I respect that. I think the degree to which character deaths affect me has more to do with my feelings for the character themselves than their death's proximity to the last character's.
I respect that. I think the degree to which character deaths affect me has more to do with my feelings for the character themselves than their death's proximity to the last character's.
I upvoted just for the Beth comment. I wasn't nearly as articulate but I thought the exact same thing!
I had the same feeling about the 500 miles in 1 minute. If they'd done a better job of not making the journey the story and the destination always the season finale, the time-jump might have gone over better. It felt disjointed to me as well. Thanks for mentioning it.
I think that's exactly what Noah did. He totally left that door open when he went to find Rick and Co. Just the fact that he went into his house when he should have waited until Rick, Michonne and Glenn came back shows he has the reasoning skills of a sheltered adolescent. Noah is like season 1-3 Carl -just stupid,…
Yeah, I think either Michonne or Tara killed him.
I know.
As someone mentioned around here somewhere, you can't burn a body to ashes in a conventional fire - it doesn't get hot enough. I think in a pyre, a body would have to burn for hours to be completely reduced to ash. They didn't have the time. And I think they actually indicated that after they burned him they ended up…
I thought Walton Goggins played that scene so well. He's one hell of an actor. His face totally read as "appropriately humbled" aka a little scared.
Re: Sam Elliott- I'm glad I'm not the only one.
More like Flowers in the Red Keep.
Ew, that's gross!
I totally, totally agree with you in the real world. But in Westeros, Aegon Targaryen was married to his sisters, Rhaenys and Visenya remember?
Do you really think so though? (I guess you wouldn't have said it, if you didn't right?). I really don't think you know any more than you did before, if you read all five books.
That's what I've thought since Book 3. I feel like GRRM laid the groundwork for that pretty clearly. If he punks out now because too many people have guessed it and "he doesn't outline his novels", I'm gonna be pissed.
We don't know that the bags ever got to the landfill. They put all the bags into one dumpster under an overpass or near a tunnel or something. Might have been a spot where the trash doesn't get collected often or where the homeless go through it before it ever gets to the landfill. If that's the case, a dumpster diver…
Yeah, but all into the same dumpster because Connor was losing it by that point and called "enough". Wes tried to remind him they'd agreed (as probably instructed by Annalise) to take the bags to the landfill but Connor refused and they were in his truck.
I didn't cry but I did want to smack Patrick. This season, whenever Richie and Patrick are in the same room together I hold my breath. I'm such a sucker.
It was huge. Just a little before my time as a viewer but I remember it being on and people talking about it. Wasn't it a book too?
Yeah, I've been saying Bonnie killed Lilah for a while now too. It threw me off when they showed that Annalise was in on his death though. My problem now is more that ethically, the Keating Five have no legs to stand on if Sam didn't do it. If he didn't kill Lilah then they barged into that house (following that idiot…
Yeah, that was Kayla's error. They did burn it. What they didn't do was dispose of the remains properly. Connor was cracking up by that point and he decided they should just dump all the bags of Sam into the same underpass dumpster instead of taking them to the city landfill as instructed.