Already done. Not by me, but, well, you know …….
Already done. Not by me, but, well, you know …….
It says that you are a sociopath who wants to watch little kids getting blown blown to smithereens, and you were disappointed when those little SOB's didn't explode into a big, cool fireball, tossing the bus into the air, almost in slow-mo. It's understandable.
"The meeting between Matt and Meg at the end of this episode is an issue of opposites meeting like Job and anti-Job." Or the Man in Black and Jacob.
I guess it depends on what he does about Evie and the girls and whatever the hell is going to happen. But most likely - yes he is.
"Thirteen takes place over what might be the longest period of time compressed into a single Leftovers episode. It begins before the Sudden Departure and carries Meg through to the present…." This is only true if one does not consider the episode that began with the prehistoric woman experiencing an earthquake in…
I get it. So what's up with the disappearance of Evie and her friends? Why is John such a badass? Did Matt really rape his wife? Why do some of the birds live and some die when Erika digs 'em up? What was that scene with Meg and Tom about? What's up with Laurie and Tom? What's up with Jill? There a lots more…
I watch shows that tell stories. Stories have a beginning, a middle and and end. A story can be told backward or forward, or even jump around, as this one has sometimes, but it has to have some direction. It's like if one is reading a novel, and after 10 or 12 chapters that tells a linear story something random…
Well, I guess you didn't become Prom King for nothing!
I went back, and I had not watched closely enough, and accept that the events are separate, at least chronologically, if not supernaturally, which is now firmly in play after this episode. This is assuming that the surreal episode that we just watched was actually supernatural and not some hallucinatory manifestation…
How predictably nonspecific of you. Art is subjective, and there IS no "correct" way to interpret it. That is an uniformed and intentionally provocative statement, since you pretend that you know what the "correct" way is, when you actually cannot.
I did, and though I was wrong that it was the same event, I still wonder why we get Kevin "rising from the dead" twice in the same season. All the Virgil 'magic" stuff and Kevin's "experience" in hunting and killing Patti did not answer any questions, it just opened up a whole new can of worms. We, the viewers have no…
I stand corrected I re-watched both scenes side by side, .I made an erroneous assumption that it was the same event, thinking that it was just slightly altered, my imagination getting the best of me following a totally bizarre "dream" scenario in which Kevin is an international assassin and who "kills" "Patti" twice…
Respectfully, I get all that - the logical, factual explanation. But how much of what Virgil (who blew his brains out) says can Kevin/we believe - on either "side"? Why does Kevin sleepwalk, and why can't he remember what happened the night of Evie's disappearance, but can experience and remember such a vivid and…
Maybe I didn't watch closely enough, but how are you sure about that? If it is, indeed, a different time and place in which Kevin crawls out of the ground like a zombie out of a grave, then WTH? A similarly bizarre and random occurrence happening to the central character in the same manner in the same story seems…
How presumptuous of you to point that out. What, exactly, is the correct way to consume dramatic narration? Not just a TV show, a novel, a movie, paintings, drawings, sculptures, or an infinite numbers of artistic expression - any art form.. I submit that there is no prescribed manner in which to consume artistic…
But what is the significance of the numbers? 63500? It could have been any number, but it was specific. What does it mean?
"Now she wants to watch the entire season to see how we got to that point." Tell her not to hold her breath. Hint: the entire hour was devoted to "explaining" how Kevin came to crawl out of that mud hole the night Evie and her friends disappeared. I didn't notice a cinderblock tied to him tonight, so no clarity…
Thanks for filling me in on that. If only I knew to what you are referring. "World-building" vs. "Clues necessary to solve a mystery"? You say,"SOME VIEWERS are confusing … with clues necessary to 'solve a mystery'". What caused me to comment in the first place is that there are hundreds of "confused" viewers…
I felt the same way when I saw that link.
It is disturbing to me that the comparisons with LOST are now reaching, "Is Kevin the "Jack" of this show? OMG! Through the Looking Glass yet again! It's not just me.