Well, to quote Victor, he had acquaintances, not friends.
Well, to quote Victor, he had acquaintances, not friends.
Dorian, with his white suit and slicked back hair, was starting to look way too much like Jared Leto.
No. That hair, like Sir Malcolm's beard, was glorious. It's a Samson thing. It was their power.
My only issue with the Lily scene was her lack of concern over getting shot. Even if she can't die, wouldn't she still need to patch that up? It's not like she had a painting to magically fix her wounds like Dorian.
Seemed like he was going to start picking stuff up and needed both hands. My best "he's not totally dumb" guess.
Favorite touch: The picture of Vinci's sleazebag mayor with George W. Bush was that was behind him in almost every shot.
The problem was it took a whole episode to find a body and start the investigation. I suspected this episode would get things moving, and it did.
"You're money! You're so money that you must have pissed someone off. What did you do to piss someone off? Something money?"
Just realized a "clue:" The blood in Caspere's second house was fresh, it hadn't dried yet. We know from episode one that he was yanked from his main home. Something recently happened in the side home.
Can Paul get his own Richard Harrow? Please? A Black Mountain buddy with even more issues?
That was my initial reaction, but the second shot that close up, even with those two options, seemed fatal.
This was the episode that got my interest for the season. The first episode was slow burn building toward the finding of the corpse (as opposed to the immediacy of "here's the corpse, go!" at the start of season one). The set up for the investigations within investigations (and, even if it's much later, Velcoro's…
And then they start performing Putting on the Ritz.
Dalton and Green deserve every award possible.
The classic Wolfman film was set in Wales, like the Del Toro one, and I think in the Edwardian era. The setting wasn't well defined, but it was definitely Wales.
Bite, yes. Slash, no. That's why Roper didn't wolf out.
Remember when Satan "played" Malcolm and Ethan? He's compelling.
I broke out laughing once they got a rhythm going.
The witches will never get their hands on it! Good triumphs!
Ethan's not Lawrence Talbot's ancestor, he's this show's version of Lawrence Talbot. Ethan is Ethan Lawrence Talbot, according to Rusk. He's a Victorian era Wolfman, like both Universal versions (and specifically in a post-Ripper one like Del Toro's). The one difference is that he's not a Welshman who spent much of…