avclub-26c0eb74eb2e815d15918a4ac46473ec--disqus
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avclub-26c0eb74eb2e815d15918a4ac46473ec--disqus

So - Angie seemed to melt when Junior said he was just holding her captive until she could get better.  But did I miss the part where here sickness was anything other than the fact that she wanted to break up with him?  I don't recall her actually being sick - I thought it was just his delusional way of justifying the

I personally didn't remember, but I know there were comments here that Joe Mills was indeed the guy with Lyric in the cab.

(Potential Spoiler) - imdb says the Friday Night Lights girl will be in a few more episodes…so yeah, subplot seems likely.

I didn't even so much think it was about the encounter having a philosophical impact on Holder - I just thought Skinner's arrival literally meant the jig was up.  Reddick's whole thing was that they could get away with roughing Mills up because there were no witnesses who would say anything.  Once Skinner arrived,

The Troy Davis stuff WAS good.  Frankly, anything that lets Don act like an actual human is good, because he really is a good character outside of the cartoonish love pentagon.

**"It’s ridiculous preachy garbage but it can be totally fun to watch when it isn’t etching a heavenly glow around Jeff Daniels and cut to Coldplay songs. But please, I have to beg, put an end to this Maggie/Jim/Don/Sloan/Lisa (did I miss anyone?) crap."

Maybe @olivececile:disqus has something else in mind, but I'd argue that if it's not Joe Mills, you have two key reasons to assume it's a cop:

Oh, I don't disagree that she was phenomenal in the role.  I've really liked her work throughout the season.  I just don't know that the prevailing opinion is "This season is as shitty as 1 and 2, but at least it has Bullet."  And that's what the paragraph in the review kind of implies.

Absolutely the strongest episode of the season, perhaps of the series.  Not sure I loved (or even had a reaction to) all of the plot points, but the vibe was just perfect.  Performances were phenomenal throughout, and it just felt like the show it was always trying to be.

I agree that this was a crap episode, but I find the review's note that the show should have milked that final "cliffhanger" to be perplexing.  That entire storyline was one of the stupidest things the show has ever done (and that's quite the list to be on!) but the idea of further insulting the audience's

Only one episode has to air before the cut-off, which as @avclub-56dfc41867dc4d05e285222c24c4e7c2:disqus said is June 30/July 1.

I actually completely disagree with the Orphan Black part of this.

That Corey Stoll didn't get nominated (but the mediocre SHOW did as a best drama) is proof that the headline is wrong - the voters actually don't watch Netflix.  They just saw something with a movie star in it and figured it should get some Emmy nominations.

I don't know that I would consider any of those bold, though.  In fact, most of the hip choices this year are actually far safer than they might seem on paper.

*Have to say that while the debate over hottest female cast member typically comes down to Sarah Rafferty vs. Meghan Markle, Gina Torres totally put herself in the running with that tight gray dress in the beginning.  Good Lord.

Agreed, and it really shows here.  Erik calls The Client one of the best, but from an archive standpoint, you'd have no idea since the low grade for Performance Review averages it out to a B+.

Has its status within the AMC ranks really changed, though?

— Even if that's all true, I guess I still don't understand what kidnapping Linden accomplishes.  No matter which way it went (he wants to convince her of his innocence, he's broken and wants to kill himself, he wants to kill her, etc), it would have been the wrong way to reach that end and highly inconsistent with

Question about this don't get caught thing - if that were part of the code, why was LaGuerta even an issue?  I'm positive Ghost Harry's given Dexter shit about killing people who, despite being threats to Dexter's mission, were not actually evil.

By the way, was I missing something with that shot of the driver's hand at the end?  There was nothing specific or identifiable I could notice - bruises, rings, tats, etc - but it seemed odd to focus on the driver's right hand as he pulled up to the diner.