On some level I'm a bit disappointed that this wasn't the utter clusterfuck it looked like from the promos. I mean, a good genre show is all well and good, but a campy mess can be something really special.
On some level I'm a bit disappointed that this wasn't the utter clusterfuck it looked like from the promos. I mean, a good genre show is all well and good, but a campy mess can be something really special.
It means Ichabod gets results, you stupid chief!
That mirror scene at the end was a genuine scare moment, and nicely inventive, since it looked like a window at first. This show totally works, somehow. I'll be watching.
I hope the Headless Horseman finds time to visit Stars Hollow and take a cleaver to some of the more annoying townies. Start with Taylor.
Walt's cover is already blown at that point. Jack providing evidence on Walt would be irrelevant.
Walt hired him to do those murders. In this case, Jack murdered people that Walt didn't want him to kill.
A question for the ages: who is more incompetent, the Miami Metro or the FBI on The Following?
And, God willing, the series finale of Dexter.
When we next see Jesse, Meth Damon will have him in a gimp suit, like Channing Tatum in This Is The End.
@DesertDweller79:disqus: Nowhere did I say that was what Walt was going to do. I said that was what he could and should do, which would be obvious to Uncle Jack. There's no reason, hence, not to eliminate that risk, which costs them nothing (apart from a bullet, but with $80 million that's not a big expense).
After we learned that Jesse told Uncle Jack's crew about the tape made of Walt's phone call, I was half-expecting them to show up at the Schraeder residence just in time to take care of poor Marie, but that didn't happen. Are they going to pursue that at all? Seems like the time window should have passed (plus,…
Walt was going to have to disappear regardless, so tipping the government off about Jack and co. costs him nothing, and it would doom Jack and co. unless they also vanished immediately.
On the issue of Hank and Gomie's bodies, apart from the possibility of Jesse surviving to say where they are, how far away did Walt get in his car? I don't remember, but it seemed like it broke down pretty quickly, and it seems like they should find that, right?
If Jack and co. are planning to flee, then yeah, it doesn't matter. But I didn't really get that sense.
Sure he can. He was already fleeing, just leave an anonymous tip about where the bodies are and the names of his associates. That would be enough to put the government on them, at a minimum, and these guys are very obviously carrying on criminal operations, so gathering evidence wouldn't be that hard. Even if they…
I remember how Toby Ziegler once described somebody as "the guy who goes into the 7/11 to get Satan a pack of cigarettes". Meth Damon is the guy who buys the cigarettes and then politely cautions Satan about smoking.
When they just murdered two people that said associate didn't want them to kill (well, okay, I doubt he cared much about Gomie), and said associate knows where their bodies are, and could very easily give them up to the feds without being caught himself, yeah, it's contrived. If there was ever even an inkling that…
Hank and Gomie have been transferred to the DEA Office in the Sky.
If Jesse lives, he could presumably tell people where to find them, at least.
I find myself oddly liking Uncle Jack. That line was perfectly delivered.