[S1E6] Book Of Ruth
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At long last the pair of heavenly hosts clues our hero in on his mysterious power and we get the full Genesis backstory data download. Fortunately, given the charisma of the angels, it never just feels like raw exposition or someone explaining the comic book aloud. Anatol Yusef's reading of \"conjoined\" in particular is fantastic, full of disgust and horror. The trump card though, is one of the show's specialties, that amazing fight between the angels, Jesse, Cassidy (at the end) and the Seraphim Terminator Lady. Superbly staged and shot by director Guillermo Navarro (who has worked with Guillermo del Toro, Robert Rodriguez and others as a cinematographer and has forged a healthy career directing shows such as Hannibal), it's a marvel of stretching the budget and creating a comic book tone on the screen.
With Sundowner, we must once again break out the phrase \"mixed blessing\". Because while Preacher continues to impress with its ability to stage wild, wacky, inventive fight scenes, other constituent elements of the show just don't have the same drive or spirit right now. It's almost as if the show feels like it's on pause when people are simply talking. Sure, you get one or two nice moments, such as the Cassidy/Tulip confrontation in the storage cupboard or Tulip and Emily bonding in the latter's kitchen, but everything else is starting to drag instead of patiently unspooling a story. We'd assume that things will start to pick up now that there are four episodes of the season left, but there are only so many times you can watch Jesse wrangle in similar fashion about his calling and what part God has to play in it, and you have to wonder what exactly (beyond Jesse's order this week) is keeping the angels from simply taking Genesis back. That said, talk about a great pair of bookends: the fight at the start and Jesse shouting at Eugene at the end, before we also discover the final fate of the poor Green Acre corporate team. Crispy.
Ruth and Troy discuss a difficult topic to talk about with your family - sin. This week is about Foundation 2 - hate sin, especially your own. Foundations (book) is 50% off at ChristianBook.com thru 3/15. Click here for info.
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Despite being told that no student ever goes into the school library because of a mysterious book that causes students who read it to disappear, Mitchell insists on heading right in, dragging his friends Becky and Templeton with him.
Searching the creepy library - despite the protests of the equally creepy school librarian - they find a book called A Most Intriguing History of Strange Hill High. When Becky and Templeton get sucked back to Victorian times at Strange Hill, Mitchell seeks to rescue them.
While on his regular patrol, Reeves would catch a man named Fred throwing a molotov cocktail at a Jewish delicatessen. Fred casually walked away as Reeves pursued him and questioned why he did that. Fred suggested that a rat chewed through a wire, setting the place on fire. Will arrested him and took him to the station, but Fred denied starting the fire. Fred claimed that it's a case of mistaken identity, and he asked the other officers who they're going to believe. One officer takes offense when Fred called Reeves a \"spook\" and told Fred to apologize. Once Fred does, the officer proceeded to take Fred for booking, but not before making an OK hand signal at the desk sergeant.
Will goes to a newspaper stand sometime following this incident whereupon he speaks to a German newspaper vendor. The vendor shows him a copy of Action Comics #1, the first issue of comic books which depicts the superhero, Superman. Will seems to identify with Superman because, like him, his parents shipped him away from the destruction of their home, to hopefully give him a better life. While looked over the comic book, Fred bumped past Will and snidely smiles when Will calls him out for it. Reeves returned to the station and asked the desk sergeant if he released Fred. The desk sergeant pleaded to Will to let it be, warning him that he'll be in serious danger if he doesn't drop it.
Reeves, now known as Hooded Justice, figures that Fred is involved with the Cyclops. He watched as Fred and members of the Ku Klux Klan go into the back of a grocery store that Fred is the owner of, and then breaks in and takes out the KKK members inside. Once Hooded Justice has taken them down, he finds a book called Mesmerism for the Masses. A man attacks him and they burst into the grocery store. Fred fires a shotgun at Hooded Justice, who dives out the window.
In 1947 while on duty, Reeves gets summoned to a movie theater after a violent riot broke out. The police send him in and bring out the black patrons, and talks to a woman named Lorna. Lorna says that there was a flicker when the picture started. Later they told her that she hurt people, but Lorna doesn't remember. Reeves figures that it involves Cyclops and the book on mesmerism that he found, goes out, and sees men loading projection equipment into a truck labeled F.T. And Sons that's going to a warehouse.
The House Un-American Activities Committee subsequently demanded that all masked vigilantes reveal their identities to a congressman. Reeves refused to comply.[2] Reeves, as Hooded Justice, spoke out about his decision in an ad published in the Amsterdam News, a leading black newspaper, in which he stated \"At this time, I am not prepared to share my truth to the world. And I will certainly not bow to the bullying of this racist Congress. For as long as the structures of law and order are controlled by corrupt elites whose singular, cyclopean focus is to protect and fortify the interests and flourishing of the ruling majority, I will never surrender my mission to help the invisible and the oppressed.\" This action surprised many and caused some of his former Minutemen teammates, Nelson Gardner and Eddie Blake, to distance themselves from him.[1]
In the years following the disappearance of Hooded Justice from the public eye, rumors and speculation developed about the whereabouts of HJ and who he really was. One notable theory came from fellow Minutemen member and New York City police officer, Hollis Mason, who wrote in his book, Under the Hood, about the connection between HJ and Rolf Müller, a German circus strongman, whose body was found washed up on the shores of Boston Harbor in 1956.[5] Adrian Veidt looked into Hooded Justice's disappearance when researching his crimefighter predecessors. Veidt learned that the Comedian, while under the orders of the U.S. government, attempted to unearth Hooded Justice shortly after his disappearance but reported failure to his superiors. Veidt suspected that Blake had found and killed Hooded Justice, although he admitted that he could not prove this.[6] With the exception of the late Captain Metropolis, Mothman, and Sally Jupiter, nobody knew of HJ's real identity as Will Reeves.
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A-Train has lunch with The Deep and Alastair Adana at the Church of the Collective. Alastair calmly threatens A-Train to stay and join the church, telling him that he knows about his past. Alastair convinces him too that he can help him stay in The Seven. He tells him that he needs to let The Deep tell him his \"truths\", aka how he felt anger towards him for most of his career. A-Train reluctantly agrees. 59ce067264
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