sambra--disqus
Sambra
sambra--disqus

While I generally tend to think (like everybody else) that anything Amantha does is great, that line came across perhaps too bluntly to me, like the sort of thing internet athiests fire at every chance they get. I'm not sure that Amantha would be thinking any other way, but for whatever reason, it broke the quiet

Why does he look so much older than both Daniel and Amantha? Bad genes?

I certainly see a lot of parallels between Friday Night Lights and Rectify, starting with its authentic, natural portrayal of a tightly-knit Southern small town, and reaching into its bittersweet, sublime mixture of struggle, guilt, and hope. I think that's one characteristic that's set both shows apart from their

RON PAUL 2016!!!

Agreed that Hannibal needed to get going by the time he walked away, but the guy takes his sweet time, walking at a leisurely pace, taking a moment to savor the rain. If he really wanted Crawford dead, it would've taken him ten seconds to pop into the pantry for another stabbing.

The way I see it is this - Hannibal is nothing if not always in control, and never more so than when he's got a knife in his hands. He brings the term "surgical precision" to a new level. Additionally, the show's worked hard to give him a supernatural level of perception, of understanding exactly what the human body

On what charges though? It would have been completely pointless to arrest Hannibal then. The whole plan was to get Hannibal to try to murder Jack; even if they could've managed that, the conviction was going to be a long shot given that the investigation was compromised. I get that Jack had fallen a long way in a

So I'm shocked like everyone else, but I have a question / issue that I don't see address anywhere else. What was Jack's plan, exactly, when he entered Hannibal's kitchen? He draws his gun on Hannibal unprovoked, so it seemed like he was planning on straight up murdering him. Which, given Jack's role as the perennial