Category Archives: TV Series

Harley Quinn Review: “Til Death Do Us Part”

Family-unfriendly trailer:

Riddler: Riddle me this: What did Nadia Comaneci do after she scored seven perfect tens at the 1976 Montreal Olympics?
Harley: Win a medal?
Poison Ivy: Not menstruate until her twenties?
Riddler: No! She broke a record! And that’s what you sound like. A broken record.

The new, R-Rated Harley Quinn series premiered at the end of November. Here’s our take on the pilot of a series set in a version of the DCU where everyone swears heavily and reality doesn’t take itself too seriously.

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Crisis on Infinite TV Shows: Our Crisis Reviews Begin.

The Crisis on Infinite Earths comes to DC-TV starting tonight, with Supergirl. We’ll have reviews—and we have an overview.

Lex Pendragon: On the CW, five shows are combining their audiences into one super crossover event, Crisis on Infinite Earths.

Based (at least loosely) on the DC comics event Crisis on Infinite Earths, the comics story that took the various Earths and different continuities and eventually combined the multiverse down to a single continuity. The Multiverse option was appealing to the showrunners, who embraced it to allow a crossover between Supergirl on CBS and The Flash on the CW. The shows loved to exploit this, giving us Flash hopping between universes regularly, using it for further crossovers, and eventually even referencing past shows such as the 90s Flash and Constantine (from NBC), who eventually joined Legends of Tomorrow.

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Scooby-Doo and Guess Who? Review: “The Scooby of a Thousand Faces!”

I‘d like to go to Themyscira.”
–Velma Dinkley

Lex and I will be alternating reviews to the forthcoming CWTVDCU version of Crisis on Infinite Earths, starting tomorrow with a joint overview of the series, followed by Lex’s take on the official start with Supergirl. Despite a plethora of guest-stars that will bring Smallville, Superman Returns, the 1990s Flash and, just possibly, the 1960s Batman (we don’t yet know which character Burt Ward will actually be playing) into continuity with the various CW series, the Crisis will leave many worlds untouched. The chaotic DC movies seem disconnected from this event, as do prestige shows like Titans and Doom Patrol.

Also missing? The latest incarnation of Scooby-Doo, who has belonged to DC for some decades now. In 2019, the pooch and his Mystery-solving friends appear in Scooby-Doo and Guess Who?, a series that revisits the premise of the first Scooby spin-off, The New Scooby-Doo Movies (1972-1974), in which, each week, Mystery, Inc. stumbled onto a mystery and a famous guest-star.

In this episode, it happens to be a certain DC Amazon.

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Bureau’s Breakroom’s Television Table – Week beginning 24 November 2019

I have managed to get nearly everything to be advertisement free in my life, which means that until something is outright told to me, I tend to miss that it exists.  His Dark Materials is a new genre show that I had no concept of, so didn’t know it needed to go on our list.  If anyone finds any more of those, please, chime in!  The week is a bit more bare than usual, but we get to see Watchmen explain the past, Black Lightning have a father and daughter bonding episode, The Good Doctor tries to get laid, The Flash gives us the first half of a two parter leading into Crisis, Arrow tries to restart his game, Riverdale acknowledges these kids are getting to old for high school, and Titans finishes its season.  We don’t get a description for Castle Rock nor The Mandalorian, but if you’re watching either you probably have a good idea what to expect from these episode.

[All synopses (and titles) from Trakt.tv below the cut, except when there really aren’t any.  (If a show’s synopsis is a spoiler to you, do not click More…)]

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Bureau’s Breakroom’s Television Table – Week beginning 20 October 2019

I hope you didn’t have any other plans, as there is plenty of television to keep those of us unpopular enough not to have Halloween party invites busy. If the Dire Crisis of Batwoman, Supergirl, Arrow, Flash, and maybe Black Lightning and the Titans coupled with the horror of 1984, Riverdale, the return of Castle Rock and watching The Good Doctor try to get to second base is took much, Will and Grace also will return to lighten the mood.  Personally, The Blacklist cheers me up pretty well, too.

[All synopses (and titles) from Trakt.tv below the cut, except when there really aren’t any.  (If a show’s synopsis is a spoiler to you, do not click More…)]

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Batwoman Review: “Pilot”

With the show that created the CWTVDCU flying off the screens for good this year and a TV version of Crisis happening later on (with appearances by characters from Superman Returns and Smallville announced), we have a new DC super-series, this one featuring the twenty-first century version of Batwoman.

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Bureau’s Breakroom’s Television Table – Week beginning 22 September 2019

Even with the official start to fall this week with the equinox, the late-late-late-not-quite-fall-season television offerings are still sparse.  We go get the return of The Good Doctor where Murphy goes on a date.  Alfred plots assassination, and on Preacher there is a theater event to end all theater events1.  Meanwhile2, at camp in in 1984, American Horror Story brights out an evil monster.  While we don’t get a proper description of what happens on Titans, the name “Aqualad” probably tells us all we need to know.

[All synopses (and titles) from Trakt.tv below the cut, except when there really aren’t any.  (If a show’s synopsis is a spoiler to you, do not click More…)]

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