dudeeee, that's last look totally telling you it's gonna be hell for what coming next!!
I wanted to binge watch this season as I do with all Netflix shows but these episodes just feel to real and I time in between to digest them.
Michael Mando deserves at least a nomination for this season... damn, what a great job - physically and mentally
Watching Jimmy bring ruin to an elderly woman's social life for his own gain was flat out disgusting.
It was the first time I've ever felt genuinely disgusted with him. All the other lies and schemes - even his bar scams as shitty as they were - didn't feel as repulsive to watch as seeing him manipulate those women like that.
Pride, anger and desperation have stripped him of his moral limits. If he ever had any they're gone now. He's not Jimmy anymore, he's Saul Goodman.
the one eyed boy aged like +10years while the Rhaenyra's kids looked like they aged only 3years. the passage of time is so wildly different between characters, makes it feel so inconsistent
Desert scene reminded me Breaking Bad :)
I don’t get why Rhaenyra had a kid with that loser, let alone 3
Also why does Alicent have so much power? The king needs to put her in her place
Hearing Werner's last words to his wife, I mean watching him yelling at her to save her life is literally broke my heart.. and when Mike shot Werner.. I just can't stop thinking his wife's emotional state when she learn Werner is dead..
Every episode is great, and this one was not the exception. Saul is such a complex character and yet so normal. I like the way it is played by Bob Odenkirk because it looks genuine, every gesture he does looks genuine. And this episode was especially beautiful because after all the crap and sacrifices he still gets to help his brother. The final scene was awesome.
The first two seasons are awesome, the third not bad but the last 2 are ugly
Wednesday is entertaining casual watching, but not something I'm likely to re-watch. Maybe my hopes were too high with all the big names involved. I was expecting an Addams Family show with a lot of Tim Burton influence but we got a CW teenage drama with Addams Family characters and barely any Burton influence. Jenna Ortega is carrying that show because it is mediocre. It would have been better as a movie. It's very much a Netflix generic show, nothing spectacular. There are definitely good parts to it, but cannot be compared to the classics.
As I said, Jenna Ortega is note perfect as Wednesday. She captured the essence of what the character was all about. However, I found her a bit too "the new girl who's not like the other girls in those YA movies/shows", which annoyed me a lot. A school full of 'outcasts' and everyone but Wednesday acts like your regular high schooler she looks down at. And it feels like the writing started to slip on the second half because Wednesday just going around accusing people made her seem kind of dumb.
Catherine Zeta Jones and Luis Guzman have zero chemistry, and I'm sorry but Luis Guzmán just does not have charm as Gomez. The family, minus Wednesday, is miscast to be fair. Pugsley was there as decoration. Morticia is uninteresting. Genuinely shocking how little effort was put in for the supporting characters vs Wednesday, I have to imagine it was the script and direction. The male characters are especially bland, I got so tired of the back and forth with Xavier and Tyler. It felt like almost all the relationships between characters were told to us and not shown to us. Everything had to happen for the plot but it effected character's development.
A lot of the dialogue lands so flat, "Why do u look so pale?", "Wednesday always looks half dead" - like I get what they're trying to do but it's so on the nose, it doesn't seem organic.
All in all, Wednesday was OK for light watching but I wouldn't set up your expectations too high, it definitely gets better as the show goes on which is a good sign but it doesn't feel so much like an 'Addams' show, and it lacks the screwball charm of the originals. The Addams family as an ensemble unapologetically juxtaposed against normal society seems to work better than yet another gothy, supernatural high school drama. I just feel the need to say that for those who may have been looking for something darker in tone.
At this point I don't even blame Henry Cavill for leaving. He deserves so much better.
So Geralt broke Rience's hands but then decided to walk past him and not kill him in that instant?!?! He could have just swung his sword and finish him off on his way back to the portal!
When that guy pull out the knife I gasped, perfectly knowing that Mike's life was not in danger. That's a good show.
Mental note: Always answer your mom's calls
This is the first episode that I didn't like very much. Older Rhaenyra (Emma D'Arcy) is nothing like the younger one. It's like we've been introduced to a totally new character.
But the worst thing about the episode to me was Larys. So far he is like a mix of Ramsay and Littlefinger, but without the good writing. He just seems like a total stereotypical villain.
Another nice episode.
I really liked the idea of it (getting blackmailed and not knowing what your blackmailer actually wants) and the plot twist at the end was great! I honestly didn't expect that. By now I'm used to paying attention and I usually have a lot of theories and try to find subtle clues, but somehow I didn't see that one coming. I was so naive and thought the main character was really just masturbating. I just started to get skeptical when he even agreed to rob a bank, but I still couldn't figure out what's exactly going on.
By the way, if you rewatch the beginning you might notice the scene with the little girl which seems creepy in retrospect. But at that point I really thought it was to show that he's just a nice young guy.
Well done. Another plot twist I haven't seen coming like that. And of course the acting was incredible again :)
Although I could see Ben and Devi ending up together, I felt so happy to see it happening. Plus, how could I get so emotional in the end? I literally started crying out of nowhere when she finally made it to the beach. Definitely needed this light, funny show right now.
Going into this episode, I thought there was no way it would be satisfying. Turns out Teen Wolf still had one last trick left up its sleeve. I'm actually emotional. Stiles and Derek coming back made it feel like the good old days. There were some genuinely funny moments here thanks to them. I also liked the way this episode was framed as a story that Scott was telling Alec. That was an interesting choice. And Gerard finally got what he deserved, from his own daughter no less. I loved Kate way back when she was Allison's cool aunt, then kind of hated her, now I once again like her for tearing that old asshole to shreds. And Jennifer! I shipped her and Derek so fucking hard in season 3. Before she turned out to be a disgusting old hag, that is. Also, Scott and Malia were CUTE. And that last shot of the pack walking together felt like the perfect ending. Overall, much better than I expected.
Of course, it had its flaws as well: The Anuk-Ite was defeated way too quickly (although I half-expected them to kill it with a fucking mirror, so props to them for, you know, not doing that). And Monroe didn't die, which is a sin. But then again, I kind of like the implication that there are still more battles to fight and that our characters still have a mission that will last beyond the show.
To sum up: as far as series finales go, this wasn't half bad. It was the right moment for Teen Wolf to end. My memories of this show will be pretty good. Sure, they dropped characters like hot potatoes without explanation (anyone remember Isaac? Danny? Cora?), some storylines were weak, the lighting got progressively worse over the years (daylight? What is daylight?), season 4 was mostly forgettable, season 5 was messy as fuck (it seemed to me like they were trying to be super clever and dark and whatnot, but the final product was just incomprehensible and unsatisfying), season 6B was rushed and introduced a plethora of one-dimensional characters no one asked for that took the focus away from our pack. But even those seasons had their moments and for the most part, this show was entertaining with some good humor, suspense, action, a healthy dose of teenage romance and The Feels™, and a lovely cast of talented people whom I wish all the best and hope to see in new successful projects soon.
P.S. To the people who keep complaining about That Gay Shit™: this might be a shock to you, but gay people aren't something Hollywood made up. Gay people are real. We exist, we live our lives, fall in love, pay taxes, buy groceries, watch TV. If two guys kissing offends you so much, just skip the scene. No one's forcing you to watch. But somewhere out there is a teenage boy who will see Mason and Corey or Jackson and Ethan, and he will be thrilled. He will feel validated, he will know that there's nothing wrong with him, that he can have a happy life, no matter what his conservative Christian parents say. Those characters are for him, not for you. Don't worry, you'll still have your bajillion straight male leads. No one's taking them away from you.
This show was totally absurd and I loved it. I thought I had it figured out by episode 6, but I was so wrong and I love it.
I thought the best friend did it. She always showed up unexpected, and I was wondering if she might have been obsessed with the main character. She knew Anna disliked Lisa the day she met her, she knew Anna painted, she suggested that Neil was single now that Lisa was dead, broke her out of prison for $500k, offered to help her escape, etc. All of those things made me think she was willing to kill for her.
They had Gideon trapped in theatre guy's head. All they had to do was walk out and remove the key.
this episode is so special. fuck nyah. stan nalini. the continued presence of grief in devi’s life is so realistic and important. i was crying. devi’s character is the best character in a tv show you can’t change my mind. also i love how eleanor lived out her fantasy dreams like no matter how ridiculous that is so fucking healthy.
I’m so happy for Ben he really deserves a good life
is this american crime story or something
Idk who thought it was a good idea to basically make three out of six episodes of the final season center around tommy's kid who we barely know but it wasn't a good idea. I'm also not optimistic about them wrapping this up in a satisfying manner with only two episodes remaining but i'd love to be proven wrong.
This episode felt very much like a series finale, rather than just a season finale. I do feel like the show has now run it's course and if this was the end, it was a good way to go out