Risky opinion but
Episode two was better than episode one. (IMO)
Not as frantic. Better story. No last minute police cars with sirens blaring. Fewer "mind melds" with the jury.
Possibly there is hope yet for Bull and company.
Episode two was better than episode one. (IMO)
Not as frantic. Better story. No last minute police cars with sirens blaring. Fewer "mind melds" with the jury.
Possibly there is hope yet for Bull and company.
Not risky at all. I liked the pilot episode but this was 100 times better. I'm starting to see why so many people were upset when Limitless was cancelled. These are good show runners.
shareAgreed. I thought the story was a lot more interesting. Thought the pilot was decent but really liked this one.
Milo, I've told you again and again - please, don't walk on the chickens!
I liked the pilot. I got half way through this one and had my doubts. Then it went pretty well. Yeah, I really liked it. Actually very surprisingly the closing made me emotional. That as a shock for me.
So, the show has something..for me anyways....so far.
Agree, this episode was better. It's giving me hope for the show, I think some of the secondary characters were a little more fleshed out (which was to be expected). Also liked that their client wasn't just another Richie rich.
shareA much better episode. I didn't think the show would last after watching the pilot episode but now see some hope for it.
shareSo, the pilot episode left you cold, but the episode about the pilot gave you hope?
shareYeah, that was weird. I had to type a lot of extra words to clarify that....did they have to have the first episode, the pilot, be followed by an episode *about* a pilot?? And, since joking/smiling while typing/chuckling doesn't translate on a post, I am kidding.
shareAgreed but only a little better.
Opinions are like orgasms. Mine is more important and I don't care if you have one.
Byrdz: I thought episode 2 was an improvement as well. But I'm still waiting for the writers to find a way to *show* me Bull is brilliant, and not just tell me over and over from the mouths of other characters.
When the main character from Lie to Me pointed out the universality of micro expressions, the program flashed pictures of known and unknown and primitive people making the same expression. It showed the audience the truth behind the words, and the fact that this was something the character studied at great length. The lawyer pointed out that Bull had 3 degrees in psychology, but the only skill sets I've seen used are data mining, mostly by hacking, and manipulation. A good con man can do that.
Fingers crossed for episode #3.
sharelooks good, I also liked it a lot better than ep1
Do they still call it an elevator when it goes down?