Jimmy might have planned to look up Kim once his trail cooled. Perhaps she even lives in Nebraska.
Jimmy might have planned to look up Kim once his trail cooled. Perhaps she even lives in Nebraska.
I don't think it's just that for Jimmy. He clearly *wants* and *needs* the colour and the life of making deals. He couldn't stand Davis & Main, it was too straight. It was success in everyone else's eyes and torture for him.
But I think we see that too, in the grimness of Jimmy's face. He's seeing this about his survival now. This is his only chance at having any kind of a life he wants.
That does seem like great possible foreshadowing for Kim and Jimmy's future.
Watching this *again*. Third time today.
The smugness in Chuck's "Have I answered your questions to your satisfaction?"
And then the ugliness of the hatred he reveals, at least partly in the anger that Jimmy had successfully tricked him…just so strong. Even the judges look away.
I don't see that as a problem with this review. I do see it as part of the greatness of this show.
I think this is still consistent in terms of the story, because this is how Chuck has had it. He's objected to having phones near him even if they are completely turned off.
The great flip side too is, Kim would tell you if you were wrong and exactly how wrong you were. While having compassion the whole time.
Somewhat undercut by all the fantastic performances around him, the guy who's playing Howard is doing such a great job as well. He is all about the pragmatics of every situation, with neither malice nor much benevolence. He also does have a bit of humanity, in his own previously shown need for Kim to know he wasn't…
McKean is just *killing* it. As is everyone. But that chill when he just states that Jimmy is going to pay for it….oh man. Just bringing to life in that moment how seemingly smaller events in life can have behind them the full venom of a murder.
I have a suspicion we're going to find out a bit more on what's led to Chuck's slow-motion breakdown too. Some guilt that he can't quite deal with, about how he compromised himself. His house was already darkening even when his wife was there, so it probably dates before that. I'll just say I expect it's to do with…
That's the excuse of where it starts, and they both probably believe it. But of course it goes past that too - Chuck is emotionally in it for vengeance, and Jimmy is in it to get over. As his own kind of revenge, for a world that doesn't give him the freewheeling freedom he loves.
Fargo is great, Legion is great, Mr. Robot is great, Veep is great, Rick and Morty is great; this is a fine time for great television. But I do think this is the best. This show has just been superb right out of the gate.
Yes. Chuck is using moral rules to hurt someone else, with the excuse of it being for the greater good.
HOly fuck, that's real???
"Apparently, he decided clever stuff like “kudos to your dirty hole, you fucking jackoff cunt-face jazzy wondergirl” wasn’t quite up to the standards of a civilized society."
Yeeaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhh!
Agree to disagree re: first place? : ) But no problems with Converge in my book.
"C" clearly should be Clutch. Come on now.
MRAs. Doing more damage to men than their fever-dreams of feminists will ever have the chance.