Geez some people seem agitated by this season. I'm loving it. Great characters, shocking turns. Love that there are still three episodes. It doesn't feel rushed, unlike a lot of other TV these days.
The dialogue between Jennifer Jason Leigh and Jon Hamm was outstanding. Lorraine is something else. I love to hate her and I hate to love her. Still enjoying this season very much .
"I'm not sure I can negotiate with a man named after a breakfast pastry."
10/10. Peak. This might be one of the best comic book TV finales or even episodes ever. Maybe this is recency bias but I don’t really care, this straight up floored me. Incredible.
I’ll say it again, the growth of Loki throughout this series has been absolutely phenomenal. To go from a selfish villain to a selfless hero has been an epic journey. This is MARVEL in all its glory!
Loki is the most well-developed character in the MCU. This ending was truly worthy of the character!:green_heart:
I see what you're doing, show. Having Loki become a master of time travel who turns toward the camera while emphasizing the line "it's WHO". I see, and I am amused. I like how this not only explores who our main cast were before their lives in the TVA, but it's a meta examination of how you can't just recapture the allure of the past without it literally unraveling, and also how the absurd impossibility of fiction is just as essential to science fiction as the science. A really inventive and rich episode. And so many jet skis.
I never thought that Marvel would dare to do a scene like that, where Rabona and Miss Minutes murder the former AVT agents in cold blood, woww... it was too strong a scene.
Dare I say… best episode of Loki yet? Definitely the best this season. Everything about it was PERFECT.
On one episode of "Band of Brothers" I once wrote that no show or documentary can ever relate what it means to be in battle. But this episode was tense, it was frantic and you can get an idea what these men went through. And you really have to be amazed that they did it again and again.
The airbattle scenes in this show are through the roof. It's not all about the action, though. We are reaching a point now where losses are becoming more meaningful for the viewer.
"Rhinoceros is a play by Eugène Ionesco, written in 1959. Over the course of three acts, the inhabitants of a small, provincial French town turn into rhinoceroses; ultimately the only human who does not succumb to this mass metamorphosis is the central character. The play is often read as a response and criticism to the sudden upsurge of Fascism and Nazism during the events preceding World War II."
In the opening episode, I thought the feature song (Children of the Sun - Billy Thorpe) was actually (Locomotive Breath - Jethro Tull) .. Similar opening tune. Well, I was pleastanly surprised to finally hear Locomotive Breath - Jethro Tull in this episode!!
"Before the Law is a parable contained in the novel The Trial (German: Der Prozess) by Franz Kafka. A man from the country seeks the law and wishes to gain entry to the law through an open doorway, but the doorkeeper tells the man that he cannot go through."
Stellar season premiere! This is going to be another fantastic season of Fargo.
Amazing. This show proves that we are living the golden age of television. Perfection.
nolite te bastardes carborundorum
"Don't let the bastards grind you down"