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The Guild was written by Felicia Day (who stars as Codex), directed by Jane Selle Morgan and Greg Benson (season 1), Sean Becker (seasons 2–5), and Chris Preksta (Season 6), and produced by Felicia Day, Jane Selle Morgan and Kim Evey. Overall, 70 episodes of The Guild were released over six seasons.
[citation needed] The first season ended on May 15, 2008, consisting of 10 episodes and two specials (including the Christmas special, "Christmas Raid Carol"). The Guild season 1 DVD was released on Amazon.com on May 19, 2009. For Canadian audiences, it was bundled with season 2, released on September 29, 2009, also available on Amazon.com.
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The website's consensus reads: "Smart writing, a few surprising plot developments, and an ominous final scene make 'Valar Morghulis' a satisfying conclusion to a stellar season." [7] Matt Fowler of IGN rated the episode 9 out of 10. [8] David Sims of The A.V. Club gave the episode an "A" grade. [9]
After visiting Norman in the hospital early in Season 2, Brother Justin and Iris head home and pass a tree; Justin names this location "New Canaan", the future site of his temple. New Canaan is also located in San Benito County, California, south of Salinas. [61] The last Season 2 episode is named "New Canaan, CA" on DVDs.
The montage that opens the episode is accompanied by the Johnny Cash song Walk the Line. While the song technically has a source within the universe of the story, with Detective Pryzbylewski playing it from a CD and ending the montage by pressing pause, this scene still noticeably stands out among the rest of the show which usually makes a point of not including non-diegetic music (with few ...
Four special ending theme songs were used in certain episodes; "Starboard [Silky Wind ver.]", sung by Hitomi Kuroishi in another language, was used in episodes 8 and 20, "Innocent Eyes" was used in episode 17, "Sorrows of Life" was used in episode 18 and "Grand Exile" was used in episode 19.
The Strain is an American horror drama television series that premiered on FX on July 13, 2014. [1] It was created by Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan, based on their novel trilogy of the same name.