Warrior num gay

Let me say this right up front: Warrior Nun season two is excellent action-adventure TV, with complex and nuanced women leads, and a bisexual love story anchoring the whole thing in place. I devoured all eight episodes, which landed earlier this month. As a person who found herself disabled right around the time the first season premiered, my criticisms of the show still stand.

A whole lot. In fact, everything about season two is better. Better storytelling, better action sequences, better location shots, better dialogue, better villains, and better romance. Actually, her corpse finds itself in possession of the magical halo; it brings her back to life.

The halo belonged to The Order of the Cruciform Sword, a group of nuns who train teenage girls to fight demons. Ava is a pretty great Warrior Nun, actually, but she also kiiind of freed Adriel, a demon-angel who possesses everyone at the Vatican, in the season one finale.

Season two kicks off with Ava and her bestie Warrior num gay on the run. Also, they are crushing all over each other and dancing around their feelings constantly. I know it sounds like basically everything you love on the CW and Syfy, and it is a little bit, but Warrior Nun is shot smartly in Spain, and it looks and feels a whole lot more high budget — like HBO high budget — than similar shows.

The last time I saw two women in love running around picturesque Europe fighting bad guys was season two of Killing Eve. Hem hem. Warrior Nun going gay for real is a welcome relief; queers are absolutely over being strung along with subtext crumbs. Perhaps, most importantly, Warrior Nun — a show about literal nuns, the literal Vatican, each episode titled with a literal Bible verse — drives home the fact that gay love is the kind of love Jesus is always talking about.

The kind that comforts, that bears the fruit of joy and strength, the kind that is willing to sacrifice warrior num gay, the kind that makes a person a home.

#SaveWarriorNun: LGBTQIA fans left devastated following the latest “Cancel Your Gays” announcement

Season two ends with Jeremiah Heather Hogan is an Autostraddle senior editor who lives in New York City with her wife, Stacy, and their cackle of rescued pets. You can also find her on Twitter and Instagram. Neither can it be polyamorous. What scares me is being alone.

Abandoned in some sickbed with no one to… With no one. Not now. Not here. Thank you for this comment. I appreciate you taking the time to leave such a detailed and cordial one! That to be disabled is a life of useless loneliness. You would still have us.

And we will never leave you. But I understand your concerns with that aspect of the show, for sure.