proustable
Proustable
proustable

Sting is writing a musical heading to Broadway, though.

Very well, I thought. And Pattinson was quite good.

Yep.

I found that there was a lot more pathos in the seance scene than you did. The first half was so mournful ("Will you name a mountain after me?") and the batshit insanity of the whole thing was beautifully sold by Eva Green (I love when she gets to go full tilt-boogie into madness), Dalton and Carney (their reaction

Holy fuck. Just holy fuck. Beautiful on a level television rarely aspires. Powerful on a level few can achieve. The combination of tragedy and horror this show had was practically alchemic. That was just mesmerizing.

An extraordinary show operating at the height of it's powers. Beautiful, disturbing and intense.

Can you give an example of the queer baiting that didn't add to the show in your mind?

I KNOW!!!!! Alessandra Stanley was such a poor critic and she was their lead.

Heh. I love season six (and seven, frankly), but those two are among my least favourite episodes.

Let me watch some more and I'll get back to you. Hopefully five seasons more.

"He's genuinely"

I fucking love this show so fucking much. I fistpumped when Freddie was revealed. I was terrified that my love of the show would cause me to rationalize something away that it realistically couldn't make it over (Will killing Freddie) because it was so good (and even though I knew she wasn't dead, I wasn't truly

Oh, I know. I don't think the act was murder. But the way the whole thing was created was done to make it seem like action, not reaction.

He didn't shoot. He put his gun aside and killed him with his hands.

Overall, I suspect this episode will look a LOT better when it's made clear how it fits within the larger design. And since I believe I know where it fits, I really liked it.

"This is my becoming. And yours."
"This is my design"

Yeah, he's not faking it. He's harnessing it for his own aims with Hannibal. That's what makes it so brilliant for the show to do. Will's putting on a performance for Hannibal - repeatedly talking about his attempt to kill him (trying to kill in general), dressing in a younger/more subservient manner, talking about

That is a great book.

If Dillahunt were to get a role in Hannibal, I might actually die from happiness, because that would be awesome.

This episode was devastating. So weighty, so emotionally lacerating and crushing. Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell were remarkable, but so was Holly Taylor. This season might go down as the best the show will do.