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Agents of SHIELD. Season 1 Discussion Thread

Ward was clearly a psychopath even before Garrett messed with him, and he had no problem killing the dog and Fitz/Simmons despite having mixed feelings (unless they reveal that it was actually Garrett who killed the dog). But there have been worse characters on TV that have been redeemed-- Spike and Londo, for example-- so who knows? But he's so boring now that I'd just as soon they kill him off. Hopefully this "SHIELD No More" storyline won't last very long anyway.
I laughed at the large file transfer as well.

I'm not so sure Ward killed the dog. He can't have used the gun AND the sniper. Likewise, all we saw was a box fall out from the bus with no idea if Fitz and Simmons were in the box. Looks like Ward's started on his redemption arc.
As others have said, I think that we, like Fitz, are being shown once and for all that Ward is not going to be redeemed at least not any time soon. I can't wait to see what Fitz will think of Ward after he and Simmons are fished out. I mean they were begging for their lives and Ward just did the damn thing like he couldn't even hear them.
If Ward was going to kill the dog why wouldn't he have done it with the handgun? Makes little sense for him to fire into the air, leave, then shoot the dog with the rifle.

I figured it was Garrett watching through the scope and seeing Ward hadn't killed the dog. I don't even think there was a gunshot after the scope-shot, was there? Maybe the dog lived.
Earlier in the episode when Ward killed the deer, he mentioned that Buddy would take off runing (to retreive the fallen prey) whenever he heard the shot. Ward fired the pistol knowing that Buddy would run, then finished the job with the rifle because it was less difficult, as Christopher has mentioned. I don't see any reason for Garrett to have shot the dog.

Pretty sure I heard a shot.

In my mind, there was no shot. Buddy is FINE.

He'll will save the day in the finale when Garrett and Ward are about to kill Coulson and Buddy will come charging in and take them both down. Then he will join the team as a certified canine agent and good boy. He's a good boy! Yes he is!
Keep the faith, baby! :)
 
I saw the rifle thing as not having to look Buddy in the eye when he did it. Just like he couldn't turn around to face Fitz and Simmons.
 
Earlier in the episode when Ward killed the deer, he mentioned that Buddy would take off runing (to retreive the fallen prey) whenever he heard the shot. Ward fired the pistol knowing that Buddy would run, then finished the job with the rifle because it was less difficult, as Christopher has mentioned. I don't see any reason for Garrett to have shot the dog.
The logic you people use sometimes is truly mindboggling.

That truly is one of the most convoluted and completely-pulled-out-of-the-ass interpretations of a scene I've ever seen around here. And there have been some real beauties, so that's saying something.

I'm still laughing at the people who are now trying to convince themselves that Coulson didn't murder his own men a few episodes back. (Even better, trying to rationalize that he wasn't in command, he had no say in the matter, and that he totally hadn't gone rogue with blood in his eyes at the time, too.) It's downright hilarious.

But I digress. Seriously, that's some ridiculous stretching there, to the point of being absolutely absurd.

And you're right, Garrett had no reason to shoot the dog. Because, you know, he's not a fucking psychopath whatsoever who'd do it just to teach Ward a lesson.
 
Someone can correct me if I'm wrong, but I think that electronics that are not in use when an EMP goes off remain unaffected. Only operational electronics are wiped. At least, that's the way it is often presented in fiction. :)

And it's called fiction for a reason. ;) An EMP is a magnetic pulse that induces electric currents in wires and circuits, currents so strong that it burns them out. It doesn't matter if they have power running through them ahead of time or even if they have batteries installed -- the EMP itself is the source of the power that runs through them.

The only defense is for a device to be shielded/hardened against external EM fields, e.g. by a Faraday cage, or to have robust circuits that are designed to handle really intense currents without burning out. Perhaps the metal shell of the "quarter" walkie-talkie would work as a Faraday cage.
I am not sure where you are getting your information, maybe from some "survivalist" forum?

This is the Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) Atttack, and their reports. Their conclusions mirror my own education and training (college level) with electronics and wiring.

Here is a link to their relevant study; I hope you find it enlightening.

If a circuit is closed, it is generally safe from EMP. An electric surge will not effect anything that is not a complete circuit, for the simple reason that there is nowhere for electricity to flow. If your flashlight is turned off, there is no circuit and it will not burn out. There may be an exception with micro-circuits because of the small gap between connections.

For the same reason that we ground ourselves before taking components out of static bags, an uncircuited micro device could burn out from a sudden charge because of the small gap. This is like the spark from your finger when you walk accross a carpet and touch something that is grounded. From the research of the Commission it is not actually clear what the level of threat is.

Automobiles were subjected to EMP environments under both engine turned off and
engine turned on conditions. No effects were subsequently observed in those automobiles​
that were not turned on during EMP exposure.
Cars that were turned off, even with modern electronics, were not affected by EMPs.

What I find surprising is that you consider these threats real and complain that "And it's called fiction for a reason" but you don't complain that a device from supposedly the 1950s or so, that is less than the size of a pocket watch, can contain enough power to send an EMP with enough voltage to even burn out a lightbulb.

Let's all suspend our disbelief for the sake of a good adventure story, but please don't try to argue that there is any real threat from these type of devices.
 
The whole dog thing was indeed pretty ambiguous. My first thought also was that Garrett was spying in on the scene, and Ward let Buddy live. Upon review, I'm no longer so sure, but neither did I see that I was necessarily wrong, either.
 
What I find surprising is that you consider these threats real and complain that "And it's called fiction for a reason" but you don't complain that a device from supposedly the 1950s or so, that is less than the size of a pocket watch, can contain enough power to send an EMP with enough voltage to even burn out a lightbulb.

Micro-tesseract powercell? I mean Hydra must have left hundreds of those things lying around by the end of the war, no? ;)
 
Earlier in the episode when Ward killed the deer, he mentioned that Buddy would take off runing (to retreive the fallen prey) whenever he heard the shot. Ward fired the pistol knowing that Buddy would run, then finished the job with the rifle because it was less difficult, as Christopher has mentioned. I don't see any reason for Garrett to have shot the dog.
The logic you people use sometimes is truly mindboggling.

That truly is one of the most convoluted and completely-pulled-out-of-the-ass interpretations of a scene I've ever seen around here. And there have been some real beauties, so that's saying something.
Why, thank you. ;)

But I digress. Seriously, that's some ridiculous stretching there, to the point of being absolutely absurd.

And you're right, Garrett had no reason to shoot the dog. Because, you know, he's not a fucking psychopath whatsoever who'd do it just to teach Ward a lesson.
In most well written 48 or so minute T.V. shows there is almost nothing shown that is meaniingless. We see Ward aim the gun at Buddy (looking at Ward innocently) point blank and we see the emotion take over Ward. He can't do it. We are then shown him pointing the gun into the air firing, then we see a shot of Buddy's hindquarters taking off right after the shot. That scene might not make sense without the prior one when we are told how Buddy reacts to the sound of a gunshot. What we are being told is that Ward does have a certain amount of humanity remaing, just not THAT much.

Next, we are shown Buddy lined up in the scope of Ward's rifle and then (I believe) we hear a shot.

Now, it is possible that Garrett shot the dog, but until we are told that and given a reason for it (and if we are told Garrett was the shooter, I think we'll get a reason), it doesn't make sense. My ead on Garrett is that he is a cold blooded killer when he needs to be, but doesn't kill when he doesn't have to. If Garrett did kill Buddy, then I will have to reassess my view of who Garrett is.

So unless you think the scenes with the deer and the dialogue about Buddy's reaction to gunfire and the scenes which show Ward trying to kill Buddy were meaningless, then please give us your interpretation of what those scenes and dialogue meant.
 
Next, we are shown Buddy lined up in the scope of Ward's rifle and then (I believe) we hear a shot.
Nope. We expect to hear one, but it cuts to a hiss-chunk sound as present-day Ward pulls a lever of some kind.

For the record. ;)
 
Next, we are shown Buddy lined up in the scope of Ward's rifle and then (I believe) we hear a shot.
Nope. We expect to hear one, but it cuts to a hiss-chunk sound as present-day Ward pulls a lever of some kind.

For the record. ;)
Thanks for the clarification.

Okay, I'm obscessing about his now.

Normally, in these types of scenes, we are shown the prey through the rifle scope, then the camera cuts to the shooter and we see the shooter take the shot. That didn't happen here.

But if Ward was holding the rifle when Buddy was in the scope and STILL couldn't pull the trigger, that's like showing us the same scene twice. I don't see the producers doing that, ergo, Ward shot Buddy -- right?
 
Earlier in the episode when Ward killed the deer, he mentioned that Buddy would take off runing (to retreive the fallen prey) whenever he heard the shot. Ward fired the pistol knowing that Buddy would run, then finished the job with the rifle because it was less difficult, as Christopher has mentioned. I don't see any reason for Garrett to have shot the dog.
The logic you people use sometimes is truly mindboggling.

That truly is one of the most convoluted and completely-pulled-out-of-the-ass interpretations of a scene I've ever seen around here. And there have been some real beauties, so that's saying something.

I disagree, that is the absolute natural interpretation of that scene, at least it was for me. I didn't even consider the possibility of it playing out any other way. You have to look at it in context of the scene that was going on in the present during the flashback. They were absolute 1 to 1 mirrors of each other. Garrett told him to kill something he had an attachment to, because attachments were weaknesses, and he does it both times, but both times he does it in as a detached way as possible because he has what Garret has taught him is a weakness.

Interpreting the scene to think that he let Buddy go would mean the show was trying to say Ward attachment to Buddy was strong enough to disobey Garrett and let him live, but his attachments to Fitz Simmons were unequal, because he was willing to drop them in the ocean.
 
The Guest host in the Guest house?

...which is cleaned using the Guest Hose...
I think we can rule out the alien being from Indiana, or they'd have called him the Guest Hoosier.

In my mind, there was no shot. Buddy is FINE.

He'll will save the day in the finale when Garrett and Ward are about to kill Coulson and Buddy will come charging in and take them both down. Then he will join the team as a certified canine agent and good boy. He's a good boy! Yes he is!
No, Buddy will be too busy dragging Fitzsimmons out of the ocean.
 
I can't believe some people don't get it. It seemed rather blatantly obvious that Ward killed Buddy. He initially couldn't up close, but he recognized his weakness and was able to compensate by doing it from a distance. Same with FitzSimmons. He couldn't look at them until after he pulled the lever. Fitz was even shouting "turn around" and "look at me".

Ward flat out admits his weakness out loud. And then we see how he compensates by shooting Buddy from a distance and getting rid of FitzSimmons without actually having to shoot them in the face.
 
That said, I just went back and rewatched the pertinent scenes. There was some impressive writing ambiguity in this one. Thumbs up for the writers.


Garrett: "Where's all that trust and loyalty lead? Abandoned in the woods or dumped at the pound?"


Ward: "Takes off running everytime I take a shot out here. That deer was 1800 meters out. Gonna take him a while to find it."


Garrett: "Take care of Buddy".


After which we see Ward eventually firing his gun in the air. I can see how the intention would be to lead some people to believe that "abandoned in the woods" was a legitimately believeable outcome.










Garrett: "Put down Fitz and Simmons."


Well, on the off chance that he didn't kill Buddy, then perhaps his hope was that he was abandoning FitzSimmons in the ocean, where possibly they'd survive in the wild. He certainly followed "Put down" to the letter. Considering that they were in a cargo container, if they survived the fall, presumably there would be some supplies in there that would help them get by until rescue.


He did after all admit that he cared about them and that it was a weakness of his.



I don't know. I used to be 100% certain that Ward killed Buddy and then meant to kill FitzSimmons, but now there's some doubt creeping in there.




On the other hand, wouldn't it be a shocker if Fitz and or Simmons died in the fall? For all we know, Agents Of Shield was always meant to be a single season show right from the very start. Either to simply end and be replaced by a new Marvel show (Agent Carter), or to be sort of continued in a new show that also stars 1 or 2 surviving members of the AOS cast. The folks behind AOS are obviously very good at keeping secrets when they want to. Perhaps their final secret is that the season finale was always intended to be the series finale too. (And to be truly final.)
 
We don't know if Ward killed Buddy. I rewatched it. The noise you hear when the scene switches back to the Bus is NOT a gun shot (though it was supposed to almost sound like one). It is the release sequence of the module Fitz-Simmons are in. It was Ward's weakness with Buddy, and it's his weakness now. He knows the module will survive the fall. But he can honestly say to Garrett that he got rid of them.

EDIT: This reply and the one above were typed at the same time. :)
 
Next, we are shown Buddy lined up in the scope of Ward's rifle and then (I believe) we hear a shot.
Nope. We expect to hear one, but it cuts to a hiss-chunk sound as present-day Ward pulls a lever of some kind.

But that was deliberate parallelism. The sound of the shot blended into the sound of the lever being pulled because they were both the same thing: Ward going ahead and delivering the deathblow despite his reluctance. The whole point is that the Buddy scene is symbolic of the Fitz/Simmons scene.
 
Also, it's entirely possible the network vetoed an explicit depiction of a shot sound effect, plus reaction shot of Ward looking out from the scope. Wasting anonymous humans is one thing, but wasting a lab could bring in unwanted complaints, particularly as this show (mostly) aims for a family audience.
 
Next, we are shown Buddy lined up in the scope of Ward's rifle and then (I believe) we hear a shot.
Nope. We expect to hear one, but it cuts to a hiss-chunk sound as present-day Ward pulls a lever of some kind.

But that was deliberate parallelism. The sound of the shot blended into the sound of the lever being pulled because they were both the same thing: Ward going ahead and delivering the deathblow despite his reluctance. The whole point is that the Buddy scene is symbolic of the Fitz/Simmons scene.

If so it bodes well for the dog since there's no way in Hell Fitz/Simmons are dead.
 
These is when we find out that one or both of Fitssimmons is an Atlantean double agent?

Fitz would freak the shit out if everyone on the team turned out to be a double agent except him.
 
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