3 reviews
Great Dialogue Driven Episode
- jablack-42141
- Jun 21, 2021
- Permalink
Best episode yet!!
(Shortened summary in the bottom of the review)
Fantastic episode with great dialogue, also driven much from its long but fulfilling and phenomenal dialogue and story it provides through its ca. 1 hour running time of complete greatness.
Silver and Flint are also growing on each other really fast now in a fantastic way, creating a fantastic friendship for further episodes to explore.
Flint has also set himself on a mission to take back the role as Captain in a old fashioned coup, which this episode also follows much about.
(10/10)
Shortened summary: Great episode with great deep dialogue, the relationship between Silver & Flint evolving really fast & Flint plotting a coup to take back the Captaincy.
Fantastic episode with great dialogue, also driven much from its long but fulfilling and phenomenal dialogue and story it provides through its ca. 1 hour running time of complete greatness.
Silver and Flint are also growing on each other really fast now in a fantastic way, creating a fantastic friendship for further episodes to explore.
Flint has also set himself on a mission to take back the role as Captain in a old fashioned coup, which this episode also follows much about.
(10/10)
Shortened summary: Great episode with great deep dialogue, the relationship between Silver & Flint evolving really fast & Flint plotting a coup to take back the Captaincy.
- RealCJHopkins
- Jun 24, 2024
- Permalink
Another glorious day for a broadside
Ahoy landlubbers, grog blossoms and scalawags. There is much merriment to be had from this week's episode. We open up with an unusual scene which may leave you gloriously happy or happily perplexed.
All is not well in the kingdom - uh, I mean, in the free and democratic land of Flint - uh, I mean, of the Caribbean.
Eleanor learns that swords and dirks may kill a man but words cannot kill jack (as in the expression, not Jack Rackham). Flint and Silver play Game of Thrones Light on a boat and Jack (Rackham this time) and Anne Bonny discover that brothel business can be much more than just rum and women.
Thank god there's no commercials on this show, because each episode finishes faster than a young man's first time with a woman of leisure.
Ahoy!
All is not well in the kingdom - uh, I mean, in the free and democratic land of Flint - uh, I mean, of the Caribbean.
Eleanor learns that swords and dirks may kill a man but words cannot kill jack (as in the expression, not Jack Rackham). Flint and Silver play Game of Thrones Light on a boat and Jack (Rackham this time) and Anne Bonny discover that brothel business can be much more than just rum and women.
Thank god there's no commercials on this show, because each episode finishes faster than a young man's first time with a woman of leisure.
Ahoy!
- SuperHelpfulMedic
- Feb 2, 2015
- Permalink