Bruises by Gene Loves Jezebel
Song name was listed here, I believe.
Bruises by Gene Loves Jezebel
All of that makes sense, but why wouldn't the Tuttles have just killed Errol? For all the effort that they (probably) put in to cover it all up, why not have him killed when the heat came back on?
Yep, this is my thoughts too. Why didn't they just kill him? So you have a point. This could contradict the theory that Errol was acting alone. But I just find it strange that Errol would be this leader to these families. He was a young child, and presumably they had been doing these rituals long before him. His own father scarred his face. And I can't get my head around why, they would go to great lengths to cover this up. Then it begs the question, why would they display Lange? Would they really want to bring that kind of exposure to their activities out in the open?
Exactly. No one stops him because they live vicariously through him.The implication isn't that Errol is a renegade but that he is part of the family and is allowed to act out their dark fantasies and they can take part or have complete denial of it, depending on which is convenient. He's probably not the head, but he is in a position of power because he's the one who is able to act on these darker impulses they have.
Possibly. But I just mean in terms of age, you would have to figure that the Tuttles and Childress's have been doing these rituals long before Errol was even born. And at one point, Errol was a kid, who's father scarred him. And I would assume Errol as hew grew up, would participate in these rituals with his family.
Have you ever painted a house before? I take it you haven't, because paint get's fucking everywhere.
HBO Go blew chunks tonight. I was forced to find... other means to watch the finale.
It's strongly implied that Audrey was victimized due to a number of unusual behaviors she exhibits that parallel the case. But we see at the end that she's fought through it and survived whatever internal or external forces. She's survived and is back on track, paralleling Rust's journey out of nihilism at the end of the episode.
Yeah, I mean his dead scarred him, so obviously the father didn't care that much about him. Why not just kill him when the cops start investigating?
The implication isn't that Errol is a renegade but that he is part of the family and is allowed to act out their dark fantasies and they can take part or have complete denial of it, depending on which is convenient. He's probably not the head, but he is in a position of power because he's the one who is able to act on these darker impulses they have.
Song name was listed here, I believe.
This is what Soundhound returned me, but after listening back it doesn't sound like it.Song name was listed here, I believe.
Unless I'm missing something, that's not it. Shazam has "Andrew Weathers - Countless Rooftops" listed, but I can't find that track.This is what Soundhound returned me, but after listening back it doesn't sound like it.
It's not obvious when viewing for the first time, no, But once you see the links together parallelling other aspects of the case (the spiral, the cult arrangement, her gothic clothing) it cannot be an accident, and the writer has said repeatedly that they are not trying to trick us.I don't know if strongly implied is the way I would describe it.
Unlikely. They were taking pains to cover up the Lake Charles case.That's interesting. Do you think the family approved of him displaying the body?
lol I don't think there has ever been a song on any tv show as hard to find as this one. What obscure ass shit did they pull this from.Unless I'm missing something, that's not it. Shazam has "Andrew Weathers - Countless Rooftops" listed, but I can't find that track.
That's interesting. Do you think the family approved of him displaying the body?
It's not obvious when viewing for the first time, no, But once you see the links together parallelling other aspects of the case (the spiral, the cult arrangement, her gothic clothing) it cannot be an accident, and the writer has said repeatedly that they are not trying to trick us.
lol I don't think there has ever been a song on any tv show as hard to find as this one. What obscure ass shit did they pull this from.
It's not obvious when viewing for the first time, no, But once you see the links together parallelling other aspects of the case (the spiral, the cult arrangement, her gothic clothing) it cannot be an accident, and the writer has said repeatedly that they are not trying to trick us.
lol I don't think there has ever been a song on any tv show as hard to find as this one. What obscure ass shit did they pull this from.
The hallucinations have been obvious. This is not Twin Peaks.What if it's all direct messages to the viewer though? Like showing hints everywhere we look. Symbols, markings, hallucinations, people. It may have nothing to do with her but rather the clues spread throughout the show for those watching.
i wouldn't say it reduced it at allI was slightly bummed out that they decided to reduce Rust's character to "Near death experience made me believe in stuff"...but otherwise, still an amazing show, and an amazing ending.
what for?At the very least Rust definitely should have died.
I used SoundHound at the end and got nothing
don't speak such things!Would be badass if the song was created just for the show and they never reveal what it is.
I don't think it's an issue of them approving or not. He's very large and very strong and very violent. They need him to satiate their violent dark impulses, and since he is unhinged enough to do it, and smart enough to keep a low profile, they're probably afraid of him. I think Tuttle committed suicide not necessarily out of fear of getting blackmailed but out of fear of Errol finding out. Even the sister, who was sleeping with Errol was extraordinarily afraid of him and watching him lift Rust up like that implies almost superhuman strength.
Given the themes of masculinity, I almost see Rust taking a blind eye to Marty's infidelity, the Cops taking a blind eye to the unusual case behavior, and the Tuttles covering up Errol's exponentially higher body count as variations on the same theme of people being allowed to do bad things because good men do nothing. (Well, not-quite-as-evil men in the third case.)Interesting take. Appreciate that perspective. I guess I just find it weird that, these families have been doing this all along for centuries, and then they get afraid of a boy in their family that grows up. But if we are going with the angle that he's evil incarnate (which is what, thematically he was - with Carcosa etc.), then what you are saying makes sense to me too.
Interesting take. Appreciate that perspective. I guess I just find it weird that, these families have been doing this all along for centuries, and then they get afraid of a boy in their family that grows up. But if we are going with the angle that he's evil incarnate (which is what, thematically he was - with Carcosa etc.), then what you are saying makes sense to me too.
Final track: "The Angry River" - The Hat, Father John Misty, & S. I. Istwa
They just put it up on the iTunes store.
Final track: "The Angry River" - The Hat, Father John Misty, & S. I. Istwa
They just put it up on the iTunes store.
The hallucinations have been obvious. This is not Twin Peaks.
Oh, and the painting on the bedroom that's the mural in the children's psych ward. That's the one the only one that appears to be metaphorical in nature.
Awesome finale. Glad I stayed up haha.
Can someone explain/link me to a post explaining the body in the shed for me please?
I believe that was Errol's father.
an idiotic review
Bruises by Gene Loves Jezebel
People tend to judge the show based on what they want it to be rather than what it is.
Marty re-developing some skills long lost in young pussy and booze.
Are we reading different reviews?just a dumb review. played into internet hopes and didn't have a view of it's own.