Absent devils throw a tantrum on this weeks Salem.
The episode even has a great knock-down, drag-out fight between Alden and Beelzebub.
It is definitely the fight of the series.
They make more sawdust than you ever saw onF-Troop.
Lets start with the brat.
Marilyn Manson can apparently even corrupt the devil himself.
Cotton maneuvers Beelzebub to check against Gods own king.
I was really hoping that god would have knocked over the king and conceded the long-running game to Mather.
That would have really pissed off the little devils.
God himself being beaten by the local reverend.
Ad content continues below
Suspense is everywhere, even during the happiest of scenes.
Cotton has a ball with the wedding vows.
He is as at home in the cathouse as on the pulpit.
Maybe more so, because here there are people who are listening in pleasure, not fear of death.
Cotton is sweet and sultry and passionate and pious all at the same time.
Ann Hale is in Hell and it looks like she likes it there.
She really is a hellcat, even if her familiar was a rat.
Standing outside the door to the infernal dimension, Hale is more than entranced.
She is positively aroused.
Hale has been descending quickly since she found out who she was by blood.
Now her dark side is reaching a climax just as the whole world is about to explode.
Thats not to say that Tamzin Merchant doesnt have her way with subtleties.
Hale is a bit of a slave to her urges.
Shes pregnant and her cravings arent merely carnal.
Swallowing the last morsel of the cheese, cornbread and beans before kissing Cotton was a very real moment.
OnXena, the warrior priestess used to sing the dirges to lost souls as they passed to the underworld.
Here Lucy Lawless underscores the swan song to the Barons love for Mary Sibley.
Now that weve seen the end of Beelzebub, Mary has the baroness to contend with.
Hey, seer, didnt see that coming did you?
Fridays Knights was written by Adam Simon and Donna Thorland and directed by Nick Copus.
Rating:
5 out of 5