Those pages are going to be what make or break the marriage. It's going to eat away at Philip until he explodes with resentment at Elizabeth, who is doing her utmost to lie to herself and pretend everything is OK.
Those pages are going to be what make or break the marriage. It's going to eat away at Philip until he explodes with resentment at Elizabeth, who is doing her utmost to lie to herself and pretend everything is OK.
Again, that all leads back to Philip's and Elizabeth's influence on Paige. Her snooping was a clumsy attempt to please her spy parents. I don't think season 1 or season 2 Paige would have gone rifling through someone else's private affairs.
Wish I'd read your comment before I posted mine. I read that scene exactly the same way.
Super interesting acting / editing from the last scene between the three Jennings. Maybe I'm reading too much into things but Paige was wearing a distinctly accusatory look as she glanced at both her parents whilst they were reading the diary.
And that being said, Philby at least had a rough time of it in Moscow. Depressed, suicidal, disappointed with life in Russia, etc. If a seasoned double agent with a lifelong career in espionage, who was sympathetic to the communist cause, could barely hack it in the Soviet Union… it's really difficult to imagine…
Poor Martha.
Nina's death reminded me of Lara's in Dr. Zhivago's. Both were sudden and abrupt and symbolised the lack of individualism and crushing repression under an oppressive government.
I do appreciate that the other characters on the show regularly call him out on it. Nothing is more frustrating when a lead character gets away with his mistakes just because he is the lead.
I disagree with the 'superbly acted' part. Don't get me wrong, I think Charlie Cox does just fine with the role. But 'just fine' is where it stops. He's good, but not outstanding to me. And I heard his accent slipping more than once during this season, most tellingly during scenes he shares with Bernthal.
As far as I'm concerned, from the moment the Punisher was introduced, this was Jon Bernthal's show hands down. Even the character of Frank Castle was just more compelling to me. I feel bad for Charlie Cox but in my opinion, Bernthal as an actor completely steals every scene both men share.
I think the saddest thing of all is that Carrie never loved Quinn the way he wanted. Everything she did in the finale pointed to that. When the entire incident at the airport was over, she didn't go straight to Quinn's side - home for her was with Jonas. It was only after he broke things off with her for good that she…
Asking the important questions: Are we going to discover the true nature the weird vibes coming from During or not?
I AM SO UPSET OVER NORMA AND ROMERO. They'd better patch it up somehow before the season ends. Stupid Norman!!! Stupid Bob Paris!!! Booo!!! #NormeroForeva
No, she told him during the Season 2 finale. That was why he was looking at her sadly when she was with the children. He was thinking about what could have been.
Everyone's talking about the Stan/Peggy scenes but I liked the Pete/Peggy scenes the best. There's a lot of bittersweet nostalgia there that always comes out whenever the two characters have a scene together. It's not that I want them to end up together or anything, it's just that there's always that 'what if'…
I regret it too, Joss.
RIP Pastor Tim. May your death be the salve for Philip's damaged soul and may your hair serve as one of his wigs as he berates Paige for respecting Jesus, but not him. Again.
Well, Game of Thrones is setting the bar quite low. It's entertaining for what it is but massively overrated in my opinion. And, as a book reader, I'm often annoyed at how much the showrunners cater to the dudebro demographic and horny teenage boys in the audience.
LOL. I know all the killing has sent poor Philip into a depression, but I do believe that murdering Pastor Tim is just the pick-me-up he needs. Probably worth ten of those EST seminars.
He was annoying enough to be entirely too existent.