morbidmatt73
BlueSteeleCage
morbidmatt73

Seeing Superbad in the theater is still the most I’ve ever laughed at anything in my life. I’ve had good laughs since then, but when a TV show really hits a nerve and I start laughing so hard I can’t catch my breath, it reminds me of seeing Superbad for the first time. At moments I wished the movie would stop being

I believe the last couple seasons have been showing this. He is much more generally annoyed by them and more confrontational than he was in the first season.

I love how Mike is so stern and emotionless, but Jonathan Banks is so emotive!

How about a show with Tormund, Jon and Ghost sailing after Arya and getting into hijinks along the way, only for Arya to have to constantly save them?

Upon rewatching the series, adventures of Jon and Tormund would be the only thing I'd want.

Mike was usually a blank slate, reacting the same way whether he won the lottery or his dog died. That made the few times he did get emotional really stand out. That conversation by the water tank was one of those times where he let his guard down.

All the RICO charges were likely the result of Skyer’s statements when she cut her deal. She would likely have had to testify had there been a trial.

I think that he was serious. Jimmy was always like this in a sense. He always had the Slippin’ Jimmy side to him since he was a kid as far as stealing cash from registers and pooping in sunroofs. It’s why Walt reacted with “you were always like this?” and how Mike reacted similarly too.

Covid delayed the filming of this season by nearly two years and Bob suffered a heart attack. They did the best they could given the circumstances. I am just grateful he lived to see the story through to the end. There’s an alternate universe where this script would have never seen its way to picture.

Jimmy doesn’t give serious answers to either Mike or Walter White about his regrets, but it’s important to note he’s the one that initiates the question in the first place. As long as he kept the mask of “Saul” on, he’d never gain the personal growth that he truly, deep down, wanted to seek.

I think Bill will be OK. Representing Saul Goodman will buy him an in with the clientele Saul catered to. He’s going to have more business than he can handle.

How does any of it actually do anything?

What was really great about this episode was Mike’s goodbye to the series which i’m glad we got. That he regretted becoming who he was and recognized that his lifestyle, his corrupt cop life, is what got his son killed. He wishes he could take it all back and and how that connected with his final scene with Papa

If Kim had ever chosen to leave Jimmy because of his red flags, they would have broken up long before the events of the pilot. And Kim’s childhood flashbacks show her behavior in adulthood is likely a result of her wrestling with her mother’s complicity far more than Jimmy’s.

Are you slappy now

The garden gnomes frozen in the market and then starting to run away as soon as they stop looking at them was such a great sight gag. I legit laughed at loud at the one. The night market is a font of delights! 

Laszlo should really have a word with Gizmo about peddling those bullshit Pinocchio lies in his upcoming film.

I hadn’t even seen the recording yet and from the recap, Hell Boy II is exactly what came to mind. Even more of a shout out to Del Toro is the red devil with horns.

Sorry this was a rare miss.... for you, I watched this episode 3 times in a row and laughed uproariously each time, I found all 3 plots quite amusing, and saw Nadia’s quest as the true story. Loved the whole Nandor v Gizmo but felt it was just good fan service ( that didn’t make it any less funny however.) The

Forgot to mention that Aya Cash is another one of those actresses. She was so ridiculously good as Gretchen in Your the Worst that I wondered how come we’ve never seen her before and why wasn’t she getting more roles as well as Emmy nominations for her acting