They have no ideas of their own.
They have no ideas of their own.
I liked this episode, because it was funny, "Murmur, that's an interesting name", and I believe Ben Kingsley knows exactly who he is dealing with and is trying desperately to not offend them. Also, it shows how insulated Hollywood is from other things, and also in a way how the Mob is insulated. I didn't know about…
I liked this episode, because it was funny, "Murmur, that's an interesting name", and I believe Ben Kingsley knows exactly who he is dealing with and is trying desperately to not offend them. Also, it shows how insulated Hollywood is from other things, and also in a way how the Mob is insulated. I didn't know about…
You forget that the life they chose is for keeps, and they can't get out. Also that Chris slept with his cousins girlfriend, that they could have killed him instead of sending him to rehab, and that he implies to JT that he can rat on them and go into witness protection. I can argue that Tony with all his flaws, had…
You forget that the life they chose is for keeps, and they can't get out. Also that Chris slept with his cousins girlfriend, that they could have killed him instead of sending him to rehab, and that he implies to JT that he can rat on them and go into witness protection. I can argue that Tony with all his flaws, had…
Well, I know she felt bad, but you can't be a lawyer and feel bad if you win a case. I think she doesn't feel worthy of Mesa Verde, because Jimmy got it for her by duplicity. So she didn't earn it. But Chuck was being an ass.
Why did she take that extra case? Is it because she feels she didn't really earn the Mesa Verde case?
She sort of faded out. Lack of sleep and thinking of the case, she wasn't paying attention.
She wasn't concentrating because she overworked.
It shows how sensitive Christopher is, and that how he really doesn't want to do the mob life. Deep down, he wants something else.
I don't think he got this episode at all. It is fraught with frustration, laziness, and mostly entitlement. I could go on but I wish the descriptions would delve a little more into the real reasons these characters do what they do.
I don't see Hank as a copy of Vic on "The Shield". Hank is a typical big mouth guy, but he's just as smart as Walter is, but we don't realize it because he is cocky and loud. His PTSD from the trauma will only get worse as we know. Vic had good points, but really he let the horror of what he saw everyday change him.
I think Phil is just enraged at everything, and the gay thing to him is really embarrassing and horrible. Also he's pissed at other stuff. Its just a way to feel powerful because he feels marginalized. His wife is hilarious…the DaVinci code remark, Father says,"there's nothing gay about hell" and My tailor is going…
I think Phil is just enraged at everything, and the gay thing to him is really embarrassing and horrible. Also he's pissed at other stuff. Its just a way to feel powerful because he feels marginalized. His wife is hilarious…the DaVinci code remark, Father says,"there's nothing gay about hell" and My tailor is going…
Latina Day Parade…little dude.
Or "The Haves and Have Nots..
Paulie blames his mother for lying to him, and now he feels that he doesn't know who he is. It hints at the gulf between him and his siblings, he's very different from them, could explain why she favored him and got him out of trouble? . He feels betrayed, but ultimately in later episodes he reconciles with his…