Tatiana Maslany as Bradley, because then she could also play - concurrently:
Tatiana Maslany as Bradley, because then she could also play - concurrently:
Nothing says "coitus interruptus" like being stabbed to death!
Norma: Norman would never hurt me, I'm his Mother!
*Mother/Norman pulls knives on Norma*
Norma: Perhaps I misjudged this situation…
Norma's denial: No, I can handle this and everything is going to be just fine.
Norman/Mother: Everything is going to be just fine, Mother.
Bradley: "I really am dead."
Viewers: "Sometimes dead is bettah."
See, Paulonius42, this post is how you successfully nerd! Sadly, myself - I'm only a dork although I do claim a bit of learned-nerd, being a librarian.
To crib from @nknotz above, Norma can't [won't] see red flags because with rose-colored glasses on, everything is red.
No, they run away together to Colorado where Dylan - who turns out to be a weed savant - develops a strain that cures CF (and MD and IBS and back acne) and they live together in bliss on a little plot of land by a clear mountain lake and Emma writes Caldecott-winning children's books about a plucky girl detective who…
I'll be rooting for Emma to push her in, if Bradley tries to rekindle with Dylan.
That's inception-level incest…
"To make this show logically sinc up with the first movie, all of these characters must be gone except Norman" - thanks for that, I had forgotten, and so now the pit takes on even more meaning as that's what Norman's life will be one day - empty, useless, and dark. And if he thinks he's lonely now…
For me, it's her face - there's something tighter in how she uses her face as Allison, probably most noticeably in the mouth, especially when she smiles, as Maslany's infectious, toothy grin is absent.
I'm so sorry for your loss.
I felt some sadness for Mark, as he became disillusioned with whatever was going on with his military project, then sought meaning in religion*, but was sorely disappointed by Henrik. At least with Gracie he's no longer alone.
Out of all of the Leda clones, Allison is the only one I keep forgetting is Maslany - she seems to be a totally different actor. I'm not sure why, but I'm always surprised and impressed with the characterization when I remember.
Depends on how many corpses you need to dispose of, or if you're into crafts like knitting or torturing with glue guns; if so, wife her immediately.
As a woman I am interested in the themes about female agency, especially for young women [or even girls - remember Kira's bone-marrow procedure decision] but I'm excited they're exploring self-determination/autonomy with the Castor clones given that a societal institution effectively owns these men, who are expected…
Given what happened in the finale in the scene at EST with Sandra, your last sentence is eerily prescient, so good read on that aspect of the Philip character.
Raylan didn't.
Perhaps if the Castor clones were raised only in a military environment, there would be less personality differentiation? And if they were trained as SuperSoldiers that might have deranged them, since people cannot thrive if identity is constrained to one role (here desire for agency and autonomy comes into play).
Metaphor for total, utter emotional exhaustion? The weight of their feelings causing collapse? I've done that before, in moments of great stress - it seems the bed or chair won't support your burden and the ground is the only solid safe place…