Who is lia in being human




















If there is, then I'll be posting reviews as and when I can. Any missed episodes I'll catch up with on my return. I know it's not ideal, but it'll have to do for now. And kudos to you for bothering to stick with the VD novels. I found them tedious and could only manage the first two. Yeah, H12 was the seat number. The camera zoomed in on it briefly.

I too have been wondering why Annie's having such a hard time. Unless there's some evil backstory, I'm as baffled as you are. Great opening episode. They lost me a little during season two, but this one reeled me back in. I've been enjoying the American Being Human but how inferior was it compared to tonight's episode?

There's only one Mitchell! I think BBC America did some judicious censorship because from Paul's description, we definitely missed some R-rated stuff. Ah, well. It was still a terrific season opener. I loved Mitchell going to Purgatory to find Annie and I am definitely getting couple vibes. And Nina at the police station was hilarious. I love Nina. Do we have two supernatural couples sharing a house in Wales, now? Post a Comment. Being Human: Lia by Paul Kelly. Tonight they even ended up doing it doggie-style during their time of the month.

But Being Human does seem to have rediscovered its mojo. After the comparative darkness of season two, tonight's episode felt like a return to form. Whilst reviewing the first episode of season two I did ponder what might happen should George and Nina meet in their wolf states.

Would they rip each other apart? Or would George recognise Nina, as he did in the season one finale? Well, now we know. Fairly obvious, I suppose. The George and Nina scenes were a welcome respite from the relative gloom of Mitchell's storyline. Nina trying to free George from jail whilst coping with the pangs of transformation was sublimely amusing -- as was the physical comedy of the bedroom scene.

Nice outfit, Nina. Enter Lia, played by lovely ex- Eastender , Lacey Turner. I guessed early on that she'd turn out to be one of Mitchell's victims. H12 was her seat number, right? Mitchell coming face to face with his mangled victims was like something out of An American Werewolf in London except less amusing. Who knew? In the comics, when he's in disguise as a human, he goes by the name "Ike Harris.

Sersi Gemma Chan is dating a human but has a romantic history with Ikaris. Played by: Gemma Chan. If it's Ikaris who typically runs the Eternals in the comics sphere, Sersi is its heart. She's something of a historian of humankind, having had a first-row seat to events like the fall of Rome and the French Revolution, per Marvel.

You'll often find Sersi in green, a nod, perhaps, to her deep love and appreciation of the Earth and its inhabitants. She's also had a centuries-long, on-and-off relationship with fellow Eternal, Ikaris.

Powers: Matter transmutation. Basically, she can alter matter into any form she chooses remember in the "Eternals" trailer, when she appears to dissolve a double decker bus into a parade of petals? In the comics, Sersi joined the Avengers for a spell. Though she later quit the group full-time, she sometimes still helps them out when they need a hand from a godlike hero. Sprite Lia McHugh will always look like a young person.

It's not always fun. Played by: Lia McHugh. Sprite is as mischievous as her name suggests. Though she's just as old as her counterparts, she has the appearance of a perpetual preteen, which she uses to her advantage -- one comics run saw her starring in her own teen sitcom. Her naivety can also be disastrous, though: In one series, the Sprite "altered reality on a cosmic scale," according to Marvel.

Sprite has also been written as male in the comics for much of the character's run. Powers: Illusions. The group's "grandiose storyteller," Sprite casts lifelike mirages and can teleport herself if needed. Phastos Brian Tyree Henry has no interest in violence. Played by: Brian Tyree Henry. The inventor of the group and a sworn pacifist, Phastos is also the first out, gay superhero in the MCU. While Marvel comics feature a number of queer characters, only a few other characters -- including Valkyrie and Loki -- have been suggested, though not confirmed, to be queer onscreen.

While still a student, Chiharu Shiota had an identity crisis. She felt as if her life and work were not connected in the way she wanted them to be and so she gave up painting. The work Red Line Linha Vermelha is a painting in red, where the emphasis is on the artist's hands and their movement. In revealing her subjective gestures in a pictorial form, Chiharu offers a reflection on the act of manual creation.

Having given up painting for 20 years, the artist went back to using canvas, albeit not in the conventional way. She weaves her work onto the canvas, as if a dense web of impregnated threads were appearing on its surface. Chiharu invites visitors to explore the idea of identity, memory, and fragility.

All these themes are expressed through the artist's own body in an autobiographical tale. In the video Earth and Blood Terra e Sangue , Chiharu is the leading actor in an ad-lib piece where, in an intimate setting with no audience participation, she interacts with metaphorical themes of life and death. This series replicates body organs made of glass. Played by Lacey Turner, the effect was a little off-putting at first.

There to get Annie back, Mitchell had to encounter his own personal demons along the way and it was all handled rather well. The final showdown with the massacre victims, in particular, was adroitly done. And the gore? Naturally, Mitchell succeeded in bringing Annie back home — well, to Barry, anyway — so that the series can put all that purgatory nonsense behind it.

A quick resolution? I absolutely loved this series opener. Follow Den Of Geek on Twitter right here.



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