javierdepascual--disqus
Javier de Pascual
javierdepascual--disqus

Yeah, I think the shock Kevin has here, although subtle and definitely not that well performed by Enrique Murciano, is that Marco WAS playing this emotionally all along. When he first started digging for more clues and different angles, he did it for allegiance for the Rayburn family; then he started doing it being

Dude, in Banshee there are plenty of men that are so worse plot devices than this one. She helped through her relationship with Calvin and Kurt to bring out the conflict. And it's portrayed as it is, a fucking horrible act and nothing else.

I disagree. I think the time jump disoriented a lot of people but both the FBI agent and the cult are getting so little screen time, and the nazi brothers' fewd definitely comes from last season and we're already seeing it plays a major part on what's going to unravel in these final episodes.

What I think is that everything is mapping nicely for an awesome couple of final episodes. Things will start unraveling really shortly, and probably because of budget they didn't think it was worth to spend more on fights during these clearly considered set-up episodes.

It's an amazing idea, specially considering how cheap VR with a smartphone costs a little more than 20 bucks if you know your stuff.

To me, Jimmy painting the walls brown is a subtle metaphor of how he is turning everything to shit slowly and methodically.

Is Jimmy a dick? Of course he is, to Chuck, definitely. To his last boss, sure. Now, of what we've seen so far, is Howard a dick? Of course not. As I've said on the review thread, Howard sees so clearly the bigger picture he seems like if he's at odds with himself. He thought pushing Kim that hard would make her

Actually, this isn't the first time Howard is portrayed as a good guy. Remember the time in Season 1 when Howard was rooting for Jimmy to improve his situation in HHM but was sabotaged by Chuck? He's a "bigger picture" kind of guy because his job demands him to. His character is shown as "do what you have to do to get

I like how you roll, lady.

Two things I BEGGED characters of this show to say while they were interacting with each other:

I actually CAN imagine it, but the show would have needed to film an impressive scene in which Daryl thinks he's outmaneuvered this Dwight guy because BLAH BLAH BLAH he saw on the tracks they left or whatever, leading Daryl to think he's having the upper hand and ACTUALLY SHOW that this Dwight is smart. What we've

I think this was the best season so far and it definitely embraced the all-camp spirit of the show and just rolled with it. I'm specifically baffled by the two different tones during the season: the season 3 fallout had a more serious drama approach, and after Frank Underwood recovered from the liver gunshot it seemed

I think this episode wants to have a weird pace in order to throw audience expectations out. As Ash himself says about his other Ash: "same shit, different day". We've seen this already on AoD, why would we need more than what we already saw to end this threat?

Watch the episode again and you'll hear the pop pop… just in a different form. Very subtle but I couldn't stop laughing.

I don't know guys, every one of you that seem pissed off by Siobhan's death accusing it of lazy writing, look to the trajectory of the season until now… I don't think Banshee stands being accused of lazy at all. But they seem to LOVE these familiar tropes and clichés of storytelling, and I sure love them too. Having

Bacon hair.

SoA was never meant to be serious drama. I think we're past the point to acknowledge that. We all know this show is just shit thrown to the fan and watching it stain everybody else but the main characters again and again. I, for one, I'm glad this kind of show exists. I miss the times when TV was allowed to be pulpy