Board Thread:False Info and Speculative Discussion/@comment-16083651-20170111164432/@comment-13895380-20170114191135

Killer kev wrote: The kanima was a powerhouse but I feel like Jackson would've been more vulnerable in his human form. Had they all worked together to kill him, they might have actually succeeded. I highly doubt a Kanima can survive decapitation, they should've tried that. I hate how they kinda put the idea of an Alpha kanima in our head with that the talk about wings and it being "bigger and badder".

That's what I can't figure out. It seems a bit inconsistent. Deucalion was scared of Scott being a True Alpha, yet True ALpha's aren't special power-wise? Doesn't make much sense, especially since Scott was able to break the mountain ash barrier, which to our knowledge, no other werewolf has been known to do.

I don't see it as ruining his perfect record. Scott killing, for me, it would mean growth in character. Scott finally realizing he has to put on his big boy pants and make the hard decisions, which will sometimes mean killing someone, especially if it'll save others. Scott always tries to find ways around killing the villain, by doing that, he only gives the villain more time to kill.

No, no, no, no, hell no. Theo's a sociopath, the literal definition of it, he'd take out anyone at any cost. Keep him that way. No death during selfless acts, no redemption, none of that, instead he should kill Garrett, become an Alpha, and leave town to do whatever it is evil Alpha werewolves do. I actually think something like that would be good for the show too, proving that the good guys don't always win and the bad guys don't always lose. Theo's one of my favorite characters but I don't feel bad for him, he knew what he was doing while he was doing it, he must be held accountable for his actions when the time comes, it was brutal though. Eh, I agree that killing villains prevent them from killing more people, but not killling is a common trend among superheroes (e.g. Batman, Superman), so I guess I'm used to it. :P

You didn't get the impression that he has matured and was humbled by his experience in Hell? I sure did. I think the bad guy turned good but is actually still a bad guy plot is overdone by this show. It happened with Peter. It happened with Gerard, even though they randomly revealed that he had another master plan...

(side note: S5's plot was the most rushed episode ever. They gave no indication of what Gerard was planning whatsoever. They shouldn't have wasted 5a on filler episodes when they really needed more development on the Gerard and Deucalion story arks and the Hellhound and La Bete mythology).

...so Theo turning out to be evil again is too predictable and played out. At the end of S5, Theo seemed like someone who was incapable of empathy and humility, and I already saw some of the contrary last episode. If the show should show that even someone like Scott can kill, it wouldn't hurt to show someone like Theo can be capable of goodness to contrast it, no? :P