erikrohmer--disqus
Erik Rohmer
erikrohmer--disqus

I took it to mean that someone is tweaking with them, rather than the hosts changing themselves. How would they do that?

I see Lewis as a pretty realistic reaction of experiencing Tandy for the first time…and compared to all the others, he is way more patient. Something about him reminds me of a Lost character, maybe it's the way he entered "Others" style and seems like his character could turn any direction.

Because the title character does seem useless and thoroughly annoying in this episode. I actually liked all the other characters except for Dirk this episode. Maybe it's also that I watched the original series which had a more compelling Dirk and tighter structures.

Or some people find the narrative arcs the most compelling strength of the show as it has insights and mirrors into our reality that other media doesnt. Whereas some of the experimental material and misdirections feels amateur, while some payoff. It's uneven, but no one can say that the show doesn't take risks.

I agree s4 and 5 were my favorite too, S6 did seem a little….Lost…..but was thrilling nonetheless. I don't think Mr Robot can possibly come that close to Lost on ambition, and the references on Lost were much cooler imo….where as lost referenced an obscure Flannery o Conner book (all that rises must converge, which

That seems pretty clear. Although I like all the surreal elements being introduced, it's watching how scarily close the show seems to be mirroring real life that gets to me. There was a lot of talk the last couple weeks about eliminating anything over the $100 bill….well actually the number keeps going down, now they

Agreed. It still doesn't quite explain just how far she fell for Naz and excuse how she jeapordizes her career, but it does make sense coming from Second or Third generation South Asian community. You can't blame people for not understanding the connection.

Kids their age, coming from South Asia, don't make distinctions like their parents about religion as much. We go through similar things, so Pakistani, Indian, Bangledeshi, Bhutanese, Nepali, I think we share a kinship based on how we are all perceived and lumped together by people in the US. A pretty keen observation

People fail to think about how close her relationship is to Box and the fact that he was unsure about Naz's guilt since the beginning. When he walked out at precisely the moment she said that the police had no other suspects, it clearly rattled her. As a seasoned prosecutor only other seasoned professionals command

His life was ruined, but also he did go free after making some of the stupidest decisions ever. If he can kick his habits he may be made stronger by this.

I can't possibly see how any British actors could come close to the acting on this version.

The reason I thought it wouldn't be the financial advisor is because that would make it obvious in a different way…the way so many procedurals try to pick the not obvious choice. We thought this show was different and that's what the reviewer and many people are complaining about.

You're arguing the subtleties of politically correct language with someone named Pootietang.

Not to mention potentially her blood in traces in his car or elsewhere.

Except for maybe his semen in her bed.

Just checking if I should read your comment in the voice of Al Pacino.

If he gets exonerated, then what a great second season that would make, showing what his life is like after getting out of Riker (and presumably still having to do Freddy's bidding).

Agreed, depending on the ending I could almost see a second season possibility, the way they've established and fleshed out such strong characters.

She's also professionally green, emotionally vulnerable, and obviously has another side to her as we see in that drinking scene with Stone. Probably sleep deprived as well as under so much pressure.

That's pretty standard ethics