I belly laughed at that scene, when the brother crashes through that plate glass window.... and then his daughter holding the unicorn on the car ride home. Priceless.
100%. Way back in the day, everytime I saw Outkast's music video for 'Shake It' or whatever that song was actually called, I felt superior for knowing that you aren't actually supposed to shake the photo to make it "develop faster". I wish Ray just said "You know that's bullshit, roight?"
@@OrdnanceTV Back in the day my "land" camera the SX-70 came equipped with sonar and a collapsible frame! The working theory was that by shaking the print U spread the emulsion. Briefly Kodak had an instant camera you had to hand crank in order to produce the print. It was bulky and the lens was fixed!
@@markescartin1915 Such a weird myth lmao. That's the point of the rollers in the feed mechanism, they spread it evenly like a paint roller. Ultimately the emulsion is just pigments and solvents: it is basically paint lmao. But yes, SX-70s are stunning cameras, will no doubt own one myself at some point
Her death got to me. In shows like this and as dumb as at it may sound I never felt bad for people getting whacked that were in the game, it' comes with the job.. But this lady, there was something innocent about her and her death made me sad.
To me, she had a toe dipped in the game. I don't think she was fully immersed in this criminal underworld yet. She was just looking for some extra dough while going to uni. Taking on a little risk running drugs and getting paid handsomely for it while she pursued her dreams. She didn't deserve to get whacked.
Just finished a marathon sesh of this series from 1 to 3. (i've never seen it before. Thanks DVD) How could you not fall for Zoe, She was wonderful. Shame she had a small part.
Do they show the developed film to the audience in the tv show as part of this scene? In The GreyMan a kid takes a polaroid of the greyman and the producer or director doesn't show the developed image and it would have been nice to see how it turned out because Ryan Reynold's character was in a suit standing against a sliding glass window/door and the kid used the flash as well so it would have made a nice image.
Great show, wildly underrated !!! Would have been best show if it had more time to properly wrap up the story. Dare I say could have been better than breaking bad. Yes I said it
@@garfs5208it’s kind of not confirmed, it could be true that Rafael killed her, but she could also have died on the way to the hospital like he said, I was hoping they would find Ray finding her body to find the truth
@@Okaydokie173 I mean it’s kind of implied, Rafael didn’t want to take her to the hospital in the first place, he has no problem with shooting anyone in a stressful situation and he gets kind of defensive when ray asks him if she’s okay
@@garfs5208yeah exactly that was my thought too, that’s why I wish Ray somehow found her body, even if that’s far fetched and found bullet holes, but either way Ray had plenty of reasons to hate Rafael so it doesn’t matter anyway haha
@@Okaydokie173 I had always taken it as she was killed because she didn't seem significantly injured to the point that she'd die, which kind of made it all the worse, because that means they executed her for like a sprained ankle essentially - completely unnecessary.
Nah, a 'tube' is a tin can containing beer. Though they don't call beer 'tubes'. Well, they don't have just one word for beer. Aussies have as many words for 'beer' as the French do for 'love'.
I think it was to show that if Ray does not change he will never find happiness they were running drugs when she died lol guess you dont understand how to understand a concept when watching art lol need tow ork on that iq bud
I agree. It kinda felt like a blind date the entire time. Sucked what happened to her but I feel like the producer's last second were like "Hey Scott, uh.. we've got everything but the 'Love Interest' box checked. Can you squeeze some rando-female in the very end so she can die and Ray can shed a tear for her? Thanks."
Yeah, she was used as a reason for Ray to have a falling out with the Boss, and that was necessary to drive the whole revenge sub-plot thing that ended up with Freddie's betrayal, the shootout at the farmhouse and Ray's eventual "retirement" to a caravan in the country.........
@@nickmaclachlan5178 I dunno, you might be right, but I think it was more than the romance that got through to Ray. It was that she was young (she mentioned being a uni student) and relatively innocent. She was dipping her toe into the criminal world which she was ultimately unprepared for. Her death happened off scene which gave it an even more ominous and detached feel; neither Ray or the audience were given the catharsis of actually seeing her die, we have to imaginve it for ourselves which creates uncertainty. I don't think Ray was fooling himself into thinking he had a future with Zoe. I think, towards the end of the show when he'd either pushed away or killed anyone he could have had a meaningful connection to, Zoe was kind of a last, desperate struggle to feel something for someone. Her death wasn't tragic because they were in love, it was tragic because Zoe was way too young to have been disposed of in such an uncaring way, and because it reminded Ray that his lifestyle always leads to death in the end. I think that's why he finally moves away; he wants to protect his daughter, the last person who still loves him (for the time being).
I think they had no chemistry because it was rushed. There was very little connection for each of them characters. Ray was more like a guardian and this woman was there to be protected.