He did say that a partner died, and he didn't know his name, so unless there's a Jedi truth in there somewhere, it's ruled out.
He did say that a partner died, and he didn't know his name, so unless there's a Jedi truth in there somewhere, it's ruled out.
Sure, but is it drawing in viewers? Are people purchasing HBO to watch it? They don't have ad space to sell, so if they're not picking up enough new subscribers, it could be scrapped.
I think there's a difference between theories like, "How is Walt going to get himself out of this mess?" and "Allow me to connect disparate pieces of far flung minutiae in order to concoct a theory that in no way reflects how TV writers think."
To paraphrase Jurassic Park, they've got all the costs of a period show AND a scifi show.
Thank you. An unfolding plot is not the same thing as a mystery.
And if they only printed more Babe Ruth rookie cards, they'd be easy to get too.
Okay, but by that same logic, why not just instead watch Ex Machina, or Blade Runner, or AI, or 2001, or The Matrix, or god help us, I, Robot?
It's true, mainstream Hollywood sorely lacks Christ allegories.
You're assuming these plot points were invented by the reviewer?
It was a visitor area until the raptors took over.
I think it's just to indicate which people are artificial. Humans swat them away (like that tourist's wife right before the first bot malfunctions). And, of course, to show that the artificial characters are on a souped-up version of the Three Laws.
Yeah you gotta write a pretty big check to get a pop culture website to run an article about a show that puts its segments on youtube for free.
By any chance are you a woman, or gay, or Muslim?
How else would you tell people to be on the lookout for a wanted criminal?
Those who live in glass castles shouldn't assassinate… stuff.
There's always money in the banana stand.
The cane from Citizen Kane!
The fact that you call it that tells me you're not ready.
One of my all-time favorite jokes:
Neither did he.