He’s 51 and stopped coloring his hair. That’s about it.
He’s 51 and stopped coloring his hair. That’s about it.
Norm MacDonald looks around the room, “Man, am I glad I’m dead!”
If McKinnon had just done the song as herself, it probably would have seemed powerful and poignant, but her doing it in character as Hilary was so weird.
Al is in the trailer in multiple clips as a record executive that signs Weird Al. He’s heavily involved with it.
Same. Every other character is in a position that I don’t need to see more of (Tyrion, Bran, etc.) but Jon and Tormund living and developing a new free society up north could be interesting.
I get that to a point. I think the last interaction we saw with Mike and Gus in BCS was well-done. He knows he’s just a hired hand at this point, will do whatever Gus asks because you can’t just “get out” of that life unless you’re dead or in prison. I think we see more of his humanity later on, when he starts to take…
I don’t get the sense that Kim using her non-expired Bar License card to gain access to a prisoner is some slippery slope con that will send her down a dark path of being unethical again. She wanted to see the man she loved one last time before he lived out the rest of his life in prison. I think she’s still redeemed…
Oh right, during the confession he did try to bail.
I thought Harrington had become an incredibly compelling actor around Season 3 of GoT and carried it through the rest of the show. I don’t really see how much of a story there is left to tell about slightly older Jon Snow living in self-imposed exile North of the now-unfrozen beyond-the-wall territory, but if it means…
I found it interesting that the chronology of those scenes wasn’t even backwards, but we start in the middle with Mike in the desert, then we move ahead to Walt in the vacuum shop basement, then back to the beginning with Chuck. Mike and Walt seem to think Jimmy is only about money and scheming and don’t really value…
If you’ve seen any of Jonathan Banks’ interviews with castmates from BB and BCS, he almost always gets emotional. You can see how much this world has meant to him. I thought that was a great last scene for Mike Ehrmantrout.
Mike was ready to quit the work for Gus altogether a few times. He always had a conscience. Remember when he went on benders and was getting in fights and got stabbed and almost died after the delivery driver was killed? After that, Gus convinced Mike that he needed him because they were in a war and he needed a…
I’m pretty sure Kim confessing to destroying Howard’s reputation and getting him killed and then living in exile and eventually convincing Jimmy to turn himself in, all while putting her legal skills to good use as a volunteer at a law center, is a pretty good indicator she’s on the path to redemption. Sure, she might…
Exactly. After thinking about Mike, Walt and Chuck, and realizing he was “always this way,” and never able to be fully honest with himself, he finally came clean and admitted to all of his regrets, and was ready to accept the consequences for them because it was the right thing to do. Kim had already done the same for…
Marie did call Skyler in the BB finale to inform her that people knew Walt was back in ABQ. We hear her leaving a message on the answering machine as the camera pans in and reveals Walt to already be in Skyler’s home. I assume they remain in contact, but Skyler probably didn’t feel the need to face Saul given that she…
He didn’t try to bail, he got Saul a 7-year deal that Saul sabotaged on his own. If anything, Bill will be more reputable for the type of Goodman clients.
When you consider that the feds think Pinkman is in Mexico and likely won’t face justice, and White was dead when they found him, there was nobody left to pay for or answer to Heisenberg’s crimes. Goodman was the only one left, but the fact that he still managed to work himself down to a 7 year sentence shows how…
Yes. The first season seems like it was trying very hard to be a PRESTIGE TV SHOW on AMC, and while it’s enjoyable, I think it gets much better as the show goes on and the character grow and develop.
Points!
I’d never heard “Roblox” uttered in a scripted TV series until this episode and yes, I can absolutely relate.