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Shades of Breaking Bad with that sniper threat too
Except Rust dont **** around
and lol @ taking Errol alive.... he was literally about to drop the hammer on woody.
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Shades of Breaking Bad with that sniper threat too
Except Rust dont **** around
anyone know what song played during the end credits?
end credits of the 8th episode?
And it would have been the easiest thing in the world to kill one or both of these guys. I even had an idea where something more mysterious happened to them, where they vanished into the unknown and Gilbough and Papania had to clean up the mess and nobody knows what happens to them. Or it could have gone full blown supernatural. But I think both of those things would have been easy, and they would have denied the sort of realist questions the show had been asking all along. To retreat to the supernatural, or to take the easy dramatic route of killing a character in order to achieve an emotional response from the audience, I thought would have been a disservice to the story.
Feelin like Bio-Shock in the bayou.
Yes taken ALIVE
they blasted that one guy's face off
and now Errol's dome
IMO it would have made a better finale if Errol had the opportunity to explain/confess like K. Spacey in Se7en
Rust w/his interrogating skills would have been more interesting than getting closure through NDE/coma
Very underwhelning finale. I definitely expected something much more epic.
So why did Marty's daughter draw those pictures?
Are the Tuttle's just going to get away with everything? Are we just supposed to assume things will all come to the light when everything is said and done with the evidence they released?
Why did Errol have his daddy chained up in the outhouse?
What was the opening scene of episode 1?
"The problem is, there were more bad guys. People who were smarter, higher up, and had better connections. They're just gone now. At least from Louisiana. Rust and Marty were too late to take down Carcosa when people like Billy Lee Tuttle were running things. What they finally stumbled upon was simply all that was left."Very underwhelning finale. I definitely expected something much more epic.
So why did Marty's daughter draw those pictures?
Are the Tuttle's just going to get away with everything? Are we just supposed to assume things will all come to the light when everything is said and done with the evidence they released?
Why did Errol have his daddy chained up in the outhouse?
What was the opening scene of episode 1?
Very underwhelning finale. I definitely expected something much more epic.
So why did Marty's daughter draw those pictures?
Are the Tuttle's just going to get away with everything? Are we just supposed to assume things will all come to the light when everything is said and done with the evidence they released?
Why did Errol have his daddy chained up in the outhouse?
What was the opening scene of episode 1?
Very underwhelning finale. I definitely expected something much more epic.
So why did Marty's daughter draw those pictures?
Are the Tuttle's just going to get away with everything? Are we just supposed to assume things will all come to the light when everything is said and done with the evidence they released?
Why did Errol have his daddy chained up in the outhouse?
What was the opening scene of episode 1?
"The problem is, there were more bad guys. People who were smarter, higher up, and had better connections. They're just gone now. At least from Louisiana. Rust and Marty were too late to take down Carcosa when people like Billy Lee Tuttle were running things. What they finally stumbled upon was simply all that was left."
and
"Yup, and Cohle mentions that they didn't get them all to Marty. I think it's important that not everyone is caught because it shows the reality that you can't get them all, but that it doesn't make it a loss. It also shows the futility of trying to make everything right in the world, because in reality you can't. That was Cohle's original viewpoint on life, and it wasn't necessarily wrong, but it was so pessimistic that he was missing out on the little stars of light that creep through the black sky of life. In his coma, he finds the love and discovers the light. Marty transforms through his actions, we see his bravery and such. Rust is still a dynamic character, seen through his final monologue and closing line."
On to Audrey I feel like this post explains it really well
"I think all of the stuff that people are taking as "red herrings" — the Audrey doll scene, the flowers, etc. — they're not red herrings nor clues to a literal mystery, but motifs, and emblems of how deeply embedded in the culture the evil was. The spirals, the stick sculptures, all of that which we see in endless variations in the backgrounds shows us that the icons of the "ancient evil" (as NP put it) are everywhere ("he is all around us") — for Audrey to be literally exposed to the tape or abused or whatever is boring, poor writing. She didn't need to be. She was far more effective and far more haunting as the product of environment in which the ritual culture was a kind of constant background tone. Of course she would paint spirals or yellow kings or whatever — they're as much part of her unconscious symbology as, say, the apple and the snake are to us. And that's a far scarier kind of evil."
All courtesy of Reddit.
The show gave closure, you just put way too much focus on things that weren't meant to be anything more than they were on face value.Why should I have to draw my own conclusions? I'm not a writer on the show. You invest time into a show you deserve to have closure when it is done. This is one of the reasons I hate The Sopranos ending.
Same thing I said about LOST in relation to this craze for everything to be a clue and there to be some deeper mystery to a story (although LOST definitely did keep hyping **** up) and now a lot of viewers are unknowingly permanently effected by it.I blame Lost for all these damn theories. People are still trying to relive their memories of Lost
Its not the worst thing ever because it gets people talking about the show and builds interest but it does get annoying when theories are ALL people talk about. It just derails any real discussion of the show. And then there will be the inevitable whining from some when the ending doesn't live up to the crazy theories
Why should I have to draw my own conclusions? I'm not a writer on the show. You invest time into a show you deserve to have closure when it is done. This is one of the reasons I hate The Sopranos ending.