Or crazy people slam their own heads into stoves.
Or crazy people slam their own heads into stoves.
The story of how the Garvey's rented house burned down is the previous episode. Remember how John goes to the palm reader con man and mentions he'll have to build another exit or fire escape, sth. like that, if he wants to rent out part of the house? And then John burns down that house?
See you in seven days!
I feel that repeating a criticism is valid when the subject shows little indication of improvement. That's not having nothing to say, that's saying that the show keeps messing up in a certain way.
I've seen mentions of the cheap-looking visuals of the show in many professional reviews and fan-oriented online discussions. Sure there are people who don't care about it or who don't see it, but it's definitely there.
But the show does look bad, there's no question about it. That's a relevant point to keep making since the show's visuals barely improved since the pilot.
Nah, faithfulness to the comics isn't a positive. Different media require different looks. What works on the page often looks idiotic on screen.
I thought Lindsay was more calculating in that scene. She wasn't expecting them to get back together, she was sabotaging his online "relationship".
But that's not true though, is it? Jimmy not only lets Edgar live with him, he also gets into it with the VA bureaucrat on Edgar's behalf.
Nah, I was just riffing.
"anything between two people is mutual"
Tell that to my stalker :/
No, I mean by the time of the finale, whatever bond there was had been eroded by Boyd, and for Raylan it had become an obsession, not something mutual.
If she had foresight she wouldn't have cut off her leg. Like, duh. :-P
It could also suggest that she's preparing for the arrival of a guest, one that never shows up.
I like hearing creators' thoughts about their output, but I don't find them more definitive than what actually ended up on screen/on the page.
The show's logic practically demands it.
Yes, a huge stretch. Like, I dunno, a human.
Oh, I took that scene at the end of Justified completely the opposite way. Yes, there had been a bond due to their time digging coal together, but Boyd had completely eroded it with his heinous actions by the time of the finale. Raylan only pretended that there was still a bond so that he could use it to convince Boyd…
No, during.
That's why you make the tech public, so that people can research it, incorporate it into security, politics, and daily life. The longer it stays restricted, the less chance people have at coming up with countermeasures, adjustments, and advancements.