Both wrong. It's a direct reference to Prince of Darkness (maybe?).
The first dog in the pilot reminded me of a pariah dog. In literature, it's normally a device used as a foreboding sense of warning.
I came across this this morning on youtube, and I swore, that it was a parody of an imaginary sequel. And I honestly laughed.
#jamesons
I thought it was pretty funny. A kid who hasn't been alive for more than 3-4 years is going though such a heavy emotional scenario that he's crushed. It's absurd. I guess that's why I giggled a bit.
"The point is, they came back. Like piglets sucking at the blocky teat of a Minecraft sow, they always come back. I do. You do. We all do."
I thought it seemed obvious who shot Gamby. It was that weirdo that Brown brought in to investigate the school as she was taking over earlier in the season. Same gait and general creepiness.
What!?!? I didn't even realize that! Nice catch.
Chandra being used as a device to lift Stone, even made me, the last person to be labelled a SJW, kind of queasy.
"blowing Gamby to smithereens"
Well, that was the joy of Eastbound. There was doses of sweetness amidst the heavy reams of anti-heroism.
Lost my shit on that line..
No, The Killing is the poster child on how acting, (not directing) and cinematography can all team-up to elevate a show over its writing.. The Night of is only a pretender to that throne ;)
Very confusing if you take the previous scene they shared together. The one where she finds out he sent two kids, not one, to the hospital. To me, in that scene, it seemed like she was livid with him for lying, or at least excluding, information. However, now based on the kissing scene, are we are to consider she's…
Meh, it's just a half-ass idea on my part. Something to think about. Not a coincidence he's reading Call of the Wild, then gets a dog/wolf on his shoulder. OK, maybe he doesn't kill Freddy. That was a reach on my part; but there is going to be more connections to this novel, I'm sure of this.
I'm surprised no one has mentioned this yet, but this show appears to be a classic "Call of the Wild" story. I suspected it before Freddy actually gave Naz the book. And when he did give him the book, I thought that my idea might have some "traction".
Well done..
Has anybody answered this question yet? I thought I was crazy. I swear he only had three, and he only ate three..
Yeah, feel the same. You know it's funny, before the book "Call of the Wild" came up in Freddy's room, I was thinking if that was the point of this series. To show a mild mannered boy transformed into a stone cold tough guy/killer(?) by the prison system.. A new version of Call of the Wild.