[S2E15] You Only Die Once
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Regina confronts Cora over murdering Eva and keeping it a secret from her. She realizes that Cora also orchestrated Snow's riding accident. She expresses concerns over Cora's true motivations, and the likelihood that Henry will learn that they are responsible for anything they order Mr. Gold to do now that their possession of the dagger is not a secret. Cora insists that Henry will be Regina's.
Snow White/Mary Margaret's statement, \"Help us, Mother Superior. You're our only hope!\" is a nod to the famous Princess Leia line, \"Help me, Obi-Wan Kenobi. You're my only hope!\" from Star Wars. The lines that Mother Superior says before that is also a nod to Star Wars as is similar to what Obi-Wan Kenobi says after the destruction of Alderaan.[1] Outside Storybrooke, Cora tells daughter Regina her horse, Rocinante, is ready. Rocinante is the name of Don Quijote's horse in the novel \"El Ingenioso Hidalgo, Don Quijote de La Mancha\" by Miguel de Cervantes.
The outing saw a decrease from the previous episode, tied for second in its time period with a 2.2/6 among 18-49s with only 7.39 million viewers tuning in (placing it fifth among the number of viewers tuning in).[2]
Punctuating this awkwardness are Rumple's random bursts of anger at Henry. Even knowing what he's seen concerning his future and the boy's, the flare-ups seem out of proportion and make the story disjointed. Fortunately, the family tension is dissolved with one vicious swipe of a hook - as in Captain Hook (Colin O'Donoghue) himself - forcing them to focus all available energy on saving Rumple instead. As luck would have it, this also brings to light the tidbit that Neal is engaged. Shocking. Or not.
But on the eve of her big birthday ball, Eva's health takes a mortal turn, and their faithful servant suggests that Snow seek out the Blue Fairy (Keegan Connor Tracy) for a magical cure. Alas, the magic that Snow is offered isn't something she can stomach after all. The tearful scene at her mother's deathbed has a lot of heart and for once the dying monologue doesn't come off as cheap or trite.
Josie returns to the school for her and Lizzie's birthday party, only to reveal that she plans to have the Merge early and warns Lizzie that if she backs out, she'll do \"something drastic\". Josie learns that the Necromancer is watching the school and meets with him. He offers to team up with her. Lizzie goes to Alyssa to find out if she can win, and Alyssa tells her that she can't because she's a better person now. When Lizzie decides to run away, Josie shows up and kills Alyssa as a warning. Lizzie runs away, but MG catches up with her and convinces her to return. Hope traps Alaric and Kaleb in Vardemus's box to keep them from interfering with her plan, which involves giving Lizzie a potion that would allow Josie's mind to survive if Lizzie wins and absorbs her body. She also has a Plan B that involves Landon. Rafael uses an artifact to find out who died in the woods and leaves. Landon tracks him down, and Raf tells him that it was him who died, killed by the Necromancer. Raf tried to drown himself in order to avoid hurting anyone as the Necromancer's puppet, but he can't. Meanwhile, the Necromancer forces all the students into the gym and emcees a fight between Josie and Lizzie, while revealing a re-animated Alyssa. When Lizzie doesn't show up, Hope appears to fight Josie. Lizzie arrives just in time to save Hope. The Merge starts and both girls faint. Alaric and Kaleb break out of the simulation but arrive too late. Josie gets up and reveals she won. Alaric announces Lizzie's death, but in private it turns out that Lizzie is still alive thanks to Hope's Plan B, which involved temporarily tying Lizzie's life to Landon's, so she came back to life when he did. While Josie was out, MG \"incepted\" Hope into Josie's mind, and Alaric keeps her body in his secret chamber, where he tells Lizzie she must hide until Josie is saved. Landon refuses to help Raf drown himself and hugs him. The Necromancer mind-controls Raf into stabbing Landon with the golden arrow.
After inhaling hydrofluoric acid at the last fire, Chief Ripley (Brett Tucker) collapsed and wound up at Grey Sloan memorial. However, a pre-existing heart condition made it harder for the hospital to treat him, which was only exacerbated when he checked himself out to go find Vic (Barrett Doss) and explain he hadn't stood her up that morning. He eventually made it back to get care, but by then the toxin had spread too far and Maggie (Kelly McCreary) was unable to get his body to respond to the treatment.
How did you and Brett prepare for that heartbreaking goodbye sceneDoss: We only read it one time before we actually shot it -- during the table read -- and after that we did a lot of talking. I mean, Brett and I have been working together so much this season and we work very well together. So that's a gift, but we just sort of went into it. I should say this first: It was the last scene we shot together. They scheduled it at the very end of the day, on Brett's last day of shooting. It was his last scene. It was our last scene together, and it was heartbreaking. So it was really a goodbye. After a season of working so much together and enjoying that work so much, it was actually surprisingly easy to find our way into that really sad, sad space where you lose someone who you care about, who you're going to miss.
You are getting near the part where I dont know the episodes. There are still a few, mainly from this season, that I know pretty well, but most of the ones that follow I have only seen one time, over ten years ago. This here is one of the second type.
Continuing his vendetta against Wolfram & Hart, Angel stops two men employed by the firm from sacrificing goats however neither men know why they were asked, only that it is to appease someone or something. Once they're frightened off, Angel begins to smash the place apart.
Angel decides to head to Caritas to get information from the Host, however it seems to be a busy night for him as the place is full of lawyers. Angel tries to get some information, and the Host is unable to share much but does give him some details; Wolfram & Hart is due to undergo a review, and the employees are scared not by the review itself but the reviewer: a Senior Partner will manifest itself on Earth to conduct it. All the rituals that Angel has been interrupting are just the lawyers attempting to score brownie points before the Partner arrives. The Host also confirms that the Partner can be killed once it is on Earth, and the terms Band of Blacknill and Home Office are important. Before Angel leaves, the Host gives him one more piece of information... All the lawyers want to see him dead. However one doesn't have to be psychic to know that, as Angel realizes that everyone else in the room is giving him hostile looks.
When he hits the ground, Angel puts on the ring, causing elevator doors to open in the foundation of the Wolfram & Hart building. Angel finds none other than Holland Manners waiting for him inside. Angel initially doesn't understand, since Holland should be dead, however Holland explains that he is indeed deceased (complete with the vampire bite marks on his neck) but his contract with Wolfram & Hart lasts well beyond that. He then offers Angel his trip to the Home Office but warns it is one way. By now Angel doesn't care; destroying the Senior Partners is his only purpose so he accepts.
On the long elevator ride, Holland asks Angel what he thinks taking down Wolfram & Hart will accomplish in the end since even if he does stop the apocalypse the firm have planned they'll be another one eventually. Angel responds that he has no intention of letting Wolfram & Hart win, and Holland remarks that they don't plan to do anything as simple as winning which, for the first time in their conversation, catches Angel's attention. The vampire asks why they fight when they're not concerned with the victory. Holland explains that as far as he and the Senior Partners are concerned, there is no fight which is why there is no victory for them. Ever since the beginning of time, when the first caveman killed his neighbor, evil has existed in the hearts of humans and as long as that evil exists Wolfram & Hart will be there and can never be destroyed. As Angel considers this grim outlook, the elevator comes to a stop.
The door opens and Angel prepares to leap into hell, only to find that he is exactly where he started. Holland explains that after things that Angel has seen (and, in some cases, done), he shouldn't be surprised... The Home Office is Earth. Holland finishes by telling the vampire that every single human in the world has evil inside of them, and if they didn't then they'd all be angels. Angel lets the glove fall to the floor of the elevator and leaves, realizing there is no big final battle to be fought here. Holland pleasantly bids Angel goodbye as the doors close.
Whoa. So was that a regularly scheduled episode of Arrow last night, or the first half of a made-for-TV movie The production quality was through the roof! My one mild complaint about the show in recent weeks was that it has become ever-so-slightly predictable and by-the-numbers, even if those numbers are spectacular. My prayers were answered in this week's episode, \"The Promise\", which not only changed up the story structure in a big way, but did it with explosive panache. Hit the jump for my recap and review.
There were some great moments throughout the contemporary sequence in which Slade kept dropping little hints about his true intentions, but what he was really doing was planting surveillance devices around the Queens' house. That final shot of Slade watching the cameras with his hollowed-out eye socket was a pretty awesome ending (I wonder if he hangs out with The Walking Dead's The Governor), and only teased what's sure to be more incredible action and drama in the episodes to come. 59ce067264
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