Emma and Rebecca expose their pasts, Sylar and Parkman engage in a battle of wits, Bennett does what the script tells him to do, and Gretchen does the one thing most sane people would do in her situation.
Category Archives: Heroes
Heroes Discussion: “Once Upon A Time in Texas”
With rumours aswirl that Heroes will not have another season, the show takes us back to its intriguing, ratings-scoring early episodes with a new installment rife with time-travel paradoxes and more than a little reminiscent of Back to the Future II.
Heroes Review: “Strange Attractors”
“Do we have to be invisible?”
–Gretchen.
Heroes Discussion: “Tabula Rasa”
After last week’s smooth integration of plots, this week seems a bit clunky. Still, the acting remains strong, and Samuel continues to reveal himself as a force with which the heroes will have to reckon.
Heroes Review: Hysterical Blindness
This week’s episode features strong performances and some very well-paced storytelling—and also a few signs the show, yet again, may be about to nuke a fridge over a shark.
Warning: gratuitous lesbian content.
Heroes Review: “Acceptance”
The show moves at a slow rate, but the writing represents a consistent improvement over the last two seasons. If you gave up on Heroes, there is some hope.
Heroes Review: “Ink”
We have a brief review this week, as the story heads forwards and we get to know the new characters. Heroes may not be developing quickly this season, but I remain cautiously optimistic.
Of course, this episode also sidesteps the Hiro plot, which has serious sinkhole potential.
Heroes Review: “Orientation”
Heroes has returned for Season, uh, four/”Volume Five,” Redemption, with new lives for some characters and additional backstory for the series—plus the latest return of Sylar and another foray into time travel. Can the once-mighty series redeem itself?
Heroes: “An Invisible Thread”
In a development that surprises nobody, Sylar survives his apparent death, and Nathan tries to keep him from meeting President Worf . Meanwhile, Hiro regains his powers, but he can only use them at a serious cost, and the episode ends with a not entirely surprising twist that, given the series history, need not really mean anything.
Most shocking….
Heroes Discussion: “I am Sylar”
Does that mean He is Not Spock?
Anyway, Sylar feels uncertain about his identity as Matt plays daddy, Hiro and Ando assault Building 26, and lots of brand new viewers deal with the munchies.