Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
After much internal debate (and a serendipitous run-in with a young woman whose life she saved back in the pilot episode), Liz agreed to Red’s proposal, and the plan was set: Liz would shoot Red ...
The premise of Wednesday’s Season 8 finale was simple: Red promised to gi Proceed with caution! Elizabeth Keen’s name was crossed off The Blacklist on Wednesday night — and it appeared to be ...
Red encounters a man (Andrew Howard) believed to be Berlin and tortures him for information. Tom ambushes Elizabeth in her car and drags her into the room with a gun pointed to her head, imploring Red to give himself up. Red kills "Berlin" and inches closer to Tom. Tom shoots Red in the shoulder, prompting Liz to break free.
The lack of answers for the questions surrounding the series, such as the fate of the task force after Reddington's death, his real identity, and the reason for his relationship with Elizabeth Keen, Megan Boone's character who departed after season 8, was among the discussed drawbacks. [15] [16]
Liz and Jennifer are looking into Dr. Koehler's patient files in an attempt to find Red's true identity. Moreau successfully smuggles the bomb into the UN building and escapes but the Task Force intervenes before the bomb can be triggered and Red has his bombmaker Max defuse the bomb.
(Warning: This post contains spoilers for the Season 8 finale of “The Blacklist.”) “The Blacklist” has at long last revealed the answer to the show’s central question — who is Raymond ...
Aram determines that Desai himself is necessary to utilizing the data, so the Task Force immediately sets about keeping Desai out of Ross’ hands. Red tracks down Ross through his tailor, but they are both too late and Ross captures Desai. Liz and Red both give chase, but Liz crashes her car and Red stops the pursuit to help her.
The season finale premiered as "Masha Rostova" on NBC on May 14, 2015 in the 9–10 p.m. time slot, [1] before being renamed "Tom Connolly". [2] [3] The episode garnered a 1.6/5 Nielsen rating with 7.49 million viewers, making it the third-highest-rated show in its time slot behind ABC's Scandal and CBS's The Big Bang Theory. [4]