Krypton: Savage Night
“Savage Night” backs up a bit in the timeline of events on Krypton. We start with the first meeting of Adam Strange and Seg-El, and Adam disappearing when Seg looked away.
“Savage Night” backs up a bit in the timeline of events on Krypton. We start with the first meeting of Adam Strange and Seg-El, and Adam disappearing when Seg looked away.
Flash and company continue to flail around and find a way to do something, anything, to stop, or even slow down, DeVoe.
Liv and company get kept very busy with murders, smuggling, research and conspiracies, in “Yippie Ki Brain, Motherscratcher,” a nod to a great line from the movie Die-Hard.
The fight with the World Killers is building to something truly impressive as we see in “Trinity.” After so many secrets were revealed last episode, Lena Luthor is being questioned by the DEO, especially Supergirl, Alex, and J’Onn.
In Legion’s “Chapter 14,” we get treated to an example of one of the versions of multiverse theory, including a version of someone spouting off about multiverse theory.
The Agents of SHIELD are building to a big finale as the pieces hurtle towards each other. Coulson starts off in a bad place, but at least he’s with “The One Who Will Save Us All.”
The saga of the not-quite Joker continues in Gotham as the season continues with “A Dark Knight: That Old Corpse.” J
After the rough ending to last week’s episode, things continue to look grim for Oliver Queen in “Docket No. 11-19-41-73.”
We saw how poorly the coup attempt went in “Civil War.” Now we see the aftermath as things spiral out of control in “Transformation.” If they keep this up, Krypton won’t last long enough to get to Jor-El, let alone the far more famous Kal-El, Last Son of Krypton.
The weirdness that’s part of the package continues in Legion’s next episode, “Chapter 13.” I’m still sort of surprised that a show that seems to pride itself on being surreal has such normal episode titles. Maybe they needed a token bit of sanity to give their writers a break.