Originally Posted by Discuss Thrower:
Not saying it was awful.
I'm just pissed because
Spoiler!
Pizzotto or however the writer's name is spelled pretty much spelled out that Audrey was abused by Carcosa or someone linked to Carcosa, and it never got resolved.
Further, it seems to me that Maggie tangentially knew about the stuff through her conversation with Marty. "Girls always know [about sex] before boys... because they have to." If Pizzotto was going to put this into the narrative, then it's manipulative not to address it later on.
You should have been involved in this and other threads elsewhere and watching it as it aired. The theories and ideas floating around about the nature of the Carcosa cult and such were awesome.
Then the finale that just sort of negated all the buildup. [Reply]
Originally Posted by NewChief:
You should have been involved in this and other threads elsewhere and watching it as it aired. The theories and ideas floating around about the nature of the Carcosa cult and such were awesome.
Then the finale that just sort of negated all the buildup.
The first four episodes were like talking to a girl online with a supermodel portrait and setting up a date. The final four episodes were like she shows up at your door, you're all excited, and then it turns out it's Roseanne Barr. [Reply]
Originally Posted by NewChief:
You should have been involved in this and other threads elsewhere and watching it as it aired. The theories and ideas floating around about the nature of the Carcosa cult and such were awesome.
Then the finale that just sort of negated all the buildup.
I didn't see it until after the season ended, so I was able to binge watch over the course of three nights, and I'm actually glad that it happened like that.
All of the weekly speculation would have been a blast, but like LOST, would have ultimately aggravated me to the point that I would have nothing but contempt for everyone involved. [Reply]
The transcendent performance of McConaughey coupled with the phenomenal direction of Fukunaga (seen with the tracking shot & cinematography) took a "solid" script and turned it into what looked to be an unparalleled crime drama - for the first six or seven episodes, anyway.
The finale revealed the show to be a standard crime procedural that was lifted to another level by the soundtrack, cast and cinematography.
I'm struggling to shake the notion that the next season will suffer considerably with Fukunaga's departure. [Reply]
Originally Posted by NewChief:
You should have been involved in this and other threads elsewhere and watching it as it aired. The theories and ideas floating around about the nature of the Carcosa cult and such were awesome.
Then the finale that just sort of negated all the buildup.
Originally Posted by keg in kc:
Your life is over once you discover hbogo.
Meh. I don't see the point on binging on Entourage. Treme gives me PTSD to my last semester of my second go around of college.. and I don't want to start power houring by myself.
I don't want to be depressed so that knocks out The Wire, Oz and The Leftovers.
I already finished Silicon Valley.. Maybe I'll watch Eastbound and Down. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Discuss Thrower:
Meh. I don't see the point on binging on Entourage. Treme gives me PTSD to my last semester of my second go around of college.. and I don't want to start power houring by myself.
I don't want to be depressed so that knocks out The Wire, Oz and The Leftovers.
I already finished Silicon Valley.. Maybe I'll watch Eastbound and Down.
Entourage, for me anyway, was considerably more enjoyable than Oz or Eastbound and Down, which had a nice premise but inconsistent to poor execution. I've never watched The Wire but I really enjoy Veep and the first season of Silicon Valley.
The Leftovers? Lindelof. Case closed. Do not pass go, do not collect $200.00 dollars.
Game of Thrones, IMO, is a binge watch season by season ordeal and it's even better on a large LCD/LED with premium sound. IMO, it's best viewed as a movie theater experience.
And don't forget the granddaddy of them all, The Sopranos. TV history. [Reply]
I read all the ice and fire books years before they were on tv and it's still one of my current favorites. They're definitely worth watching even if you already been spoiled.
I would agree it's best binge watched, but I watch most things that way (last half season of twd still waiting on my dvr...). Some seasons of got I've binged, some I've watched sequentially.
Since this upcoming season marks the greatest book departure I'll likely watch weekly. [Reply]
Originally Posted by keg in kc:
I read all the ice and fire books years before they were on tv and it's still one of my current favorites. They're definitely worth watching even if you already been spoiled.
I would agree it's best binge watched, but I watch most things that way (last half season of twd still waiting on my dvr...). Some seasons of got I've binged, some I've watched sequentially.
Since this upcoming season marks the greatest book departure I'll likely watch weekly.
Holy Schikes!! How did I not know Amanda Peet was married to David Beniof?
She was on Conan the other night saying she tried to talk him out of directing 'dungeons and dragons with regular people' before she knew what GoT was.
Originally Posted by keg in kc:
The wire is the best show of the past twenty years. Don't skip it.
Edited some other suggestions into my prior post.
Agreed on The Wire. I've finally got around to working my way through it over the last few months (started Season 4 last night).
I seem to watch a season, then take a week or two off as the show is pretty demanding. I wouldn't call it depressing at all, though. In fact, there are parts of it that are downright hilarious. [Reply]