Hi guys :) My name is Petra, I am 24 years old and I live in the Czech Republic. I love making videos and some scenes from my favourite tv series, but I am not an expert, so thank you for watching! :)
Roman was so loyal to his sister. She never should have lied to him about taking his memories. Nas and the others were wrong to tell her to do that. Had she been honest with him like she wanted to be this might never have happened. He just got broke way too young. He’s one of those ones you can tell tried to be the good guy when he could.
At this point Lucy & Wyatt have known each other for 7 years, this show felt like a mix of Legends of Tomorrow and Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. legends of tomorrow for the obvious reason time travel and changing history Lucy being this shows version of Nate Heywood. And AOS because in a way Rittenhouse is basically Hydra an organization created centuries ago to turn humanity into slaves by shaping history in their favor.
This shows how much of a good person flynn was cuz even still knowing that he would fail in his mission he still did everything even giving himself a bad name just to keep the timeline intact
Wen I think abt Jane n Roman fighting, I think abt how their parents wud have felt. Their real parents (not becoz they birthed them but becoz they loved them like parents shud, unlike Shepherd). I think they'd have preferred that ending they got (and then some. I wrote a story, I think they call it fanfiction).
It'll be funny if Kurt injected the needle to Remi's ass, and she would say "You're no match for the mighty..." before being knocked out. You know where the reference is.
i just assume it was setting up/showing that there could be a potential continuation of the story, either the team having to stop whatever paulina would do with a time machine, or it would be a new team with paulina as their connor
They just erased the fact that she had a daughter, what happenee to Avory....she just disappeares and season 4 just continues without her. WTF ??? That makes no sense.
Every time I see this it reminds me that Flynn knew he would never get his family back and still did all the right things he could. He’s in an endless loop where he gets to see his family only for a moment before dying and then being tortured again. It makes me cry every goddamn time.
"I love you and I want to spend the rest of life with you" then you cheat on her with Simone I'm glad Ziggy and Dean got back together and had that cute little daughter of theirs because Brody never deserved Ziggy in the first place
@@OneGaurdian I hope so to and she took their baby with her and I hope that Ziggy and dean comes back for a visit and bring their daughter with them and then Brody shows up without Simone or their baby and sees how happy Ziggy is with dean and regrets cheating on her in the first place
He made a misogynist remark about her and it felt in character for him to beat a beautiful woman until she wasn't "beautiful" anymore. Instead, we just got a bunch of bruising under her clothes. Her face seemed absolutely fine, which took me out of the show. This wouldn't make any sense. In order for the abuse frame-up with Ray to work the bruises can't be obvious. If Ray were just beating her in ways that were obvious, why was it not noticed until now? Also, Nagykas (the weapon Yuri uses) are traditionally used on the body. Would Yuri have liked to do more? Sure, but he's not acting on his own. He has a boss and his boss has made his orders clear. one of Madeline's most powerful tools, which is her looks? Plus, it would have showed up Madeline's strength more for her to have one of her advantages taken away from her and still come out on top. This was already established several times over up to that point and after the fact. In the first Episode, she attempts to distract Maurice so that Ray can grab the gun and ends up doing too good of a job, as Ray gets lost in the moment, as well. Maurice keeps the gun and makes the decision to blackmail both of them, even going as far as to make threats of violence. Madeline with her back against the wall due to being wrapped up in a crime that she had no knowledge of, decides to kill Maurice and is crafty enough and a quick enough thinker that she improvises a way to do so on the fly. Did she use her looks to kill Maurice? No. And that's important. Hawley is telling us something about Madeline; She's not what she seems. The archetype of the femme fatale who relies solely on her sexuality has conditioned the audience to believe that Madeline will fill out that role. As an audience, we're shallow. Appearance is everything. If a man appears to be a loyal enforcer to a family who took him in when no one else would, he must be grateful (Hanzee). If a person appears to be kind or meek, they are (Lester in Season 1). If a person appears to be a dumb floozy, she has to be (Madeline). Fargo is about subverting those expectations. Her relying on sexuality, being unsuccessful, only for her to kill Maurice on the fly, is a demonstration of what Madeline is truly capable of. She's not an archetype. Also, how many of her plans involve her sexuality? Did she use her looks to come up with the plan for Ray to impersonate Emmit at the bank? Did she use her looks to predict where Memo would be positioned with his sniper at the hotel? Did her looks play a role in ambushing Varga's men and stealing the laptop? Aside from the sex tape, her sexuality doesn't really play a role in any of her plans. I think your reading of her character is, ironically, the predictable reading that Hawley spends the entire Season deconstructing. I think her getting caught and killed by a random state trooper who she kills in return adds to the tragedy of her arc. That's fine. Her stupidly placing the shotgun down even though she knows Emmit is absolutely gonna rat her out is just bad writing. Sorry. I'm not buying her making that decision. She'll flirt with a cop to get out of a speeding ticket, but she's proven to be more than smart enough to not use that tactic in a situation where the person she's trying to kill could easily ruin the entire thing just by speaking. What would have been in character would be for her to just shoot Emmit and deal with what comes next. Characters acting out of character is textbook bad writing. The only reason Emmit gets out of that scene alive is through bad writing. Wrench killing Emmit after her failed attempt/death, and after Varga and company weren’t around, as he seemingly goes unpunished felt very Fargo to me. I... don't know what this means. Like it feels more Fargo because it's less traditionally cinematic? I mean, okay, but that doesn't make it compelling. And it's based on a character behaving in a way that I simply don't find believable. Also, you know what doesn't feel Fargo to me? How clunky the last fifteen minutes of Season 3 are. It feels like it has fifty different time jumps and fifty different endings. Having Emmit die on the highway spares us of an unnecessary flasforward. Kill him off. Have Gloria stand over the bodies of Madeline and Emmit knowing she failed both of them (a far more chilling image than her standing over Nikki and... random state trooper who I don't care about). Have the scene wuth her and her kid. Then end with her talking to Varga. Tragic, streamlined, and beautiful in its simplicity. Just like the film. If anything it’s very purposeful, even if you think it’s subjectively bad, I don’t think it’s inherently “bad writing”. The subversion is certainly purposeful, but misguided. Much like Rabbi's demise in Season 4. The thing Hawley doesn't get is that subversions aren't inherently good, especially if you have to cut corners to get them. Good writing isn't when you do something that makes sense thematically. It's when you do something that makes sense thematically, without taking shortcuts. I could go into more of what I don't like about the writing, but I already did a thread on it where I covered it extensively. It got some pushback, but none of the counter arguments really changed my view on it. www.reddit.com/r/FargoTV/comments/vgviso/my_problem_with_season_3/ For instance, Zelmare being pretty uninteresting (or at the very least dislikable for her role in the dozen or so civilians killed at the train station) and one note in Season 4, then killing Loy as Satchel/Mike Milligan just watches her walk away, felt like “bad writing” to me. I would agree that it's bad writing. That said, I think it's less contrived than the highway standoff in Season 3.