He says "It wasn't me, it was Ignacio." He also thinks they were sent by a man named Lalo. Ignacio = Nacho, Lalo = Eduardo (yet to be introduced).
He says "It wasn't me, it was Ignacio." He also thinks they were sent by a man named Lalo. Ignacio = Nacho, Lalo = Eduardo (yet to be introduced).
I might be reading more into the scene than was intended, but in his expression I can see the hints of disillusionment that will lead him to become a DEA Informant and start betraying his fellow criminals to get ahead.
I might be reading more into the scene than was intended, but in his expression I can see the hints of disillusionment that will lead him to become a DEA Informant and start betraying his fellow criminals to get ahead.
Gus is such a good guy, he'll even hug you tight while he bleeds you out.
The double-chambered bottle (I believe actually two Tic Tac containers taped together?) was the most brilliant part of the setup, I thought. It's what really showed how thoroughly he planned it out.
We know from Saul's debut episode in Breaking Bad that he had some sort of business dealings with Nacho that would warrant being taken out to the desert and executed by the Cartel, so I don't think he's going anywhere any time soon.
You missed one major thing about the flashback to Slippin' Jimmy's monologue about his father: his dad wouldn't — or couldn't — do what it took to make the family business work. When Jimmy talks to Kim about covering his half of their expences, he's openly and verbally commiting that he will do whatever it takes to…
If you believe that after death there is only nonexistence, and so the afterlife gives you oblivion… what's the problem? Nonexistence isn't cruel, it's not anything. It's nothing.
If they don't believe in anything else, possibly.
The ravens are a pair. Their role isn't exactly a mystery if you're familiar with mythology.
Struggling to come up with a good insemination / incineration pun.
It's been weird for a while. I'm glad we're finally getting to the awesome.
As a 32 year-old-straight man who has had the internet since he was 16, I'm beyond desensitized to it. Not that there's any logic to being sensitive to it in the first place. I once had hang-ups, too, growing up in Texas and getting called a fag in school for being a nerd. Then I grew up, experimented enough to know…
It is sort of a bummer that a lot of this American Road Trip show is actually filmed in Canada.
You should read more Image and Vertigo stuff, or bande dessinée or even manga for that matter. I've never been too into the super hero comics, but there's a lot of other stuff out there.
This show is based on a book. If you want to find out what the show will be about right now, instead of waiting for the show to show you… read the book.
Diabetics.
I'm not sure it can all be put on the acting. It's not a constant issue for me, but there's usually one or two pieces of dialogue in each episode that feel really unnatural and break my immersion. Sometimes it's the delivery, sometimes it's the staging, sometimes it's the dialogue itself. Sometimes it's a combination…
Binged through the first six episodes yesterday, will probably finish today. Beautifully directed, great cinematography and music choices, solid performances. My only negative is that the dialogue can sometimes feel a bit clunky / rehearsed / unnatural, though it's happened less this season than it did in the first.
What "one episode?" Huell was introduced as Saul's bodyguard and part of his "A-Team."