No, no, I don't mean that its bad. I just mean that its unnatural for a TV show to have that much emotional *power* over me.sukael said:Emotional, thought-provoking... I see it as the sort of thing that television should aspire to.
Episode 25. The one where, to give away only few spoilers, a character who it was very obvious would die from the beginning, died, but at least he threw daggers into a few homonculi first, surviving for a while and offering a glimpse of safety.Arc said:How far is the translated version? I watched the show in Japanese w/ subtitles, and it's odd when people reference episodes in English, since I'm fairly sure episode titles changed, and I have to be careful not to give away the plot.
Well, not just that. Don't forget the sparkles.sukael said:the Iron Fist alchemist (I can't remember his actual name) just does quick-and-dirty conversions of matter into energy
Jürgen Hubert said:(SPOILER)
Dad now hangs out with the Thule Society in Weimar Munich. You know, those guys that gave the Nazis some of their sillier ideas?
You know, the Nina episode really didn't make me care. I don't know why, but for me its worse when a developed character with potential to aid the cause is killed before he can, as opposed to the "Look at how cute and sweet I am because they're going to kill me soon" little kid characters...FreeTheSlaves said:I found the little girl Nina's transmutation episode to be quite disturbing. Mind you the Tucker side story is one of the most tragic in the series. If I remember correctly, around episode 40 Al experiences another tragic moment that really hit me.
Actually throughout the series there are a number of what I would call 'adult' episodes, which are quite heavy.