I hear you. Wasnt trying to come off as antagonistic. Was a round about way of responing to some of the other posters in here too...not sure why I decided to single your post out.
Nice hook HBP. We cool.
I hear you. Wasnt trying to come off as antagonistic. Was a round about way of responing to some of the other posters in here too...not sure why I decided to single your post out.
And I've go tell you that the way they've handled the transition from 1995 to 2002 is impeccable. There's a clear difference in the look. We've got flip cellphones now. The colors pop in a different way. The cars that populate the city look true to the time, so too does the dress. I can't give this show enough credit for how it's been doing this.
The ties they wear are what stands out to me, spot on.This show is crazy. There's a certain kind of intensity that is just simmering throughout the episodes. Marty is a perpetual cheat who has been upgraded from crazy pussy to crazy ass, and you're just pleading with the show to not let him make the same mistake again and again. The we see people lying through their teeth in the most convincing way possible, having INTENSE sex with each other, shouting at each other, flipping the bird at their partner, breaking tail lights in fights, and it manages to top itself each time. My nerves are frayed, no joke.
And I've go tell you that the way they've handled the transition from 1995 to 2002 is impeccable. There's a clear difference in the look. We've got flip cellphones now. The colors pop in a different way. The cars that populate the city look true to the time, so too does the dress. I can't give this show enough credit for how it's been doing this.
Really not a fan of the beth storyline
I did laugh a little when the Segways appeared. It was too time-establishing for me.
The ties they wear are what stands out to me, spot on.
So why did he have the Tampons?
ThisI think Maggie's a great character who's stuck with a really shitty husband.
Of course he is. Even he says he won't just opt out because its his programming. A man has his needs, he's not a saint or bastion of morality. He's just really honest with himself.Which brought Rust back to the ground for us. For all his talk of enlightenment and metaphysical, he is just like any other guy with a functioning dick. I initially thought that when this moment would come, he would not succumb to it because he always kinda looked down upon people and their miserable lives playing whatever games called life, probably coming from an "above it all" mentality to boot.
I agree with what you're saying. It's Maggie's fault completely. But Rust could have handled the situation better instead of immediately going at it like a jackrabbit.
Rust is a prophet
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BtQ_4WzTCXw
Can't wait to bring my next date to my unfurnished, creepy ass apartment chock full of pictures of dead people and thorn figures everywhere.
Oh, totally forgot about this moment for a second. "If you ever get the opportunity, you should kill yourself." That was crazy.
Music listingsAnyone have a link to the song that played at the end of episode 6?
How many episodes are left?
The show is about masculinity, thematically. It is a show about guys (and how guys treat women like shit.) The women aren't "temptation" - the scene today with the girl he knew a decade ago sort of put an exclamation mark on that. The problem is the guys, not the girls. To tone it down would be to miss the point.
I was wondering about that as well. Maybe it was a casserole with lays chips as a baked topping?What was up with the crunchy pasta? I didn't see any veggies in that bite.
Biggest mystery of the episode for me.
I was wondering about that as well. Maybe it was a casserole with lays chips as a baked topping?
Looked like there was ground beef, noodle and a crunchy top.
So what do you peeps think?was on the video Rust showed Marty
Don't know if this was posted already, but this is my speculation:
-Marty's daughter was abused as a kid by this group/cult/ring.
Explains:
- The male dolls around the naked barbie doll.
- The spiral drawing in the house, she saw one of the tattoos.
- Her darker personality vs. the younger daughter who seems absolutely normal, even though they essentially had the same upbringing. (A little Naive here, I know people can be different)
- Her desire to try a threesome with those boys.
Somethings up with Maggie I think or maybe even Marty's whole family(lets not forget his father in law). If you saw the Ep 7 preview you knowRust shows Marty something he definitely does not want to see, one or both of his daughters getting raped/molested maybe?
Sucks that here is only two episodes to go, show is really good so far.
2 week wait ffs![]()
2 week wait? Next episode is March 2, which is over one week.2 week wait ffs![]()
So we finally come to the end of Act 2. That was pretty good stuff, and I love how the show continues to focus far more on the characters and who they are, rather than just the "case". In fact, almost nothing happened this week in terms of building on the case meaningfully but goddamn Rust and Marty are so compelling. I'm glad they're going to be together again for the final Act, and that last shot of the broken light at the back of Rust's truck was a pretty great idea thematically.
Sadly, Shea Whigham continues to ruin scenes for me again. It's really not his fault I think, but it's unfortunate. I can't unsee Eli. It's even worse here when he's down on his luck now and reduced to an alcoholic. The entire scene between him and Rust felt like a weird True Detective/Boardwalk Empire crossover where Rust is questioning Eli about bad things Nucky has been doing or covering up. Lol.
Another thing that's bothering me a little is that I'm starting to dislike the way that women are portrayed on the show. It's obvious they're being written as examples of the consequences of what men in authority can do to others. That's fine. But as characters it's starting to feel a little too obvious that the story is written by a guy who thinks very much like a guy and is writing a story about guys. Every notable female character on the show is either used as a form of temptation or a commentary on how bad men treat women and sometimes the price men pay when they wrong "their" women. It's one part of the hard boiled masculine narrative which I think would benefit from being toned down or balanced out in a more meaningful way.
But it's not temptation. Marty wholeheartedly does not truly give a fuck about his wife or kids other to have them as decorations around the house. (At least, in 1995-2002.) He's not being tempted, he's just deciding to say "f it, I'm tired of doing what I'm supposed to, I'm going to do what I want." Marty is a shitty person who treats women like objects. This isn't being done in a Breaking Bad/Sopranos way where it's masquerading as power fantasy/wish fulfillment to a segment of the audience. (Although, yeah, the tits are being used to keep the asses in the seats.) It's being done in a "this guy is a self-centered lecherous hypocrite way." And we spend half of or time on the show with him, forcing us to confront this behavior head-on without blinking. When you hear about abusive relationships/domestic violence, the principal character is almost always the victim. The abused party. Here, we're getting inside the head of the abuser. It's not pretty, but it's making its point loud and clear.When a character exists for no reason other than to show the bad decisions that a man can make when presented with an option to transgress, that is temptation. The problem is not with the girls or the guys. The problem to me is that it is increasingly clear that the women exists on the show only to show how bad the men can be. I know that's the point. But it's also a pretty shallow way of making that point for a show this intelligently written and with that much attention to character development.
But really, Maggie's the only major female role in this series. In fact, she's the only other point of view we get outside of Rust's and Marty's. I think her character's arc was fair. Neglected wife, cheating husband, eventually had enough and hit her husband where she knew it would hurt most. Plus she had temptation of her own... Fucking Rust wasn't completely out of the blue for her. I always got the feeling she was attracted to him. Especially when she was hurt by his "it's not supposed to work" monologue at the diner -- hoping he was different. I'd even say the temptation was equal, if not stronger on her side in this thing.When a character exists for no reason other than to show the bad decisions that a man can make when presented with an option to transgress, that is temptation. The problem is not with the girls or the guys. The problem to me is that it is increasingly clear that the women exists on the show only to show how bad the men can be. I know that's the point. But it's also a pretty shallow way of making that point for a show this intelligently written and with that much attention to character development.
oh woops YAYWhat do you mean? The next episode is still next sunday.
EDIT: Showtime is taking the week off, if that's what you're thinking.
Love the little things in the show like Tuttle's tie color.
I KNEW he was coming back since that episode. He got a wierd level of attention by Marty, plus he was sticking up for Tuttle and his task force.This guy has way too much close up screen time for someone who we don't even know about. Can't wait for him to get fucked in the last two episodes:
So we finally come to the end of Act 2. That was pretty good stuff, and I love how the show continues to focus far more on the characters and who they are, rather than just the "case". In fact, almost nothing happened this week in terms of building on the case meaningfully but goddamn Rust and Marty are so compelling. I'm glad they're going to be together again for the final Act, and that last shot of the broken light at the back of Rust's truck was a pretty great idea thematically.
Sadly, Shea Whigham continues to ruin scenes for me again. It's really not his fault I think, but it's unfortunate. I can't unsee Eli. It's even worse here when he's down on his luck now and reduced to an alcoholic. The entire scene between him and Rust felt like a weird True Detective/Boardwalk Empire crossover where Rust is questioning Eli about bad things Nucky has been doing or covering up. Lol.
Another thing that's bothering me a little is that I'm starting to dislike the way that women are portrayed on the show. It's obvious they're being written as examples of the consequences of what men in authority can do to others. That's fine. But as characters it's starting to feel a little too obvious that the story is written by a guy who thinks very much like a guy and is writing a story about guys. Every notable female character on the show is either used as a form of temptation or a commentary on how bad men treat women and sometimes the price men pay when they wrong "their" women. It's one part of the hard boiled masculine narrative which I think would benefit from being toned down or balanced out in a more meaningful way.
I don't know about you guys, but I nearly chubbed up twice during this episode. Once when Beth was riding that lucky mofo Marty and the other time when Rust cuffed Marty's wife ass. The fucking in this show is so primal. Great episode by the way. Nice change of pace.