Discover this podcast and so much more

Podcasts are free to enjoy without a subscription. We also offer ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more for just $11.99/month.

Legends of Tomorrow 1x12 - Last Refuge | Review

Legends of Tomorrow 1x12 - Last Refuge | Review

FromDC on SCREEN | DC Studios News/Review


Legends of Tomorrow 1x12 - Last Refuge | Review

FromDC on SCREEN | DC Studios News/Review

ratings:
Length:
42 minutes
Released:
Apr 25, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

SPOILERS/NSFW - DC on SCREEN #162 - Legends of Tomorrow 1x12 - Last Refuge | Review - Go with Ray if you want to live... and see Baby Snart. The Pilgrim is travelling back to previous points  in time, attempting to kill Rip Hunter’s crew. She can only attempt to murder each person once without upsetting the timeline.  Rip and crew rescue adolescent Mick Rory and Sara Lance, 2014 Ray Palmer, and  the baby Snart, Stein, and Jackson.  They take them to a secret location called The Refuge, a place where orphans throughout time can be taken care of and trained for the eventual duty of being a Time Master.  If their past selves are out of the timeline for too long, time will cement, and they will no longer be remembered. The Pilgrim captures the team’s loved  ones and holds them hostage. Rip offers the Pilgrim himself as a child, and as the team double crosses The Pilgrim in order to distract her, young Rip Hunter stabs her long enough to keep her from freezing time and stopping the Legends of Tomorrow from turning her to a pile of ash.  Meanwhile, Kendra and Ray get engaged over much emotional tumult, Jax tries to save his father from  an IDE destiny, and time starts to cement leaving Rip and crew with the notion that they should take the fight to 2167 to where Vandal Savage is his most powerful…
Released:
Apr 25, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

The DC Comics multiverse on film and television is expanding, and we're here for it! News, reviews, and honest opinions about projects upcoming and past on a (usually) weekly basis! We do believe that every iteration of a property is valid even if we don't care for it ourselves!