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 Punisher was fighting to find redemption while Jon Bernthal was fighting for an Emmy Award.
Rick is like 'give me all your stuff so we can fight the bad guys that are forcing others to give up all their stuff'.
I'm kind of disappointed yeah, but this is simply because Marvel fans (myself included) hyped every single frame up so much - we came up with a gazillion of theories every week and expected other Marvel heroes/villains to show up at any moment. This is a show about a woman dealing with loss and having to come to terms with her grief and moving on. This was a perfect wrap up to that story. Yes, it's set in the MCU so there needs to be that element - which there was, with SWORD and Agatha - but no one was owed Fox Quicksilver or a Dr. Strange cameo or the Hex making mutants or Mephisto. We should know there wasn't going to be big reveals and much development of the overall storyline of the MCU when that's destined to happen in the movies.
No matter who you're or how you feel, after watching this show you'll be a different person. It'll touch you in the most profound way and change you. This a brilliant and amazing piece of art that will change the lives of various people for the better. Thank you so much Selena Gomez, Mandy Teefey and everyone involved helping to create this beautiful project.
Bryce needs to die a slow and painful death. I won't settle for less. F*cking piece of subhuman trash.
Elizabeth Olsen in that assistant magician wardrobe was really a sight for the eyes.
Mike and his ingenious little tricks never cease to amaze me.
That final fight scene was better than all the fight scenes in Arrow.
They spent years in a strange country pretending to fit in, in order to do what was best for their home country. Now they’re “home”, but like Philip says it feels strange. And then Elizabeth tells him, in their native language that they’d been forbidden to use, that they’ll get used to it, just like they did all those years ago in America. No shoot outs. No chase scenes. No deaths. Just a man and a woman realizing they just lost everything they loved.
I got acquainted with Michael Mando, for the first time, while playing the video game "Far Cry 3", and since then I been following his career. His scenes in this episode (and throughout the show) keep showing us how talented of an actor he is. I'm hopeful it's this year he finally gets recognized because he's way too underrated.
LIST OF DECEASED PEOPLE IN THIS EPISODE:
Queen Margaery
Lord Mace Tyrell
Loras Tyrell
The High Sparrow
Kevan Lannister, Hand of the King
Lancel Lannister
King Tommen Baratheon
Grand Maester Pycelle
Lord Walder Frey
Did I forget anyone?
I liked Solomon. He reminded me of HAL from Space Odyssey.
Let's recap, DJ Qualls got his head ripped off, Nikki may or may not have met God in a bowling alley, Ray was reincarnated as a cat, Yuri is missing an ear and probably dead, Sy drank some "bad" tea, Gloria's son got socks for Christmas, Varga took a dump, and Emmit is going full Legion.
That was everything I could've ever wanted from an episode of Fargo. Insane tension and violence. Random surrealism. Black humor. A surprising emotional core peeking through. Beautiful cinematography. A hell of an ending.
I think I'm gonna watch it again.
I like how they're trying to make the Sand Snakes more interesting (Rosabell Laurenti Sellers cof* cof*). Cersei, you´re almost there, walk the walk Queen Mother!
The best part is that it isn't even over!
The Bar now has proof that Chuck indeed has it out for his brother (via his meltdown under oath), now Kim and Jimmy can show that Chuck was entrapping him. The Bar believes Chuck has a mental illness, and will likely buy into Jimmy's story. They claim the tape Jimmy destroyed was "evidence" but they made a copy, which is what was destroyed (a copy can't be evidence). Everything points to Chuck getting absolutely destroyed in the next episode or two.
Then that's what I believe will happen: Jimmy wins the Bar hearing. Chuck becomes the subject of the hearing (or a new hearing) due to his mental illness causing poor judgement and trying to entrap his brother to try and make him lose his license. Chuck loses his license. Simultaneously to Chuck losing his license, things are progressing with Kim and Mesa Verde, she has to make a decision, her career or Jimmy. She looks back on the things Jimmy has done and acknowledges that he can only hurt her career in the long run. She cuts ties with Jimmy, and Jimmy goes to check on Chuck to find him dead at home having killed himself.
Saul Goodman is born.
Holy f*ck this show is killing me!!
"I will never hurt you, I'm not going - not now, not ever!" "I love you, Hannah"
"Why didn't you say this to me when I was alive?"
It was so heartbreaking seeing Clay so helpless when he find out, omg... but WTF Jessica you're okay with being raped??? What's the problem with her? I understand she kinda wants to forget it than deal with it still...
I actually thought Frank was gonna kill her right there in the Oval Office.
"Tom... don't cheat on my wife!" He actually said it, speechless! And what a vision, the two "mistresses" having a brief moment. "Hey what do you do here?". Can't get more stranger than this.
Amazing performance by Clay (Dylan Minnette), he's going to be in the discussion for the Emmys.
That's a hell of a deep hole they got there.
It was refreshing to see the season end on a high note instead of another "OMG WTF" cliffhanger.
Username: password
Password: password
G-E-N-I-U-S
Only this show can give you all the answers and still left you wondering if that's really the truth or not.
Good episode but let's forget the last minutes where the Russian just gets to Dante by stealing an ID card. Where was all the security at his door?
It seems like you either hated or loved this series finale. I thought it was just... okay?! Am I allowed to say it was okay?
This episode seems to cement the theory that Delos is replacing humans in the real world (that visit Westworld) by hosts or control units.
Jimmy knows now he only destroyed a copy and not the original tape (it's not evidence per se anymore and can argue with the board he didn't destroy evidence), meanwhile he got photos of Chuck's house (thanks Mike!) and I think he'll try to depict a narrative where Chuck is crazy and a danger to himself and he only tried to help his brother - even going as far as confessing to a crime we didn't do to make Chuck feel better. Basically, he can only be accused of breaking and entering to a point where he can argue wasn't with a malicious intent. Everything said and done, Chuck could potentially be also facing disbarment. Maybe they both lose the privilege to practice law or maybe just one.
Ok, Jake and Rosa going to prison but can we talk about Terry's "extra-curricular" activities the hackers uncovered?
"She's barely twelve" Oh for God's sake!!! Don't say something like that to Frank Castle!