dfs-toronto
Donald Simmons
dfs-toronto

Chuck killed a guy and switched his body, pulling out his teeth Novocaine-style to make it look like he was there. He appears at the end of the finale with a hatchet and yells “surprise, motherfucker!” 

I saw it as, the moment Saul called her in the sprinkler office, all the trauma she had compartmentalized around Lalo and Howard came back all at once. After Howard’s death, Jimmy and Kim each rationalized their earlier behavior differently, with Jimmy coming to view their actions as necessary and justified (creating

I’m pretty sure this episode contained the only two instances in which Jimmy/Saul/Gene considers committing violence himself across both series — when he’s going to smash the cancer guy with the dog’s urn, and when he threatens to strangle Marion. Both times he doesn’t actually go through with it, because he’s not

Subconscious self-sabotage, possibly. The kind of behaviour Saul Goodman would have berated a client over.

I thought Jeff just panicked. But, yeah, Gene was much sloppier on this job, between the B&E, the actual theft, and just hanging out having a whiskey at the guy’s house. To the point where I started to consider that he was planning to get caught for some reason.

I wonder if the “I trusted you” line reminded him of his Mom, the first person he took advantage of. 

I’ll admit I didn’t care for most of her singles, as they tended to be more slick and poppy than my normal tastes, but even so I’ll fully agree she was a terrific singer and performer. (And there are exceptions: most of the songs from Grease are great fun, and “Let Me Be There” is one of my favorite country love songs

Criminals are a superstitious and cowardly lot so showing some more thigh and chest hair could really help his war on crime

The Snyderverse was murdered on the way to its home planet.

Wait, is that an option?  I’d like that.

And most maddening is that it all steals from A Matter of Life and Death, while completely misunderstanding the point of the use of bureaucracy in that film, which was to contrast the chaos of WWII being fought on earth. To audiences in 1946 who have endured decades of war, depression and turmoil, the prospect of an

There shall be no Keaton slander!

Yeah Francesca is definitely a study in how prolonged contact with Jimmy/Saul is toxic.

It was definitely a new scene. I thought Paul’s voice sounded much deeper and like he was struggling to get words out for some reason— like he was sedated or had a Vito Corelone-like jaw or something.

So if I’m taking away one lesson from the Breaking Bad universe it’s: stay away from guys with cancer, nothing good will come from it!

The best line of that whole scene was when Jesse asked, “Who’s Lalo?”

He probably saw all the episodes where Raylan took a beating.

i have read somewhere he’s not even a real person and is a character on a tv show. possibly even two tv shows.

The one movie I will ALWAYS remember him for is Death Race 2000.

Anyone else surprised that he’s still alive?