That would be a weird lie to tell, and very hard to substantiate.
That would be a weird lie to tell, and very hard to substantiate.
Yeah, I've been wondering if I just have no moral compass for not being even a little worried by Raylan's supposed immoral acts on that tarmac.
Not that I'm rooting for either Art or Raylan to be killed, but I'm a little disappointed that Marcos didn't even manage to wing them. He had a fearsome weapon, a clear initial shot and the element of surprise.
Justified's portrayal of Canadian organized crime does us credit as a nation. We have criminals, yeah, but they're polite, industrious and organized.
Last chance for revenge?
"You dropped a toonie."
Too neat by half.
A drum clip. You don't usually see those things outside of gangster movies.
I dunno, I like Tim a lot and I'm glad that he's underplayed. He keeps his head down and does his job in a characteristically terse fashion. He, unlike Raylan, doesn't feel the need to be in the frame all the time.
I could see "underwritten". She is, after all, defined entirely by being Raylan's ex-wife. She's disliked by a lot of viewers, not because Zea's performance is bad, but because her inclusion in an episode is usually a distraction from the "Raylan vs. the Shitkickers of Harlan" show that we tuned in to see.
Claymore mines everywhere. Plus maybe some of those goofy remote-controlled rockets for good measure.
Why would they? A corrections officer was attacked with a weapon that was found in a prisoner's cell, and the prisoner's cellmate was a witness. You think that they're going to send the shank off to some forensics lab in Lexington just to confirm what they already know?
This season I basically expect every scene that doesn't have a visible gun to end in murder.
I was really surprised that Avon and the boys would be so easily bought off.
I think they also shot it so that Wash seemed shorter than he was. They certainly made it seem as if Gina Torres was taller than him, which fit the characters they were playing.
When I saw those two greasy, sweaty shitheels giving Searcy grief about his bouquet of yellow flowers, my first thought was, "Why, they must must be card-carrying liberals."
Really? What a way to go.
It surely made the lives of the Crowes' various enemies easier.
I doubt it, but I'm rootin' for him. They have much more of a spark between them than with Troubled Social Worker.
It was pretty sudden, wasn't it?