New NCIS season 11,episode 18 official spoilers,plotline revealed by CBS. Recently, CBS released the new,official,synopsis/spoilers for their upcoming "NCIS' episode 18 of season 11. The episode is entitled, "Crescent City,” and it sounds like things will get quite intriguing as Gibbs catches up with old colleagues for a New Orleans murder case, and more. In the new,18th episode press release: Gibbs is going to reunite with a former colleague when the murder of a congressman in New Orleans prompts a joint case between the field offices and the FBI on part one of a two-part episode. Press release number 2: When the body of Congressman Dan McLane, a former NCIS agent, washes ashore in New Orleans, Gibbs will reunite with his former colleague, NCIS Special Agent Dwayne Cassius Pride, in a joint case between the two field offices and the FBI. The teams are going to have...
- 3/18/2014
- by Andre
- OnTheFlix
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
If there’s one thing that I’ve learned from playing The Walking Dead it’s that I’m fairly certain I would do very, very poorly in a zombie infested apocalypse. I just can’t imagine myself murdering someone while Clemy, (it’s what I call Clementine, don’t judge me) is watching. I constantly feel compelled to try and save what sense of morality and hope that she clings onto in a world filled with terror. Needless to say, I’d probably get us all killed.
Yet, this is exactly why The Walking Dead is so much fun. It isn’t fast paced. It isn’t needlessly gory, but instead it creates an experience that allows you to explore the human condition in one of its most fragile states, desperation.
This is the entire premise of Episode 2 “Starved For Help”, and it executes it to damn near perfection.
If there’s one thing that I’ve learned from playing The Walking Dead it’s that I’m fairly certain I would do very, very poorly in a zombie infested apocalypse. I just can’t imagine myself murdering someone while Clemy, (it’s what I call Clementine, don’t judge me) is watching. I constantly feel compelled to try and save what sense of morality and hope that she clings onto in a world filled with terror. Needless to say, I’d probably get us all killed.
Yet, this is exactly why The Walking Dead is so much fun. It isn’t fast paced. It isn’t needlessly gory, but instead it creates an experience that allows you to explore the human condition in one of its most fragile states, desperation.
This is the entire premise of Episode 2 “Starved For Help”, and it executes it to damn near perfection.
- 6/28/2012
- by Michael Shelton
- Obsessed with Film
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