He didn't kill himself, but he let himself die (bleed out) from the gunshot wound(s). Same thing basically — he couldn't live with that guilt.
He didn't kill himself, but he let himself die (bleed out) from the gunshot wound(s). Same thing basically — he couldn't live with that guilt.
You left out raping and murdering Daughter's mother. But ugh, no, just no. Narcisse was intolerable and everybody was hoping he'd get killed right in the face by Richard. Only reason I'm glad he survived is so that he can suffer an even more satisfying death next season… hopefully involving Chalky and his daddy's…
Agreed 100%. Not very perceptive of the reviewer to misread that scene so badly.
Absolutely agree — it was the second half of the second season that for me made this show go from oh this is well done and kinda interesting to must-watch.
Plus it was under that boardwalk where he and Julia first got together. Probably the happiest he ever was, post-war anyway. I think that's why he (or rather, the show's writers)chose that spot for him to bleed out.
He didn't notice that the lights had changed.
Agreed — and a great example of that was Duncan Jones's movie Moon, not science fantasy but in my opinion perhaps the best "science fiction" movie made in the last 10 years.
^ That's what I remember too, flying used to be sooo different. I'm sure part of it is rose-colored nostalgia, but my earliest memories from the early 70's include people dressing up in "church clothes" to travel. Flying was relatively rare and a big deal — of course you park a couple hundred yards from where the…
According to my son Walt Jr., er, Flynn:
Breakfast* > Breaking Bad > Mad Men
*As long as it's not that "vegetarian bacon" shit.
Depends on how many years ahead they're going to jump. If it really is going to be 1976 (which I highly doubt), then yes, by all means!
Better Call Saul!
Absolutely agree, I LOL'ed hard. It's kind of difficult to keep track at first because Saul is talking so fast, but Tuco just keeps suggesting one hilariously sick "sentence" after another, often going, as you note, in the "wrong direction."
I've been pleasantly surprised so far. The negotiation scene between Saul and "Judge" (or "King") Tuco was brilliant, with Tuco continually coming up with-ever-more hilariously gruesome alternative "sentences" ("I'll cut their legs off!").
It's a minor quibble, but the only part of the montage that didn't work for…
Yes, exactly, noticed that too — kid was probably another, unindicted, perpetrator. Thought he was gonna show up on the tape
The thing I remember from the London McD's, back in the day, is that they actually had the audacity to charge you (and some silly amount too, like 6 pence) for every packet of ketchup. That, sir, is an outrage!
Well, he was a sniper, remember, so he had to kill them one at a time. Not like he was dropping bombs and knocking off dozens at a time.
Well, he was a sniper, remember, so he had to kill them one at a time. Not like he was dropping bombs and knocking off dozens at a time.
Agreed, of all the things that bugged me about the movie versions, that one is right up there. In the 2nd movie, PJ bungled what is, in the book, a great scene of Gandalf essentially tricking Beorn into accepting and helping the dwarves at his home (I guess we just didn't have time for that because we need a 15…
Barad-dur and Orthanc.
Life is like a box of chocolates… it doesn't last as long for fat people.