Well it's beautiful, of course. Page five panel one is a new favorite. Thank you everybody. Yes it is beautiful. Suitably epic and sweeping. Well done, you talented brats.
It is not 'morning'. It won't be 'morning' for another 20 minutes, then it will be 'stupidly early' not 'morning'. Of course I don't care, I have Freakangels to keep me happy. Beautiful, beautiful Freakangels. And the memories of the 4 ciders, 2 Bundy and Cokes, and 1 Long Island Ice Tea I had a few hours ago.
What was I saying again? Ah yes, pretty comic, good night.
Those two panels of Alice on page 6 are all the reason I'll need to buy this last book. P.S. Is this the first time we've seen the moon in the series? That's a good way of signalling a return to normality...
@phill_sea No he's right, you can't have a full moon whilst the sun is also in the sky (noitce the picture you've posted is gibbous and the moon I used in the episode is full) because the moon can only be full when the sun shines straight onto the side of it that we see.
@j-prime Regardless, you can't see stars at midday, or fly into the future, or make time go so fast that the stars appear to time-lapse, or manipulate matter with your mind... etc. It's always amusing seeing what everyone's individual breaking point is with regards to the fantastical!
Seriously though, it's an interesting topic. Fantasy bends causality, but it can't completely break it or the story would fall apart, which fantastical events constitute a unrepairable crack in the cause&effect of a fantasy story is worth a lot of thought. The script specifically called for daylight in the middle of the night, and the only way I could think to demonstrate that for certain is to have full moon and stars visible in a blue sky. The intent was to pinpoint the position of the sun behind the earth, therefore making it night, and making the blue sky (rather that the full moon) the unnusual feature.