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Spaz_Handz
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I don't know the first thing about Bridge but does it have anything to do with Bridge.

Holy shit. They could literally cut to black after showing it and I would not be displeased at the abrupt ending.

We were able to see how some of the spokes within their machinations came to be, or, simply reflected them as a human with their own set of defined (im)moral code.

I'm not a career-criminal or anything, but my immediate thought when the goons left was "go and get her phone". If he's leaving her for dead/assumed she was dead then it's going to look mighty suspicious when they trace her last incoming call back to Sy. They also have his tire tracks and his car is on file for the

I think the crux of his reliance on Maurice had more to do with the fact that he had the upper hand via the parole violation—not an earnest faith in his criminal ability.

i think this review was actually written in C++

I recently watched "Night Will Fall" which is similarly, if not more psychologically unnerving and horrific in terms of the footage and context of what we've long forgotten about the atrocities of WWII.

Stop nerding Zod's cinematic dreams up with your dirty, science!

plottwist: that's not his hand!

But Elijah's wall tumble when they stepped out of the apartment after Dill arrived.

I refuse to believe that Spike Lee has the insight to coin anything. Not to be offensive, but he always piggybacks on issues that have long predated his socio-political stances.

It was Jessa who said "RIP" when leaving Hannah's apartment, Just for clarification.

I mean, her storyline this episode was a flash in the pan compared to Elijiah's but I also agree, I don't think that interaction at the pawn shop really sunk in with her. Also, "your'e the liar" was a little over the top if you ask me; even in the case of Marnie

I mean, they didn't call her name during the "switch" so it's entirely plausible that she was an actual, physical entity.

"Men only exist to buy us jeans" killed me.

same tho

I always think about the scene of them walking out of UPS or whatever after sending Hannah's boxes to Iowa. The scene felt so true and to the core of them as a unit. Adam dressed practically, Hannah looking like she was wearing whatever she picked up off the floor, the contrast in their sizes. Maybe partly to do with

Desi is funny in the same way that Marnie is an ugly, shallow person and Jessa is a Grade A narcissist; they're all over the top stereotypes of the people we have known and run into at one point or another in our lives.

Even look at Hannah's relationship with her parents. I think it has always been obvious that she favors her father, if nothing more than because he is easier to emotionally manipulate in order to produce a desired means. Since Tad's coming out she has been relatively, and I think uncommonly [for most real life kids]