You are correct. On second viewing. I realized he did, which is amazing.
You are correct. On second viewing. I realized he did, which is amazing.
Me too.
No One, you make fair points. Fair points indeed.
I agree Gabriel.
Yes, watch!
It may have been the first time I didn't feel ambivalent about Abby.
Agreed re: jokers per minute, and I've been a huge fan of the show. I just hope they don't feel like they need to completely overdo out of context references. Balance.
Wilfred's typical dog behavior is always comedy gold. And I agree that their oneupmanship is also always funny and smart whether you view it as what it is or an anxiety metaphor.
I was just waiting for the joke to have more of a punchline. Although at least we now know where Ryan draws the line morally.
I think Wilfred's done a really great job of some true storytelling, and to me, part of Ryan's story is how he copes without real-life distractions.
I trust the show re: the symbol, but I did roll my eyes. And I'm not offended by the rape joke. It just fell flat.
I sort of alluded to it in the Observations, but this is definitely just written from my point of view. Wilfred and/or Bruce's origins can certainly still be open to interpretation. Just one man's review, in other words.
Ah, seems it is the same guy. I have no other real reference for the guy, but he was great in this without having to do too much. A great show overall. On Netflix if ya feel like it.
I agree 100 percent. To see this sort of sinewy, deceptively strong guy do his version of a Rocky montage before his killings but otherwise slip unnoticed past people looking like a Danish hipster was pretty incredible. Glacially paced, yes, but as good a character-drive drama as I've seen this year. Definitely better…
Ha. He's kind of like a more wiry Brit Timothy Olyphant. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm… A great, physical performance.
The only difference, I'd say, is that unlike the reality "stars" who come to it as nobodies, and thus don't have anything to offer beyond their most recent reality credit, someone like Paris is already a brand.
I think most of the American population is personally disengaged from their work. It kind of speaks to something that's come up in these threads, which is that for a lot of the people who make it, it's just a job. Just like all of us have a job. Not all accountants go home and get pumped about the day's calculations.…
That's probably true, Rushmore.
I think it's more that the casting process is really another subject entirely, but just one small aspect of this one.
I'm with you, Veex.