disqusxe5ufdi5uh--disqus
Zensa
disqusxe5ufdi5uh--disqus

Maybe. But who could Dylan have told in law enforcement who would've taken the time to believe him, a soldier in the town marijuana wars (Norma herself mocked Dylan with that)? Not the deputy sheriff in series 1 (who Norma was having an affair with) nor Romero (who already was onto Norman practically from jump and

How can Dylan deserve any blame? He's the first person who knew (and said) that Norman wasn't right and no one listened to him. Watching Dylan go through pics of his two families (one complete without him and resented his presence, the other with him happy and included…and necessary) just broke my heart. All night,

You read my mind.

#TeamDylemma

This is an extraordinarily honest comment that I completely agree with. I can't go f-t-b with any of theirs, either. It doesn't take away from their legacy, but your observation is on point.

Yes, but I've never met a Brit who says 'mate' eight times in 44 minutes. (American recently moved to Wirral from London).

And the fact that the opening sequence says, "NORTHERN ENGLAND," and he speaks with a Midlands/Northern accent, perhaps? :)

Ohhhh, alright - because I'm like, 'you can't be serious.' From production to casting to dialogue, Gotham surpassed Constantine on every level.

Wait: 'Best network drama pilot of the season.' Gotham's pilot was ***far*** better.

Can't agree with you more, I don't understand the B+ rating.

"The best network drama pilot of the season?" Writing was stilted, cliched, and broad; you could do a drinking game on the number of times Constantine said, 'mate;' the Liv actress was a bit meh; and it seemed patched together. Aside from SOA's Pope and Justified's Dickie Bennett as 'a-ha' moments, I don't see the

"Wonewy and sad and awone…"

You're right: Sutter is chumming True Blood this season, isn't he?

VERY droll!!!