Fuck!
Although i did get prepared for the beauty of this episode when I saw the 89% gradation, but omg how great was that?
Clay/Hannah alternative past where he told her what she needed to hear in order to survive was SO heartbreaking!
The show is defintely THE amazing surprise of the year, I was expecting a light teen drama, and i'm watching at an incredible touching production, which make people truly think about their actions
Thank you Netflix.
It's amazing how they managed to jump from the cringiest scene in the episode to the most gut-wrenching within a minute. I guess it wouldn't have the same effect otherwise.
I'm guessing the remaining tapes might include at least one teacher, the guidance counselor seeming the most likely.
Ouch, my heart. This episode was utterly heartbreaking.
I'm amazed at how good actors all these "kids" are. Just... so, so good. Their emotions manage to jump out of the screen at you.
I don't know about the episodes left, but for me this was THE episode so far. BTW I don't get why everybody is hating Justin so much and not Bryce, like, what the hell? The first one still deserves it though.
Honestly, I feel like Justin is just misunderstood. You can tell from the 'present' scenes of him and his home situation that the stuff at home affects him deeply. That he's been acting stressed the past few episodes because he feels powerless to protect the women in his life (e.g. his mom, and now Jessica). This is probably why he just sat there on the couch at the party, because this has happened before, where other men have harmed the women he loves, but psychologically, I guess, out of habit, he didn't feel like he had the power to stop it. Then, maybe coincidentally, but after he visits the home of a "regular family" - that interaction between Alex's dad and Justin broke my heart; the way Justin's eyes literally warmed up and gave Alex's dad a big smile when he got offered leftovers from their dinner - it sort of becomes the tipping point of when he realizes that he does have power to change things.
I really love the entire character arc of Justin, to be honest. The writers did a fantastic job in crafting his story, and the actor did an equally fantastic job in portraying all of Justin's character nuances.
This was a great episode overall. I love the fact that we got glimpses of what the families are like for a couple of the minor characters: Alex, whose dad is strict/firm because he works as a cop, but loving too, as we can see by Alex describing how both his parents cook (e.g. his mom cooks, his dad grills); Zach, whose mother is the atypical overbearing Asian mother, but he has an adorable relationship with his sister (e.g. eating his sister's veggies for her when their mom isn't looking); Mr. Porter, who we slowly begin to find out that everything, at both work and at home, is taking a toll on him; and of course, we get more of the families behind Clay and Hannah.
10/10 to the writers, director, and actors. Stellar job all around.
This is just sad...
They liked each other, but didn't had the talk...
Poor Clay. It's not his fault.
If Hannah had talk to him... maybe things would had been a little different.
Fuck you Bryce!! Why did he text Jessica??
That was so wrong!!!
This episode is super intense.
Clay is such a good person... he feels so guilty about Hannah, maybe too guilty. This show gets surprisingly deep, there is so much going on, I love it!
OMG really people you get emotional with the alt. version? I'm sure you're not women who has been promised all those things alt. Clay said just to completely destroy your heart some years later. Men are worst than boys. We all have this weird/cool but secretly sweet boyfriend who ended up being the worst thing that happened to us.
The part where Clay tells her what he felt, his do-over... heartbreaking. My heart aches.
What Clay feels in this episode it's probably the worst feeling we can feel... not telling something we should have, something that in this case could have saved her life. what if he said he loved her? I guess it teach us to never leave anything unsaid
Even though it's a teen drama that relies somewhat heavily on stereotypes of the genre, it's still fairly well done. I assume this is the crescendo of the season. I'd be surprised if they top this. EDIT: Spoke too soon. Keep watching.
Unhelpful Yoda made me laugh.
I rewatch the show just for this episode
Heartbreaking moments in this episode.
You are who you are and you don't care That is my code!
And that scene with Clay was really very emotional :( Crying :'(
"Don't do any hard drugs... or any drugs!" Lol
On a serious note... No means No, but Leave means Stay? That's a pretty dangerous and irresponsible message to be sending.
Definitely the saddest episode of the series. Justin’s arc is tragic. Clay listening to the tape was so emotional. I love the interaction between the present and past while Clay is listening to it. That “what if” scene broke my heart. “A thousand times.”
Clay & Hannah got me in tears. Very sad episode...
Clay finally hears his tape in pieces because he can't grasp the reality that he was one of the reasons why Hannah killed herself. If it weren't for Hannah's scaring past with other guys, her and Clay could have shared something special. Jessica learns the truth about the tape and Mrs. Baker stumbles upon Hannah's list and tapes. I'm interested to see how far the trial part of this story goes.
I was expecting, shit'd go down. This was rather plain one!
Shout by Miguel CostaBlockedParentSpoilers2017-04-03T03:21:49Z
Holy f*ck this show is killing me!!
"I will never hurt you, I'm not going - not now, not ever!" "I love you, Hannah"
"Why didn't you say this to me when I was alive?"
It was so heartbreaking seeing Clay so helpless when he find out, omg... but WTF Jessica you're okay with being raped??? What's the problem with her? I understand she kinda wants to forget it than deal with it still...