Nope. As far as I know the only way to buy it is to find someone reselling the cd-rom.
Nope. As far as I know the only way to buy it is to find someone reselling the cd-rom.
Yeah, because it was definitely the case that everyone thought it was super hilarious when Theon was nearly raped.
He said last episode he's "really, really not" FBI now. Which, geez, dude, they should at least cut you a check for freelance profiling or something. But that was a big thing in the previous episode - he told the social worker he wasn't "an officer" and was threatening him with a revolver, which I assume was his own…
Yeah, [spoiler, I guess] a charity employee started murdering the insurance agents of the sick child she was supposed to be trying to cheer up - which I'm pretty sure twice included making "snowmen" from their corpses which she left in the kid's front yard. Because… Bryan Fuller.
I hope that's a Pushing Daisies reference.
Will also allegedly abducted Hannibal at gunpoint and forced him to go to Minnesota and then nearly shot him in front of Jack.
Just because he's carving them doesn't mean he's the one eating them. I say this a lot because it would actually be deliciously (sorry) ironic if a cannibal like Lecter ended up having to limit his "protein intake" courtesy of an injury from one of his "victims."
Yeah, I mean, I don't think you're wrong? I'm just more willing to let that slide more as we haven't seen concrete evidence against it. Maybe Hannibal had been planning Chilton as a fall guy for years and so timed his murders accordingly, there's nothing to absolutely say otherwise. But Chilton having a ton of organs…
I'm willing to buy Chilton didn't have an alibi for the other murders going back years (just because who besides Hannibal would hang out with him ever, really, fine), but… he sure must've recovered really really fast from getting torn up by Gideon last season if it's believable that he followed Will to Minnesota to…
To be honest, after seeing what happened to a character I loved when she believed Will, I'll take the obliviousness.
I don't think so - as mentioned, way back in "Sorbet" he was openly flirting with her (she even called him on it), and had neither reason for doing so then.
Fair enough - I read "robotic" as basically "empty and bad acting," so my bad.
The leads aren't robotic. But I will say they are much more grounded and contained than Tony Soprano, Walter White, or Don Draper. Which of course, they're supposed to be - those are characters that are specifically built around having a level of aura and grandeur, which the characters in The Americans specifically…
A month later, but - I mean, my mom makes paella sometimes (she lives in IN, and not in what I think of as the real life Eagleton counterpart, Carmel). It's not really hard to buy fish at a grocery store in the Midwest. That being said, not every restaurant would have it - I kind of don't want to make a judgment call…
Alana has known Hannibal for a long time - years at least, certainly longer than she's known Will or anyone else on this show. He was a mentor for her. And I mean, I don't know what others are seeing, but around pretty much all the characters who aren't Will (who's a weird exception because he basically doesn't get…
I saw the suggestion of Noomi Rapace for a Frances Dolarhyde and now I'm attached to it, even if I know that starbucking is unlikely.
If I had any money, I'd send Sonia a dollar for every "what about the men?!" comment her reviews produced.
Also happened with Scott Pilgrim, though in that case I'd argue the books' ending was better.
I would agree, to the show's credit, that the only serial killers depicted who specifically target women are those drawn from the Thomas Harris novels - Garrett Jacob Hobbs, arguably Dolarhyde (he kills entire families, but I think one can argue he targets the mothers), and maybe eventually Buffalo Bill. All of the…
I think plenty of people just accept the face that turns up when the coin lands. He clearly looked at it, had this little "okay then" expression, and then got up to go into action. The moment signifies Hannibal's complete emotional disconnect - both leaving Bella to die and saving her could have interesting…