Touche!
Touche!
In a word: A fine piece of casting. Why hire an imitator when you can have the real deal?
'Call it, Friendo!', the gameshow where with the flip of a coin you have everything to gain, and so much more to lose.'
You've just answered my question: Does Lizzy Caplan have drooling fanboys as Zooey Deschanel has? Answer: Yes.
The TouRAPIST, from the director of 'The Lives of Other Rapists'
Being photographed means never having to say you're sorry.
I love him too, man!
Agreed.
Agreed, just as Eli has gone against his own blood, Jimmy will eventually ally with Nucky against the Commodore, as the ties that bind Nucky and Jimmy are stronger. As Jimmy told Arnold Rothstein 'Nucky is like a father to me'. Nucky practically raised Jimmy ('I was a father and mother to that kid'), whereas the…
They should cast the actor who played Maurice Levy in The Wire as Chalky's hebrew lawyer, keepin' all in the game, right?
except his daddy's sleeping with the fishes.
Nucky sees in Jimmy the wasted potential of a smart kid who once aspired to be the President of the United States, whereas the Commodore sees Jimmy as his heir, capable of reclaiming the throne by use of force. Make of that what you will.
Did Kelly MacDonald end up winning the coin toss?
I disagree that Margaret was ever 'pure' and subsequently 'corrupted' by Nucky's influence. I think the writers of the show have been deliberately coy about her personality and fashioned her as mysterious and enigmatic. Events like Nucky's arrest and her reaction to it reveal there is more to Margaret Schroeder than…
Margaret's actions in this episode are not entirely motivated out of love for Nucky, but are done to protect the comfortable lifestyle Margaret and her children enjoy as a result of her shacking up with Nucky (A nice house with servants, fancy dresses). In a word, Nucky's best interests are also the interests of…
yes, and her 'cunny' is not the draw she thinks it is.
Margaret totally owned that scene, reducing Nucky to a standard Buscemi-type chump.
or throw a tailored suit on him and you'd have a 1920s Tony Blundetto.
Chris Pratt: The poor man's Seth Rogan?
There was a scene where Mickey Doyle was transacting business with Jimmy. I am surprised to see Doyle still alive, as Arnold Rothstein took a life insurance policy out on him along with several of the D'Alessio brothers in the first season, and it would of been in Rothstein's financial interest to have Doyle whacked.