But what was with the Matrix green hue on the time travelled scenes? And what's the better power: the ability to only go back in time, or to only go forward in time (but also return their normal timeline like Livia does)?
I watched it, but this whole "Dan went off grid" in the past causing unintended consequences in his present got on my nerves. It's like, if Dan only does what he's supposed to do (whatever is "correct" in the eyes of whoever is sending him back in time), then things work out "well", though from...
I take it that there's a conservation of time w/r/t Dan and Livia, meaning, if Dan bounces backwards in time for a duration 2 days, he returns 2 days from the point he bounced from the present to the past, and would be missing for 2 days from his wife's point of view as well.
BTW, how far into the future can Livia be sent to, and how far back can Dan be sent to? Any guesses? A lot of the dramatic "danger" elements are fine to me with a show like "The Dead Zone" but for some reason, it still hasn't never quite gelled for me with Journeyman" yet.
But Dan is now doing it on a regular basis, and for what reward? (well, beside getting pockets loaded with stolen cash.) How many times do regular folks get that opportunity to ward off the bad guys in their daily lives? How does Dan justify butting into a dangerous situation given that he has a...
I find the missions dramatically uninteresting because Dan seems to put his life in peril far too easily. It's always rung false for me and this show. Maybe if his background wasn't just as a journalist, but something more action-oriented (military or law enforcement), it might be a little more...
I still hate these weekly throwback "missions" because I find them uninteresting. I predict Dan will bounce back to 1948 and actually see Livia in her own timeframe.
Is it me, or does this show have the drabbiest cinematography on TV these days? Everything is shades of gray, nothing really pops. At least they cleared up Livia's situation a bit, but Dan keeps going back a little less in time for the current mission, he never goes back further than the...
They should have named this show "Journeywoman" (at least for Livia's 7-episode mission to save Dan's present day situation after playing guardian angel to Dan while he gets his time-traveling legs under him).
If you'd seen "Day Break" you would have gotten a weekly dose of Moon Bloodgood waking up every morning looking fresh as daisies, mmmm....scrumptiousness.
Anyone else looking forward to when Dan's driving down the highway and disappears into the past, and leaves his car to run into cars, or a ditch? How old is that money Dan picked up from the past? Hmmm...that won't raise suspicions when it gets spent, will it? It was hard to understand the...
This show is much more fun to rail on IRL (which I did with a co-worker this morning). [snide]I'm waiting for Dan to bounce while in mid-thrust with the wife[/snide ]. (then landing in a church butt nekkid in between the pews would be funny to me.) Dan and Katie just don't seem all that...
This show just annoys me, but I tuned in tonight because nothing else was on (since the Falcons pre-empted the CBS lineup and I'm a few episodes behind on the Bachelor). I'm at the point of "who cares?" when Dan goes on his trips since we don't know why these "Touched by a Time-Traveling Angel"...
I think I'm going to have to move this show down from "live" viewing priority to something to catch via time-shifting because I'm just not all that impressed by the "Touched by a time-traveling Angel" angle of this show. I'm not even all that interested as to why his former fiancee keeps showing...
I've seen the pilot, and I think it's going to be a bit too confusing for the general public on a weekly basis. I didn't love the pilot, and would need to see a few more episodes to see if the premise grabs me enough to commit to watching it on a weekly basis.