I thought the purpose of the Linda flashback was to underline her ability to lie, her total lack of loyalty to her allies and her lack of remorse - all of which were demonstrated in the way she abandoned Piper/Vause and Caputo later in the episode
I thought the purpose of the Linda flashback was to underline her ability to lie, her total lack of loyalty to her allies and her lack of remorse - all of which were demonstrated in the way she abandoned Piper/Vause and Caputo later in the episode
Because in an earlier episode when Red finds out that he killed an inmate at a previous prison his death is described as being due to 80% burns covering his body. This is the problem with binge watching I guess - easy to miss the details
"What group was the doctor part of…he mentioned something about being a disciple to Beth at the very end….or something like that."
"TWD being their biggest show"
Homeland should never have been more than a one season mini-series. Pure cash-grab and now the show is unrecognisable. Nobody needs another 24, but we could have had an excellent standalone show about what it means to be a terrorist and a hero. See: The Shadow Line, State of Play
No mention of the lack of Tysha? Tyrion's absolute main character development, the breaking of his love for Jamie and the reason he kills his father? D&D screwed up big time with that one. Really disappointed
Last line: surely you mean "lupine" rather than "canine"?
Martinez's leadership was all a tough-guy act: he said he wasn't sure about keeping everyone safe and then casually suggested that maybe the Gov would like to help him run things. There was clearly no way he could escape being a leader with Martinez still around so he killed him to stop that ever happening. Nobody…
1) Another group killed the people in the camp, not walkers. This was made pretty clear and reinforced when Brian is warning his people about strangers later on