We were promised so much with this season of Game of Thrones. We were told it was going to be a game changer, and in all fairness that promise has still been there through the whole season, but we were continually teased and tantalised over what was to come. However, it does seem like we’ve finally turned a corner with this episode.
by Paul Robert Scott
We were promised so much with this season of Game of Thrones. We were told it was going to be a game changer, and in all fairness that promise has still been there through the whole season, but we were continually teased and tantalised over what was to come. However, it does seem like we’ve finally turned a corner with this episode.
by Paul Robert Scott
Well we’ve reached the end of Arrow’s third series and have just one episode left of Flash’s first and ultimately what we have learned is that DC definitely are kings of the small screen. Both shows offer great story writing and dynamic characters in a shared universe where both casts can show up in each other’s worlds at any time. Both also have great secondary characters, so great that DC’s Legends of Tomorrow promises to bring the best of both shows and cram them into one, and as the first reveal trailer suggests it is going to be on an epic scale.
by Paul Robert Scott
It’s certainly been a time of transition on Game of Thrones as of late. So far this season the key focus seems to be on mixing up all the characters together and letting them see how they all get on. It’s been fun seeing Stannis party on down with Jon Snow while we fear for the safety of Lady Sansa and look forward to Tyrion’s meeting with Daenerys, but we’ve had a few episodes of this now and quite frankly, nothing is really happening. by Paul Robert Scott Sylvester McCoy took over as the Doctor in 1987 during one of the show’s rockiest periods. With Colin Baker having been removed from the show, McCoy was brought in as a breath of levity from the sixth Doctor’s arrogance and abrasiveness. However, while McCoy initially began his part as a buffoonish comedian, he was soon made into one of the most interesting versions of the Time Lord. On first glance, he would come across as everyone’s favourite eccentric uncle, complete with question mark cardigan and umbrella; although a deeper inspection would reveal a much darker character. by Paul Robert Scott Today, we consider the Doctor as a madcap, if not frequently handsome hero with many different faces and lives under his belt. We are used to seeing a new regeneration every few years and witnessing the moments when a new Doctor will examine and compare himself to his previous incarnations. Yet in the beginning there was only one man who could truly call himself The Doctor. The original, you might say. |
TV Editor: Graham Osborne
TVReviews on the best TV has to offer, as well as retrospective looks at the shows of yesteryear we miss so much. Email: [email protected]
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