Ah, that explains why I love this show!
Ah, that explains why I love this show!
I was trying to remember if it was something Raylan actually did. It's definitely his style.
At least you could wrap your mind around Boon's motivations. Todd's soulless actions creeped me out way more.
That smile on Raylan's face in the last scene showed so much genuine affection for Boyd. It was a pleasure to see both men enjoying the company of the one person who understands them best.
When I saw Skye's blast wave turn that tree into splinters and Tunguska all the ones beyond that, I was fully expecting Bobbi and Kirk to be dead with their innards turned to jelly. One very selective blast wave, that.
Yeah, it was probably something that minor otherwise why have him wearing something so glaringly clean at all?
She has a more intimate relationship with Bishop than anyone else on the show, even if it is based on intimidation. Doesn't he ever let her go the hell home after bringing his kid home from school? They may as well ride off into the sunset together.
I was more invested in whether or not Father Gabriel's pure-white sweatshirt would get any splash back from two very messy deaths than I was in any part of his story arc. As much as they sweat over the smallest details on this show, I guess the unmarked shirt was a metaphor for…something? His surface purity? The…
Post-apocalyptic dubstep: Aiden deserved to die.
Well, his drunk dad probably won't notice.
I imagined Carol showing up at his house with the promised batch of cookies, him being forced to eat one by his mom to 'show his gratitude' and him immediately running behind the house to throw up after she lets him go outside to play.
One of my favorite movies is "The Quiet Earth", a New Zealand '80s movie about a man who wakes up one morning to find everyone gone, as if they'd all just blinked out of existence. He goes a little nuts for a while, living in a huge mansion and populating it with mannequins, stuffed animals and life-sized cardboard…
The entire cast was on Late Night with Seth Myers and they ended the show with Chris Pratt playing 5,000 Candles in the Wind on a guitar while the cast sang along, swaying and waving lighters. It was perfect.
Was not surprised at all that she didn't admonish the children for being "rude" in not answering Duffy and just giving him flat stares as replies to his question. No good would have come from forcing that interaction!
He's being played perfectly as someone who almost-but-not-quite remembers how sharp his mind used to be.
Every time she tells him that she's going to the salon early, I expect him to drop by there to surprise her and find out she hasn't been near the place in a week.
Just the name "Constable Bob" sounds like a PeeWee's Playhouse character!
I thought she was setting Ava up to be caught stealing and have the jeweler let her go with a warning just to show her how fast she could turn Ava's life back to shit if she wanted to. Was so relieved when she switched out the bracelets herself instead.
I replay his scenes in "Solaris" many times because his quirky mannerisms seem like impossible-to-script performance art after a while.
I keep thinking that his bare lip isn't there at all, like my mind has made it into a perpetual blind spot.