Don't agree with the comments here. This is how effed up you get after a rape. Deny, deflect, lie, confusion, hypersexuality, asexuality, shame, lies because of the shame... This is hitting everything and it's so true. I just want to say, please don't judge before you go through the same thing.
how the hell are we hearing AI's thought process? :D so producers are only picking the answer and typing that to chat? yeah im not buying this. cheapest twist.
I like to think of myself as having cognitive functions that generally work okay, but I have to admit that I've been thoroughly stumped by the relative chronology of these last three episodes. Did the two Holiday episodes exist in an alternate universe? Did they time skip ahead? If so, why did the time skip back for this episode? Were the Holiday episodes, in fact, a dream? I know Good Trouble has been doing funky things with chronology since the very beginning, but that's generally been within the confines of single episodes. Someone please explain this thing to me, because apparently I'm too dense to grok what's happened here.
I'm going to miss this show when it's gone. It's been far from flawless, but what it has been, every single episode, is an obvious work of art. This entire series has been created in the service of such a unique artistic vision and has been given more license to hew close to its dictates than really any show that I can call to mind. It's eccentric, sometimes uncomfortably so, and yet for just once in my life that pattern of behavior hasn't been a form of pandering or an appeal to some "lowest common denominator" either. Hats off to the Kings for having the guts to make The Good Fight and the street cred to get CBS to pay for it; hats off to the cast and crew who saw something in it that was worth their time (especially Baranski, McDonald and Lindo, heavyweights all); and hats off to you, my fellow viewers, for congregating in sufficient numbers to let this little experiment persist for six wild and wacky seasons, pandemic notwithstanding—let's hope this final season ends up being the curtain call that we all deserve.
These people are weird. What an awful show,
and yes, I'll watch next week as well.
Can't believe this episode ended with them hugging and absolutely nothing else happened after that.
In all seriousness, I thought we as a society were over killing sapphic characters for shock value, but I guess not. What a disappointing conclusion to a horrible season. Phoebe Waller-Bridge created such a fantastic show and Sandra Oh and Jodie Comer consistently knocked their performances out of the park, and for what? Season 2 was already a letdown, but after that the show just became a parody of itself and it was clear the new showrunners had no idea what to do with these characters. The last 3 minutes of this ep were pure clownery. How groundbreaking to kill off one of the leads and leave the other in anguish. I hope Laura Neal doesn't cut herself on all that edge.
I guess at least Sandra got a Golden Globe, Jodie got an Emmy, and they got to dive tongue first into each other's mouths. Good for them. I hope their next projects treat them better.
At this point Mike Flanagan is like 90% of the reason why I'm still subscribed to Netflix.
sobbing HE CANT KEEP GETTING AWAY WITH IT!!
(by "he" I mean Vince Gilligan and the rest of the cast and crew and by "it" I mean making this show so consistently high quality)
This episode was so misogynist, I know that Rachel was trying to prove a point, but I still felt uncomfortable
This is a pirate rom-com between Stede Bonnet (Rhys Darby) and Blackbeard (Taika Waititi) and it is so absolutely delightful. It takes a few episodes for the pair to come together, but once they do, the show is dynamite. And I am 100% serious when I call it a romance. Thank you David Jenkins and co for one of my new favorite shows!
Starts really good with a very good first season. The second one was ok as well. But after that it goes straight to hot dumpster garbage. They changed the writers or something as after second season it gets progressively bad with a even worse series finale.
I love how they got the actual sons of the actors to play the young versions of the characters.
I am somewhat embarrassed that it wasn't until the last episode that I realized "Verna" is an anagram for "Raven."
10/10
All Gold
" He did you wrong
Freddie, you only
wanted to be loved
by him. You only
ever wanted his approval.
AND IT'S STILL NO
FCUKING EXCUSE"
Now That Was An Epic
Mike Drop.
How much of a bastard
have you got to be to
make the devil want to
personally get it's own
Hands dirty,
Holy Shit Fcuk.
This show is phenomenal
and this episode was
Amazing truly amazing.
(That was a unique
perspective to see it
from that angle).
And now the show Finale
Of
The Fall Of The
House Of Usher
The most satisfying death of them all. What a prick!
And Carla Gugino oozing that creepy charm... Yum!
She gave them all an out but not him. He crossed a line even she couldn't understand. The way he appeared to Roderick as a kid was proper twisted too!
I shudder to think what's going on in that basement!
Loved Elder Madeline and 'Verna' sitting face to face coming to terms. What powerhouses.
Frauderick, that covert psycho, was the worst of the lot, imo. He totally got his just deserts.
How did it take me six episodes to realize that Luke Skywalker is Captain Pike's lawyer?
(I knew who the actors were, I just didn't think about their nerd franchise relevance before.)
9/10
Superb
This episode was
absolutely #Lemon
and I loved every single
second of it,
Once again Flanagan is
knocking it out
the ball park.
The monologue by
Daddy Usher in this
Episode was Epic
it was the best and also
my favourite one to date.
I love how Raven gives
certain people a chance
to walk away before they
pass a certain
point/moment.
Once again another
phenomenal ending
and that smile right at
the end was awesome
it was so evil and naughty
and I loved it.
(I think me and Mike
need to have a serious talk
about the cats in his shows,
not cool Mike lol).
Another Stella episode
ready for the next.
Interesting is Verna often gives her victims a last chance out. Here she repeatedly tells Camille not to go in there.
So, I’m thinking at this point the seven deadly sins are a thing. Lust being Perry, envy being Camille.
"Fuck it, I got mine" was a great last line.
I broke down when his dad finally hugged him, shedding his own shame from the abuse in his past.
wtf did i just watch... 9/10
Everyone seems to want to compare Elementary to Sherlock. Why? They are two entirely different takes in a stream of disparate tv and movie takes that have been going on since Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce hit the screen in 1939. (Lord knows I've had an ongoing argument with my cousins about Jeremy Brett since 1984.) Bollocks! All of it. The fact is, Elementary has become a gem of its own distinct value. A wonderful example of the magic that happens when chemistry bubbles up between two actors/characters and is not limited to them but continues on to a cast that has since, on their own merit, earned their viewer's sincere appreciation for something rather rare: Stories with characters for whom we truly feel something. Well done Elementary. I hate to see the series end.
Oddly captivating, The White Lotus is like a car crash you can't stop staring at. It's not outright entertaining, but something about it is intriguing and gripping on a level I can't fully explain. Looking forward to see where they go with this, every characters backstory is fairly deep and fleshed out considering it's told exclusively through dramedy snippets.
kirk and the girl was kinda creepy
Is just me or Che is a manipulative, selfish awful person?
How they got away with that final line, I don't know.
[PS. If you think this preached 'matriarchy', then you clearly didn't understand it.]
I went for the laughs and left the movie theater with an existential crisis. I loved it <3
This is a frustrating episode. Tom is a complete jackass, and the redemption at the end is not enough to make up for it. It's made worse by the fact that his business failing is completely his fault - as evidenced earlier in the season when they laughed off Ben's help.
The Ben/Andy story is even more frustrating to me, because I very much identify with Ben in this instance. I've been on the receiving end of similar kinds of roommate inconsiderateness, and it's not fun to deal with. Neither Andy nor April apologize for what they did - instead, the show focuses on getting Ben to open up. Which may be a problem, but I completely disagree that it's the main problem in this particular situation. Andy and April should learn to be more considerate.
But, it's a comedy show, and I am over-analyzing things that are being played for laughs.