Which means we'll be getting Agent Carter again soon.

Moderator: NecronLord
HYDRA has built it up through it's own mythology I think. Even to itself. It may find itself surprised at what this thing really is. By the time they formed their little order it was already gone from the planet, largely thrown out in an era of mostly superstitious peoples in the Dark Ages at latest. In the end? Another Inhuman with some rather useful albeit utilitarian powers. This day and age? Who knows what they'll think when it comes down to actual analysis. And who knows what his actual powers are yet until we actually see them in play.The Romulan Republic wrote: Incidentally, the alien really didn't seem all that powerful in the end, besides having ridiculous regenerative and apparent shapeshifting capabilities. I mean, Fitz could hold it off for a while in hand to hand combat. A lot of build up for what so far seems to be a fairly weak threat.
Desperate Simmons will be Desperate. I think Lash isn't evil so much as just Lash. I'm willing to bet he's gon full Inhuman and finished his transformation. My curiosity is how much his old personality effects things and how much the aggressiveness of Lash will have truly taken over. Or just what kind of personality Lash really has. There was so little of that seen, if any. Because it was the old personality effecting the target selection. If it's just Lash now? Roll your dice, we might have a non-Rage version of Hulk here who can...you know...talk. So to speak.Oh, and Lash is still out their, and maybe all evil now. Nice going their, Simmons. I have a feeling things will be unpleasant between May and Simmons if her role in that gets out.
I would've actually paid money to see them stuck on the other planet for more than one episode and have a SHIELD vs HYDRA Inhumans thing going on forcing Mack to make more tough calls as they figure out the way back. But my theory is this little conflict now is how SHIELD gets back in some good graces here. ATCU has literally deceived superiors on what they're doing incidentally, and who's the only people in a position to help? Though I would have kept Rosalin and a loyal guest star or two around to help with that fight.On the other hand, Mack was pretty good for the most part as acting director. And I still really like Daisy, at least most of the time.
Personally, I'm kind of tired of the screen tricks they keep using to make it seem like the SHIELD agents are way more awesome than they need to be, without showing how they actually pulled them off. This has got to be the 3rd or 4th time they've had a really tight deadline, shown the clock ticking to 0, and then shown the place where the agent was exploding/falling/flooding/etc., and then revealing that the agent was actually totally fine and made it out unscathed.Solauren wrote:I probably slithered over to Ward real fast (some snakes are really fast) without Coulson and Fitz noticing, ran it's new body to the portal and jumped in.
By that point, May had launched missiles, and Coulson and co were already running.
I very much doubt their escape from the portal went
"Sir, May is launching missiles, we need to stay around to make sure the portal closes"
Odds are, Inhumane-Possessed Ward made it out of the Portal as or after the Missiles hit. And while the castle itself was a write off, some of it is still standing.
Eh, Hydra did have a pile of inhumans to give as a 'gift' to DeathWard. I think it might be really good at the inhuman thing. I also suspect it may not be an actual inhuman, but some alien that can infect and use inhumans as puppets and doesn't die.Gaidin wrote:HYDRA has built it up through it's own mythology I think. ...The Romulan Republic wrote: Incidentally, the alien really didn't seem all that powerful in the end, besides having ridiculous regenerative and apparent shapeshifting capabilities. I mean, Fitz could hold it off for a while in hand to hand combat. A lot of build up for what so far seems to be a fairly weak threat.
I suspect Lash's purpose will be to either kill DeathWard for good or become DeathLash. He seems to know something is up with inhumans that regular humans shouldn't mess with, as he (usually) leaves regular humans be. Of course, as you note, that might just be the doctor's remaining personality holding him back.Gaidin wrote:Desperate Simmons will be Desperate. I think Lash isn't evil so much as just Lash. I'm willing to bet he's gon full Inhuman and finished his transformation. My curiosity is how much his old personality effects things and how much the aggressiveness of Lash will have truly taken over. Or just what kind of personality Lash really has. There was so little of that seen, if any. Because it was the old personality effecting the target selection. If it's just Lash now? Roll your dice, we might have a non-Rage version of Hulk here who can...you know...talk. So to speak.Oh, and Lash is still out their, and maybe all evil now. Nice going their, Simmons. I have a feeling things will be unpleasant between May and Simmons if her role in that gets out.
Yeah, dragging an arc out to more than just the one episode doesn't seem to be the way they like to do things. Sometimes that bugs me (the above complaint included), but other times it's nice to see the result of their operations wrapped nicely up in one episode.Gaidin wrote:I would've actually paid money to see them stuck on the other planet for more than one episode and have a SHIELD vs HYDRA Inhumans thing going on forcing Mack to make more tough calls as they figure out the way back.On the other hand, Mack was pretty good for the most part as acting director. And I still really like Daisy, at least most of the time.
Well, being possessed by an inhuman snake makes this even more a Stargate copycat.Solauren wrote:To remind everyone, the thing that was Will and is now Ward is not an alien. It's an Inhuman.
And am I the only one that noticed the thing coming out of the dead-will bodies mouth?
I probably slithered over to Ward real fast (some snakes are really fast) without Coulson and Fitz noticing, ran it's new body to the portal and jumped in.
By that point, May had launched missiles, and Coulson and co were already running.
I very much doubt their escape from the portal went
"Sir, May is launching missiles, we need to stay around to make sure the portal closes"
Odds are, Inhumane-Possessed Ward made it out of the Portal as or after the Missiles hit. And while the castle itself was a write off, some of it is still standing.
If Hawkeye's single explosive arrow could take out 1 of the Helicarier's engines, then I don't see it being very effective against a fortified base w/ SAMs.FaxModem1 wrote:You know what would have really helped their assault on the castle? A helicarrier.
Every damn thing that has flown near a HYDRA base has cloaked. It's just that when you're close enough and you're the only thing in the sky you're sort of going to get spotted. They tend to build the important bases in those out of the way places without a lot of air-traffic at that altitude. That's why Coulson's dropship got spotted. In spite of being cloaked. Let's get off the cloaking technology. Because remember, the Bus got spotted in the Arctic in Season 2.FaxModem1 wrote:The castle didn't fire at the new Bus because it was out of range and it could also cloak, the helicarrier could also do the same. Another advantage it could do is launch multiple dropships to deploy troops, as shown in Age of Ultron, along with fleet capability, as shown in the first Avengers film. It could also ensure that no vehicles escaped, such as Malick's escape car through having more men there to create a perimeter of people or having the quinjets on board fire at non-hostage holding vehicles, cutting off another head of HYDRA's leadership.
The operation could have proceeded the same way as it did in the episode, only more effectively.
Warning: This post contains spoilers for the “Maveth” episode of Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
Ward’s death on the midseason finale of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. was shocking — made more so by the sickening crunch that accompanied Coulson snapping the bones of his ribcage — but we learned, minutes later, that his death didn’t actually mean actor Brett Dalton is done with the show.
The “beast” that Hydra has been trying to bring back from the alien world all season (well, technically, for thousands of years) now possesses Ward’s body, and he will definitely be back when the show returns in March. We spoke to Dalton about the change, what he and his body’s new occupant have in common, and what we can look forward to from him the rest of the season.
So you actually died this time around. Are you ever worried that they’ll kill you permanently? Or is Ward so inextricably linked with the S.H.I.E.L.D. team that he’ll never leave completely?
I’m constantly in fear — [Laughs.] — that they will, all of a sudden, change their mind, forget about the contract, and just completely off me on the show.
Because that particular character changes so often, I’ve got to play a different character every season. There have been a couple of weird close calls in there too. In the midseason finale of Season 2, Skye shoots me in the chest, and if it weren’t for Agent 33 picking me up, there was the suggestion that maybe he was going to bleed out there. So there have been a couple of really close calls, but thankfully, you turn a couple more pages and find out he’s still alive.
Related: Get Caught Up With Our ‘Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’ Recaps
So to answer your question: constantly. But that’s more of a Brett thing than it is anything else. I think the character has gotten the response that he’s gotten because he started off as good guy. It’s not just some bad guy of the week or whatever. He started off as a good guy; he was literally part of the team. And it wasn’t just that he double-crossed them. Now he’s doing a hell of a lot more than just double-crossing: Now he is the opposing force to the team that he was originally a part of.
We kind of got to know and love the character — I hope that the audience did? So he carries with him all the history of the entire first season. I think it’s kind of cool that we get that for free every time he’s on screen; we get all the cool stuff he’s done in the past. It’s fun. I’m blessed. Hashtag blessed. [Laughs.] Don’t print that! Don’t print that!
'Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.' Star Brett Dalton on His Character Development
SuperFan Live host Khail Anonymous turns the attention to the character everyone loves to hate, head of HYDRA Grant Ward, played by Brett Dalton. In addition to joking that opening a pizza place called Hydra Hut was his first plan of action as head of the organization, Dalton also shares insights into the shifts his character has gone through in the past few seasons.
So this is an entirely new guy? Do you have an idea of how much Ward is left in there, or is it all this Hydra god?
Well, I wouldn’t say a total reset. Will was also playing this particular character in Episode 10; he was being occupied by this thing as well. I wouldn’t say he’s the most outgoing, affable, [or] got a great sense of humor, but enough to convince somebody like Fitz to get him to where he needs to be.
In a way, they have a similar skill set. It’s convincing enough for that being to get the job done. Ward has a lot of these things, too. He’s just charming enough to get access to this thing, and then he’ll punch you out, and that’s it. I just needed to be charming enough to do that, to get the job done.
So yeah, it gets exciting. It’s really exciting; we’re all figuring this out together. As I said, Malick is now asking the same questions that the audience did along the way. It is Ward, but it’s not Ward. It’s Ward and all of the iterations of every other host that have happened before. It’s this very intriguing combination. We’re not going to see — I don’t think we’re going to see — him winking and jumping out of planes and having quite the delight; it’s a different version of Ward. It’s very exciting. I know a lot more, and I’m trying to not say stuff. I wouldn’t say it’s Ward Lite, I would say it’s Ward 2.0.
Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. returns Tuesday, March 8 on ABC.