It's also kind of a callback to the pilot episode during the bathtub scene, when Hannah notes that Marnie always sees Hannah naked and Hannah never sees Marnie naked.
It's also kind of a callback to the pilot episode during the bathtub scene, when Hannah notes that Marnie always sees Hannah naked and Hannah never sees Marnie naked.
I'm never going to forget that moment.
Very interesting, and I'm not quite sure how I feel yet. I think I liked it. I kinda expected something anticlimactic like this, based on how final the second-to-last episode felt. Weirdly, even though this was a surprising and weird episode, that's kind of the most obvious ending this show could have.
I agree with you in general, and I felt that way a little last season, but this episode I didn't mind at all because I loved the Mike segments so much.
This was great, as usual.
I was really worried about this season at points, but I loved this one just as much as I loved the last few. And while Jessa hasn't really done anything in particular to redeem herself, that scene between her and Hannah still somehow totally worked for me. Once again, Lena Dunham nailed that scene, especially that way…
Aw, that's sad. I love this show. At least it got the perfect ending.
I went into this season thinking of Norman as the clear villain and Romero as the clear hero, but these past few episodes have really made me question everything. The possibility of Norman getting better makes me kind of not want to see Romero kill him, but it also feels weird to root against Romero.
Also Veep, Silicon Valley, Fargo, The Handmaid's Tale, and Better Call Saul!
I think I have a pretty high Tandy tolerance overall, but he's been really grating these past couple episodes. There's usually one thing he says each episode that makes me laugh a lot (this week it was "his name is JanSport!"), but his thing is just getting stale, which is disappointing considering there was a time…
That was incredible. The last 10 minutes, I found myself crying pretty much nonstop. The sight of those women all on the beach was pretty fucking inspiring, and little things kept making me cry more - like the sight of Renata rubbing Celeste's arm.
Aly gets MVP of this episode. Her reactions to Nick (and, later, the Winston-Winston negotiation) were great.
It's pretty sad that this is one of the better episodes of the half-season when it 1. teases a reveal it doesn't actually give us, and 2. features next to no Tom Cavanagh/comic relief.
The last 10-15 minutes of this were pretty incredible. I actually teared up at the end out of sheer excitement at what I was watching.
Anyone shipping Krishna and Luisa yet?
Yep, this. My biggest frustration with this season is how Marnie has repeatedly regressed - if the Marnie breakthroughs had switched places, it would've worked great. As I commented above, it would've been nice to see a slightly-more-mature Marnie for a while, in the same way we've seen a slightly-more-mature Hannah…
I disagree with a lot of this (I really like Allison Williams, and I still like the idea of seeing her grow, even if it's unrealistic at this point), but I'd agree that "The Panic in Central Park" should've been more of a turning point than it was. That's one of my favorite episodes of the show, and it would've been…
No way, I watched this movie for the first time two days ago. Loved it, and love the book.
Damn, this was a really good episode. I've been a little frustrated with the show in the past few weeks (and I still am, a little - where the fuck is Shoshanna?), but this was great. That phone call scene was so well done; it went exactly how Hannah thought it would go and even how she kind of thought she wanted it to…
Yeah, this one was a little disappointing. Would've been worth it if the episode ended and revealed who Yoda actually was, but we didn't even get that.