We should all give Iwan Rheon a hand. He played a completely despicable psychopath to a T.
We should all give Iwan Rheon a hand. He played a completely despicable psychopath to a T.
That long take surrounding Jon in the middle of the battle was insanely awesome.
I was involuntarily shaking my arms in exultation while screaming "FUCK YES!!!" over and over while Jon beat Ramsay's face in.
Get. Fucking. HYPE.
I sincerely hope that decapitation bit makes it to the show.
Although he appears to have some sort of aversion to sunlight, given that his hand was on fire there at the end.
My favorite thing is when all the guys on the plane pull medieval weaponry OUT OF NOWHERE.
Also, that shot of Cassidy, horribly mutilated after falling from the sky. Holy shit.
As someone who has zero familiarity with the comic, that was absolutely bugfuck crazy, in the best possible way.
This is a show that explodes Tom Cruise in a news broadcast.
That doesn't excuse his actions anymore. He deliberately manipulated Jimmy's caring for him in order to screw him over.
It was Chuck's idea for Ted to end up with Robin.
Season 3 will deal with Mike going through a BIOSHOCK INFINITE-style tear in reality.
That's the beauty of it. In the pursuit of his own twisted sense of justice, Chuck has become the very thing that he swore to destroy (Yes, I just quoted another, far less successful prequel).
Son of a fucking bitch. Best season cliffhanger on television since Hank was on the can. Is it February yet?
I don't know, that's the sort of STAR WARS prequel-ism that the show has assiduously avoided until now. I'm betting we see the stroke, but I don't think Mike will be the cause.
I'm trying really hard to decide whether Ted or Pryce is the most pathetic character in the Gilliganverse. It's a tough call.
Kuby and Huell's reaction to Ted's fall is still one of the most priceless moments of the series.
The best thing about "Felina" was how it acknowledged his insignificance in the grand scheme of things. It wasn't until Walt let go of all the pretensions of self-importance that he really became the sort of unstoppable force he believed himself to be.
"You have affection for my brother; a great many people do!"