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Both of those came on separately when I was watching this past week's episode of The Killing. I got so excited.
OT alert how's the killing been this season? i watched 1 and 2 on netflix and really enjoyed it.
I think it's better than Season 1 and 2 so far. There is more focus on the crime and the investigation rather than a ton of tertiary storylines. Part of it may come from that the showrunner has stated that this case will end this season like they promised would happen in the first season but didn't deliver on.
OT alert how's the killing been this season? i watched 1 and 2 on netflix and really enjoyed it.
I think it's better than Season 1 and 2 so far. There is more focus on the crime and the investigation rather than a ton of tertiary storylines. Part of it may come from that the showrunner has stated that this case will end this season like they promised would happen in the first season but didn't deliver on.
Good stuff. After season 1 I wasn't sure if I wanted to watch season 2. I'm all for a slow moving show but season 1 was really slow. I loved everything having to do with Linden and Holder, what drove me crazy was the constant scenes involving the grieving family. I don't want to be heartless to these fictional characters but I get it, it sucks you lost a loved one, do we really have to spend 30% of everything episode with y'all crying and yelling at each other?
Season 2 was much more satisfying, especially as we dug deeper into Linden's back story, that was all fascinating to me.
For tracking things. A package or a vehicle would be the first things that come to mind. I can't decide if he looks more like he is missing something or if it is something that he fears.
Good point. When I rewatched it, I assumed that he was the one doing the tracking rather than him being the one tracked. Your version makes more sense with the obvious answer being Hank, but as we all know, the obvious is rarely the correct answer.
I'm halfway through the last episode of Season 5A, and OK, Vince Gilligan. Mission accomplished. I absolutely loathe Walter White. Ready to see him get what's coming to him.
Last Edit: Jul 16, 2013 9:04:22 GMT -5 by Deleted - Back to Top
Post by Dave Maynar on Jul 16, 2013 16:34:13 GMT -5
Some things somebody from reddit found:
The average episode rating was 8.84. The average occurrence of ‘Skyler’ was 8.30. In the top 10 highest rated episodes, the average occurrence of ‘Skyler’ was 4.6 and the average rating was 9.57. In the bottom 10 rated episodes, the average occurrence of ‘Skyler’ was 10.1 and the average rating was 8.21 In the 10 episodes with the highest occurrence of ‘Skyler’, the average rating was 8.54 where ‘Skyler’ was found an average of 14.6 times. In the 10 episodes with the fewest occurrence of ‘Skyler’, the average rating was 9.23 where ‘Skyler’ was found an average of 2.6 times. Statistical Stuff
The R-Value of the two data sets is -0.54 (This is the strength of the relationship). The negative number shows that it is an inverse relationship.
It's amazing work, isn't it? But yeah, I plan on getting a tattoo one day (Josh and I are each going to get one of our oldest dog's paw print), but it's way too big of a commitment for me to get one that is pop-culture related.
It's amazing work, isn't it? But yeah, I plan on getting a tattoo one day (Josh and I are each going to get one of our oldest dog's paw print), but it's way too big of a commitment for me to get one that is pop-culture related.
The detail is amazing. But I agree on the pop-culture issue.
I'm halfway through the last episode of Season 5A, and OK, Vince Gilligan. Mission accomplished. I absolutely loathe Walter White. Ready to see him get what's coming to him.
I just finished the train heist episode. After watching the part where he turns off the news broadcast Jesse is watching, gets back to work, and starts whistling, I wholeheartedly agree. He's completely quacking lost it. Though, I still feel some sympathy for him, in that he's a man who's completely lost touch with his humanity. He's completely ruined himself, as a human being. And that's not to mention his family.
Last Edit: Jul 17, 2013 0:01:53 GMT -5 by Deleted - Back to Top
Since last night, I have been having memories of some movie where a blood trail is followed to find someone who wanted to die somewhere beautiful (seem to remember a sunset). It's not No Country For Old Men, and it is driving me a little nuts thinking of it.
Sorry to jump in so late with this, but now that I'm caught up with the series I'm finally allowing myself to catch up with this thread.
Are you thinking of Lenny's death scene in "Of Mice and Men?"
I'm halfway through the last episode of Season 5A, and OK, Vince Gilligan. Mission accomplished. I absolutely loathe Walter White. Ready to see him get what's coming to him.
I still hold out that Walt finds some kind of redemption in the last 8 episodes. I just refuse to see them ending the series with him being outright evil.
Re: the death scene I don't think it's Of Mice and Men, but it's not a bad guess.
-Hank forces Walt into the witness protection program until the DEA can set up for a massive sting of Walt's entire meth organization. We've already seen that there's nothing Walt won't do to "protect his family." Hence the Walt's-wearing-a-wire theory, which I buy. The M60 in the trunk was just to set up the first bust, which was the gun dealer (sale of automatic weapons being heavily regulated.) But Walt does have a second use in mind for the M60 -- keeping his options open.
-Mike/Kaylee -- somebody had to have a second key to that safe deposit box so it could be opened on Kaylee's 18th. Where is that person?
-Walt plans to use the ricin on Jesse as a "mercy killing" because he'd rather see that than Jesse spending the rest of his life in prison, or to protect his family because Jesse knows more than anybody else about Walt's crimes.
-Jesse is therefore the final judge of whether Walt is redeemed or not (lives/dies, goes to jail/goes free/whatever.) It's the ultimate test of Jesse's loyalty, which has been a key plot device throughout the show.
-After Walt dropped off Jesse's $5 million, Jesse sat down and slumped against the wall and slid his gun across the floor. It spun and came to rest pointing at something off-camera, reminiscent of Walt's poolside Lily of the Valley scene where the gun foreshadows the season 4 denouement. Whatever Jesse's gun pointed to will be revealed early in Season 5B, and will prove to be crucial to the last episode. Perhaps it's the phone? Perhaps Jesse calls Hank? There's an unresolved relationship there too.
-Walt has never himself used meth. At some point he tries his own product?
-Saul either gets busted big-time or serves as some kind of deal-broker between Walt and witness protection in exchange for his own immunity.
-Todd escapes and sets up his own cookshop elsewhere -- the meth problem can never be eradicated.
-The rabbit eye. What the hell happened to the rabbit eye?
Just started this show, on season 3 and it is AWESOME. I too DESPISE Skylar i'm glad to hear it is a universal thing. And being a Math Major/State Minor i love that statistical breakdown showing relationship of Skylar viewings. Although, being a math nerd that i am an r-value of -.52 isn't really a good thing. though their is some relationship you can't really assume that this shows evidence that the more time Skylar is shown the lower the ratings of the episodes.