was destroyed. Which explains Why Sam and Lucy Lane are such completely different characters from the show Supergirl. Although the old world-new world differences Supergirl and Barry spent a few episodes getting used to could have explained that. Almost everyone goes over the top in both drama and emotion in season 3. Far more real-world problems, which I was fine with but a lot of people had trouble with. Tension/dissension that feels like it's mostly there to make something of the production. For once most of the discontent, assumptions, arrogance does not come from Lana Lang Cushing. She actually seems pretty chill A particular conversation with Sarah on. Instead it comes from practically everyone else.

3 out of 5 found this helpful.


Superman & Lois: A Brief Reminiscence In-Between Cataclysmic Events (2021)

AWESOME alone. Confusing to some Season 1 Episode 11

This episode is awesome, spectacular and sets this world apart from any others in a lot of cool ways. Most of which come out in Lois' interview with the man of Steel. Usually Superman is assumed to have landed on Earth only a few months before he showed himself to the world. In this universe Superman admitted right off that he came to Earth when he was young and grew up here.. Usually Lois swoons over Superman and ignores Clark, to varying degrees until she accepts Superman as a friend and Clark as a partner. It's refreshing to see Lois choose Clark over Superman from the get-go. But this episode does raise one huge question that actually has bothered people -purists- the entire show In Dean Cain's Lois and Clark and in Smallville it is established that Superman's physiology is incompatible with an earth woman's for having kids. They can have sex but they cannot procreate. What we think of as Kryptonian physiology prevents it. Even in the rest of the arrow verse. In Supergirl, Lois was able to get pregnant because they were on Argo at the time of conception. No yellow sun meant Clark was fully human. But that is not mentioned here. In fact Supergirl and Argo are not mentioned at all. It's actually a valid confusion on the part of so many fans how Clark can have kids being an alien and all that. But it's not an assumption just because he's an alien. Normally Superman specifically *can't have kids. But in this continuity, it's no problem. They have 2 biological sons. The rules and expectations literally don't apply. The plus side is once we realize they aren't supposed to. That some assumptions the rules that have been established for us over so long aren't supposed to fit here, we can stop shredding the series for not explaining things or for not being consistent and just enjoy the show for what it is. And this episode does a Brilliant job of setting the series apart.

Also I freaking Love Clark's sincerity and Openness talking to Tal-Rho, in the hospital. As Clark is pleading with him not to hurt his kids and Tal says 'how little you understand me' Tal is actually right. But misguided Clarks statement was, it was heartfelt and a desperate cry of a father. I laugh gently at the irony that Clark's statement "Whatever it is you want, threatening MY family is not how you'll get it." As that is exactly how Tal gets what he came for. Clark tells him, breathlessly. "I'll do whatever you ask, just leave my family alone." And he leaves with Tal, knowing he'll probably be turned against the people of Earth. But to keep his family safe -and possibly to buy more time for John Henry and General Lane to collaborate, he surrenders.


Superman & Lois: Fail Safe (2021) Season 1 episode 13

Very Real, Very Rare Stuggles 17 September 2023

When Tyler Hoechlin first showed up on Supergirl season 2 as Superman-Clark Kent he had a strong baby-face. But before he even showed up there was an episode Red-faced where newborn superhero Kara had to learn to control her anger. Hank Henshaw (later revealed as the Martian Manhunter) told her that a lot of people fear Superman, not because he has the power of a god but because they're afraid of what would happen if that 'god' lost control. And here we see Superman, having been Superman for at least 20 years, still struggling with that same question. "What can be done if I lost control...and will I allow it?"

Tal-Rho had a point in this episode. "You fight against your real nature everyday. You hold yourself back because that's the only way we can walk among-st humans without killing them." Clark had already confessed this to his son, Jordan. How he struggles with anger because if he does ever lose his temper people are so screwed. Proving Tal does understand him, at least a little. Also we get further proof that this General Lane Lane is not nearly the racist jar-head the General Lane of Supergirl's Earth-38 was. Although I have to admit I was confused why Clark was So resistant to Sam's change of heart. But Clark explains it in a Beautiful conversation to Lois. One of the best parts was seeing Clark and John Henry begin to develop a sincere report and start to grow as friends. Kara never had a friendship like that. And we never saw much of Superman and Jimmy Olsen together in the CW before. Like "A Brief Reminiscence Before Cataclysmic Events" This is everything being ABOUT to happen and we're taking a breath first.


Superman & Lois:
Anti-Hero
(2022) Season 2, Episode 7

Awesomeness and Darkness share the screen  8/10

5 September 2023

This episode is chock mostly full of awesome things. Beautiful moments like hearing so much actual Kryptonian. I think it sounds a lot like Hebrew. Shuster and Sigel were both Jewish so it makes sense. Not that I'm a fan of it but seeing Anderson in this state makes a lot of sense. He sees things so perfectly clearly and is so completely sure of what he knows. Thankfully he learns the truth in a later episode. And just how wrong he was. Then again, Superman is harboring the man who killed his men and has been keeping things from him forever. The scenes at Tal's Fortress are the highlight of the episode. Especially that brief little smile on Bizzaro's face. The only real drawback is the brief scenes with Johnathan being basically punished for being honorable. And feeling so completely stuck. Too busy being lectured and condemned, people too busy lecturing and condemning him and *demanding an explanation to let him talk or let him explain or even offer one. "Don't you have anything to say for yourself, never mind I'm too ticked off at what you did to listen." Is Lois's attitude and I'm pretty sure either in this episode or one coming soon she literally says that. "I'm too disappointed in what I've learned to listen to a thing you have to say." He's alone and scared that he won't be able to win his family back...and he literally did nothing wrong. I'm not saying those are weak scenes just kind of sad. Fortunately Tal and Superman shine and for a few brief moments they ARE truly brothers to each-other.

I'm kind of figuring this was intentional. A family that never existed coming together, a family that was always the closest of families tearing itself apart at the same time. But everyone is worried that Johnathan might be dealing drugs. And yet no one in the family, not for the rest of the season genuinely asks him if this is the case. It's heartbreaking and realistic but for those with troubled families or troubled histories it can feel waaaaaaaaaaaay too real and extremely out of place and distracting for a Superman show. That's how it felt to me.

1 out of 1 found this helpful.

The Pretender Reviews

The show as a whole first, then the individual episodes I hold familiarity or appreciation for.

At first I was missing 2 reviews...but I found them. they actually WERE being updated.


The Pretender (1996) An AMAZING series ... Until the last 8 episodes 2 June 2024

Back then the term 'savant' didn't exist. It's like high-functioning autism. And that's what Jarrod is. The main character is guileless, compassionate and when it comes to popular culture, ignorant. Not saying this to disparage but rather the laud the series. Jarrod is driven by empathy and altruism. I only discovered the show this year and I think it is GOLD. For approximately 4/5's of itself. Ms. Parkers transition from all business and cold to a woman searching for answers with what other characters call an infuriating moral compass was a delight to watch. She would do anything for Broots and goes out fo her way for Sydney. They are seriously like the three musketeers and Jarrod just keeps crossing thier path. Sydney the caring, guilt-ridden soul who once he dealt with his feelings of guilt and culpability - being part of keeping Jarrod locked away in the Centre all these years-- was the closest thing to a father Jarrod ever knew. Which I suppose he had always been. He practically raised Jarrod since he was 4. It was heart-warming.

But when Sydney learned he had a son during season 3 and Jarrod found his father and then lost him again at the end of season 3, the bond between the two of them seemed to dissolve. Well it didn't dissolve like implode the characters just didn't interact anymore. Instead almost everything was about Ms. Parker and the other two musketeers (Sydney and tech-geek Broots) trying to solve the ever vague riddle that was Ms. Parkers father, the 'truth' if such a thing exists about Bridget and Mr. Raines (which by the way there isn't any) and the increasingly sickening behavior of Ms. Parkers brother Mr. Lyle. The utter lack of consistency in the characters in season four was matched only by the utter lack of contact the trio of characters at the Centre have with the titular character of the series...the man they'd been chasing -- then helping, then being helped by and finally just generally collaborating with -- for the past 3 years.

It became a convoluted mess full of smoke. And however interesting the individual missions Jarrod assigned himself, the main, thru plot of the series, or the lack of one, made it hard to watch. Hard to take very seriously even.


The Pretender: Crazy (1998) Season 3, Episode 1

Brilliant Episode; Harbinger of Better Things


Speaking as someone who could legally be considered crazy, schizophrenic and disassociatve ,I love this episode. In high school and college I did personal research on the different kinds of schizophrenia and other related disorders, for both Gen Psych and for myself, so I knew that The Pretender was doing research in order to blend in among people with these problems, not to deal with problems that had manifested. But he wasn't being deliberately misleading like he sometimes is. He was always, in every episode doing research not for his own sake but to pull of whatever he had to professionally pull off in that episode. Sydney realizes, as does the doctor in charge of the facility that he did just enough to get himself put away there.

At the end of last season Sydney finally took a stand and cast aside all other considerations. His loyalties to The Centre no longer trumped his doing the right thing. He couldn't fix what happened to Jarrod but he could help now. And that is something which allows for such growth for the change in Jarrod and Sydney's relationship. He's had this attitude before but now he flat out says "I'm not interested in saving myself. This may be my last chance to help Jarrod...or you." Talking to Ms. Parker. It was pretty brilliant! Also, I laugh as Jarrod is telling his life story in such a way that he knows it will be dismissed as his delusions. Everything that is built here is destroyed in season 4 but so what, now right now things are growing. All our charters are in thier prime. It's bleeping amazing.


The Pretender:Parole (1998) Season 3 episode 6

A Beautiful Thing

Jarrod has a journey of discover in this episode. That is he discovers and learns one important, surprising and touching thing after another, and not along the same path. Jarrod's genuine surprise at the seediness and exoticness of the criminal or even blue-collar world is a nod to his innocence as well as his inexperience. He learns how easily people can be taken advantage of and fall into the trap of 'making the most of a bad life'. And by listening in on Sydney's conversation with his son, learns how Sydney TRULY feels about him. Sydney has kept his feelings inside as best he could for the last 2 years. His parental feelings of Jarrod that is. He was always his protector, friend and clearly guilt-ridden over the part he played in keeping Jarrod locked up. Sydney previously flat out lied to Jarrod, denying any parental feelings. And now through eavesdropping Jarrod learns Sydney really feels and the depth of his emotions. Sydney was always the closest thing to a father Jarrod ever knew and for the first time Jarrod learns that Sydney felt and feels the same way. The emotional umbilical Syd has with Jarrod is seen as a continuing problem by the others at the Centre, including Ms. Parker most of the time. Which is why he keeps them so deeply buried. With none of them around Sydney admits to his son Nicholas the depth of those feelings. It was a heartfelt declaration trying to convince Nicholas that the man who raised him is every bit his father as if they'd shared the same DNA. It's also the first truly open conversation Sydney has with well...really anyone except Jarrod.


The Pretender: Road Trip (1999) season 4 episode 6

The last Great Episode

8 February 2024 - 2 out of 2 users found this review helpful.

Or the next to last. All three main characters from The Cenrtre run around on Jarrod's wizard of Oz adventure. Despite her complaining Ms. Parker seems to trust that whatever they will find at the end of this yellow brick road will be worth the mystery. Sydney seems almost giddy at the though that. "Perhaps Jarrod wants us to run around like rats in a maze" and is actually enthusiastically jumping through these hoops even if that's all they are. Maybe he feels that he owes Jarrod this after keeping so many things secret for so many years. Broots shows more emotion than he has ever shown when not talking about his daughter. And by the end the three of them are just standing there like "Jarrod has a point."

Jarrod has an eye opening encounter but about more than just romance. He goes with what conclusion only makes sense or is likely - that the girl is a criminal and the cop is chasing her because he's a cop not because he's her boyfriend. But the one time he makes a conclusion based solely on the facts and the evidence- rather than the person or his own perceptions he is seriously almost disastrously wrong. He jumped to the same conclusions as anyone and realizes for the first time how trapped and alone people can be even when they do have a home. . Jarrod learns he should have trusted her, and goes with her down a journey of discovery, life and of course romance for both of them. Zoe and Jarrod seem to be each-others first honest and deeply committed relationship. So of course they are as close to soul mates as can get. And it actually works. But Jarrod still leaves because while no longer searching, he is still running.



The Pretender: Extreme (1999) Season 4 Episode 6

Slightly Ambivalent Actually

24 August 2024

Considering Road Trip had just happened this one is... a little odd. Jarrod sends the team on another trip to find the truth, namely exactly the kind of monster Ms. Parker's brother Mr. Lyle is. And Jarrod has what seems to be a pretty tame muted and motivating ride. I'm not just speaking as an audience member it's like Jarrod himself needed to recharge and couldn't be enthusiastic about whoever he was trying to help. I don't think they should have gone down this road with Mr. Lyle in the first place and increasingly...well the more the focus is on him and Mr. Raines the less of the show (about) The Pretender seems to even exist.
Also normally when Jarrod knows so many things that are going on in the Centre it's because Angelo is telling him/helping him. But this week and last week there's no real explanation given as to how Jarrod knows so much in the first place. And while that makes sense or can be overlooked in personal journeys of the team members, if Angelo didn't tell him this, how could Jarrod know such dark secrets no one on the team knew anything about? Dialogue, suspense and ambiance are still pretty solid so the show hasn't gone so far into the X-Flies meets Twilight Zone meets the Simpsons...but it's starting the descent.


The Pretender: The Inner Sense: Part 2 (2000) season 4 episode 20 (SERIES FINALE)

Too many things out of Nowhere... 1 out of 1 users found this review helpful.


...with no actual answers or closure. There are so many people and secrets in this episode that were never even hinted at in the episodes leading up to it. In fact the one thing that is consistent with previous episodes is Ms. Parkers intense and inexplicable hatred and mistrust of Jarrod. The heart of the story, other than Ms. Parker and Jarrod both searching for the truth was Sydney's relationship with Jarrod. This was especially true in Road Trip and Junk earlier in the season. But Sydney and Broots barely say anything to Jarrod the entire episode. Catherine Parker having that extra-normal sixth sense and Sydney already knowing she faked her death were never even hinted at the entire series. No one could ever have imagined Cathriene Parker HAD faked her death since who Killed her had been driving motivation for the characters the entire series. And all the sudden she hadn't even died that day? This 'revelation' and betrayal was the biggest part of this episode. Well biggest part besides having 2 people who can barely stand each other sharing a sibling in common that we'd never heard of. Which would be pretty powerful if done believably. This was anything but a natural unfolding of events. Jarrod never says goodbye to Sidney and in fact Sydney had been fading further and further away from him for at least 6 episodes. There was no event destroyed their relationship, just a lack of interaction. I don't think they'd spoken since Junk.


Weirdly this was a fitting end to what the show had become recently. The plot line which was the heart of the show was minimized to allow more time for the various Parkers to become enigmatic characters with unclear motivations. A mystery the characters at the center spent thier time trying to solve rather than finding Jarrod or communicating with him on the phone much. If you know the series you know what a big part of the story that was. A series finale should wrap up the series, not take things from across the most recent season, make them center themes, try to create further mystery in the twelfth hour. When there will not be time to address it. Ms. Parker's search for answers to her families mysteries - a recurring theme since near the end of season one - ultimately went nowhere with very few answers ever found. There should have been at least one goodbye between the four main characters.



Star Trek Discovery review

Both the shows and the episodes. Which right now is only 2 episodes of a show that I own the first 3 seasons of.


Star Trek: Discovery (2017–2024)  7/10

Valid complaints but doesn't deserve the hate 5 August 2024

Burnam is emotional. And stiffly self-focused. Yes it's grittier more intense, both visually and in plot than most Star Treks But it is as much star trek as the politically correct, over-simplified increasingly random Star Trek Voyager was Star Trek. I whole-heartedly agree that season 4 and 5 completely suck. But until you get there, it's a pretty fun ride. Season 3 was actually pretty decent. And no matter how the plot arc of the burn ended, the journey everyone took trying to figure out what happened and find thier place in the future was worth watching. I don't know why people think of Burnam as the main character. They don't have one single main character or lead. Instead they have so many supporting characters with thier own lives, story lines, discoveries to be made and journeys that they're on.  The main characters are Captain Saru, Lt. Stanments, Michael Burnam and Ensign Silvia Tilly. For the first two seasons Captain Lorca/Captain Pike and Lt. Ash Tyler are the core of the show, outside of the Kelpian Mr. Saru. Interest dropped off in season 3 because the most compelling characters were gone. I do not believe the show immediately decreased to the childish level so many people talk about. Season 3, while immensely different and taking place in a strange new world of a future, was at least consistent...until the Burn's cause was revealed. that's when things went truly infantile.

I could not stand to watch more than a couple episodes of season 4. Everyone was almost a caricature of themselves and there seemed to be no genuine connection between the characters anymore. Which I found excruciatingly confusing. That said, the Mirror universe and the Terran empire is explored more here than in any other show. I say it that way because while Ds9 explored that dark universe, the Terran Empire had already fallen and an even darker monster had risen in its place. Mirror Saru was a darling, Saru himself was a treasure and I will die on that hill.  TERRA FIRMA. Which originally meant “May the Earth stay strong under your feet.”

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Star Trek: Discovery: The Sound of Thunder (2019) Season 2, Episode 6  8/10

Better than Most of its Kind 23 May 2024

Pike and Saru reach new levels of kick-a**-ary. Getting that out right now. In all of Star Trek from Encounter at Farpoint onward we never really saw Pike or learned much about him. Anson Mount dwarfs anything Bruce Greenwood did with the character in the Abrams movies and he does so with a single line. When the Ba'ul ask if Pike is really willing to risk the lives of his people for a single Kelpian, Pike flat out says "This Kelpian IS my people. And I will use every means in my power to defend him." Anson Mount as Pike has an uncanny ability to be respectful and restrained even as he is saying in no uncertain terms "You screwed up and now you need to shut up." Something I really don't think we've seen in many Star Trek leads...with the possible exception of Captain Picard.
Saru keeps himself as restrained as he possibly can given the circumstances and the conflict he feels in himself while he's returning home, but not for any reason his people can understand. The uncertainty, the power, conviction and most of all the anger at the lies his people swallow are all there. The most cliché and simplistic of his realities, the one that is stated and usually would be the main focus of the actor or even the episode is how to unravel a lie that is the foundation of your peoples culture. And that is blessedly minimal here. Also this is the second time Saru's vision (Kelpian vision) is mentioned and I'm glad they didn't wait until it became a game-changer to mention he even had it.


Star Trek: Discovery: If Memory Serves (2019) Season 2, Episode 8  10/10

The timeline actually fits...here's why 23 May 2024

The original TOS pilot 'The Cage' happened 12 years before the season one episode Menagerie. Pike will soon start counting down the number of months until he lands in the chair. But Pike and Spock have been to Talos the first time. An episode summary said Tyler works to overcome the crews *Suspicions* of him because of his time as Voq. Which isn't quite true. He works to overcome Dr. Culberts' feelings over having been *killed* by him. In a pretty powerful and explosive scene in the mess hall. Afterward Pike and Saru share a little time together on screen which has its own kind of quiet camaraderie. Emperor Georgiou is being a classic military general in this episode, and inmost of the episodes in this part of the season.

The episode opens with scenes lifted from the original TOS pilot but leaves one piece out -- why Vina didn't go with Pike in the first place. Vina's reveal to Burnam is that explanation. I think they give and keep just enough information so that if you've never actually seen "The Cage" you still know plenty about what's going on. Most things with Section-31 are kept to a minimum in this episode. Which leaves a kind of anticipation for the upcoming stretch. And the best thing is Captain Pike FINALLY learns where Ash Tyler stands on everything and that his being part of section 31 doesn't make Tyler a bad guy. They'd gone through things together personally in the previous episode, so Pike is at least willing to listen. And when Ask leaves the ready room for the second time Pike's quiet smile of 'He's not such a bad guy after all slash 'I really DID misjudge him' is positively gorgeous.

CSI Elana Stien (Earth 21)

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