His name was "the Undertaker." How much clearer did it need to be?
His name was "the Undertaker." How much clearer did it need to be?
I think the best way for them to handle the UFO from this point forward is to just never mention it again. No explanation, no callbacks, just a singular strange moment that a small handful of people may or may not believe they actually witnessed, and an audience left just as dumbfounded.
I declared that halfway through True Detective Season 1. Don't know why it's taken the rest of the world so long to catch up.
Constance?
Also of note, the American Indian Movement stuff was going on in the 70s in South Dakota. Wounded Knee, Pine Ridge, etc.
Well, Peggy was saying in this very episode that he'd need someone to help look after him pretty soon. He did also just experience some head trauma, and the next episode shows him being carried off in a stretcher, saying "well, this is embarassing."
I don't know, man. I had a friend whose dad was a Vietnam vet, came back and led a perfectly normal, routine life, never talked about his experiences in the war… but would obsessively watch the movie "Alien" over and over, presumably because some element of that film somehow helped him cope with his PTSD.
I feel like Fred Stoller could fit into the Fargo-verse pretty well.
Is it really more strange than the Ten Plagues of Egypt in the first season?
I was loving the episode from start to finish, but man, the stinger with Ed really put it over the top for me.
We're only "too far into the story" if you think that the endgame is the details of Rye's murder coming to light. We still have a mob war and then some to get through beyond that.
I've been calling him "John Redcorn."
Anyone who's seen Mark Margolis in Breaking Bad should well know how good an effective actor can be with only subtle movements.
"Mike Milligan is not a huge fan of getting a surprise finger up his butt."
Okay, man, I don't know if being forced into a shallow grave and getting buried alive is a particularily "clean" death. That's a fucking terrifying way to die.
The only way I can watch Heroes is with skeptical cynicism.
Oh, no. It was Harmontown Episode 158 - While in Stealth Press 'X' to Kiss Your Wife, when he had the folks from Before You Were Funny on.
The shitty screenplay sounded an awful lot like a short story Dan Harmon wrote when he was in highschool that he read on the "Before You Were Funny" podcast. I think that's the podcast he was on when he read it, anyway.
About 70% of Harmon's body is made up of vodka.