Latest Posts(7)
See AllTerminator’s Best Villain Accidentally Ruined The Franchise And Has Yet To Be Sured 33 Years Later
The animatronic head of the T-800 performing self surgery to remove the tattered human eye, looks less like Arnold and more like a cross between Jonathan Del Arco's Borg, "Hugh" from Star Trek: TNG and the papier mache head of Clint Eastwood from Escape From Alcatraz.
Every time I see that scene, I can appreciate what a truly remarkable film the original Terminator turned out to be overall, given its low budget.
Star Trek: Discovery’s Breen Reveal Already Happened In DS9
Came here to say this. The author pretty much based the article on a flawed assumption.
One Star Trek: The Next Generation Species Was Too Powerful To Ever Bring Back
That one is a little hard to call. If the being, Nagilum, were a god, he could have simply disabled the self-destruct with a thought. But then maybe he chose not to do this, opting instead to try to trick Picard into stopping the countdown using illusions of Data and Troi. Maybe for Nagilum, the science experiment took a different turn and he went with it just to see how it would play out?
These Unexplainable Back To The Future Time Travel Plot Holes Prove One Great Thing About The Iconic Trilogy
Not a plot hole. If they rip the manifold out of the dormant Delorean, then Marty and 1955 Doc will dig up a Delorean missing a manifold. Unless 1955 Doc can also fabricate a replacement intake manifold from scratch for a production car that won't be designed and manufactured for another thirty years, Marty is pretty much stuck there in 1955. This creates a paradox because now Marty isn't back in 1885 helping Doc try to get the Delorean to run which leads to blowing up the first manifold.
Even if you ignore this paradox, and they're able to cannibalize the sleeping version of the Delorean for parts in 1888, they still have the original problem of no gasoline, the testing of alternatives to which leads to the damage to the manifold in the first place, ?
34 Years Later, Star Trek's Most Disappointing TNG Character Exit Still Hurts
Well, if they mean that Final Mission was the "exit" (Wheaton's last episode as a main cast member), then yeah, 34 years is spot on. That episode aired in Nov 1990.
Two Star Trek: Voyager Episodes Shared The Exact Same Premise & Aired Less Than 3 Years Apart
Article is disappointing and a waste of time. Aside from a couple of the episodes' synopses being given, the rest is just a string of episode titles rattled off with unexplained assertions of plot copying.
Even if you want to be lazy, at least link the title names to blurbs about what each one was about, jog my memory, otherwise why am I reading this?