Best editing job ever with Kim's car accident. Perfect timing. She's exhausted, stressed, anxious, going over her presentation; she finally settles on the correct wording, relaxes, muses, BANG!
Best editing job ever with Kim's car accident. Perfect timing. She's exhausted, stressed, anxious, going over her presentation; she finally settles on the correct wording, relaxes, muses, BANG!
Correct.
Also there's a slim chance that the police could tie the murder to the Salamancas, which would give Hector Salamanca some trouble, which would make Mike happy.
I'm trying to figure out how the Hector Salamanca story will go. As it stands, Hector could simply have another heart episode and take Nacho's fake pills, have a stroke and wind up in a wheelchair. I just know it's going to go down in a much more exciting way than that, and I'm dying to find out what the writers have…
Jimmy is also playing "Smoke on the Water" wrong, which is a classic music-store-guitarist tradition. Richie Blackmore is the only guitarist who is allowed to play the correct notes. Kudos to the production team for accuracy.
Having taken a few "whore's baths" myself, I can state that you definitely want to spend as little time un-clothed as possible. For obvious reasons.
(My gang always called them "Hobo Baths." Same thing. If you haven't taken your daily bath in a gas station men's room at least once in your life, you're not living life…
The heart wants what the heart wants.
As soon as Jimmy pulls the battery trick on Chuck, the prosecutor immediately says that Chuck's "mental illness" is not the issue. Up to that point, no one in Chuck's sphere had used that term. They had all played along and tip-toed around the issue. As soon as Jimmy does the work to get it out in the open, there's no…
I was concerned about the battery, too, at first. However, the thing to remember is that Chuck's illness is psychological. Chuck believes the battery hurts him, so it does.
Chuck is, unfortunately, just weak. Not poorly-written or anything, but his character has a self-imposed disability, he's fussy, he's hurting our hero Jimmy with whiny, jealous complaints and schemes. Again, there's nothing poorly written or acted about Chuck, but he's just a downer all the time.
This is nothing but good. A well-done episode, well-written, dramatic, believeable. Brings the Jimmy/Chuck story to a (temporary) conclusion. I loved it.
Not only that, but a whole episode with Jimmy, Chuck, Kim and Howard means we're likely to get lots of Mike and Gus next week. What could be better?
Tom Hanks?
Josh Brolin did a good Dubya.
Right. That's kind of my point. If Atticus had looked like a movie star, a child would have easily seen him as special. I thought of Atticus more as an Abraham Lincoln type. An ugly man with a reedy voice whose extraordinary qualities were not so easily seen on the sufrace.
The guy in the rubber suit as Godzilla.
I may be the only person on earth who didn't like Gregory Peck as Atticus Finch. I had read the book many times before I ever got around to seeing the movie, and the Atticus I pictured was not as handsome as Peck.
Much of the book is Scout and Jem slowly realizing what a special person Atticus is. To them, Atticus is…
Walter:
Benny, if you don't loan me that money. I'll…
Sarah Paulson killed it again. In the scene where Marcia and Chris are standing outside her hotel room, you could see the whole scene in her expression: from "fuck me" to "fuck you" in two seconds.
This is turning out to be a very good show, and Sarah Paulson kills it in this episode. I really hope she wins the case.
Three years late to the party, but I just had to say this is a great piece of writing. Hope you're keeping up the good work, Steven.
Three years late to the party, but I just had to say this is a great piece of writing. Hope you're keeping up the good work, Steven.