The most cinematographic episode so far, with great photography and music, which made it very intense and powerful in some parts; but unfortunately it has some quite unrealistic elements, like Sir Criston murdering a guest and just walking away...
I hate this. Even if she was a little despicable, she didn't deserve to die. And most importantly, this is obviously going to blow up in the future and ruin the relationship between Walt and Jesse, maybe even make them kill each other. Hate this. It can't be fixed.
The visuals and the message -anticolonialism, protection of nature, sovereignty of indigenous people- are great, but the plot is just bad: poor, repetitive, with many clichés, very predictable... Much worst than the first, I couldn't connect. But it's arguably worth it to see it in 3D just for the visuals.
Best sex scene in the franchise; you can tell it was directed by a woman.
Walter disgusts me. I don't even find him interesting.
That last scene was a shock.
That terrible end destroyed my image of the movie.
This episode is heartbreaking, she was the sweetest sprite indeed.
The dying Hound scene is the first thing in GoT that made me cry.
It was very interesting, nice and emotional. But, first, I think they have compressed too much all of the complexity and the facets of the saga (pre-production, production, the professionals that were behind, etc.), and second (and related) they totally diminished the importance of J. K. Rowling, who is the AUTHOR (because of an opinion she gave I happen to agree with).
The "Can I keep you?" line is just too much. :broken_heart:
The choking scene was powerful.
I like this saga because of what makes me feel. Haters gonna hate.
They created a character as perfect as Aidan for what? I guess so we suffer and hate Carrie for being a stupid as*hole much more.
"The woman's an idiot" because of a spelling mistake. Ok, Carrie.
Kirsten (Kelly Rowan) was incredible.
I started crying with The Climb......
Nice touch to finally reveal Big's name.
It was supposed to be romantic? It was absolutely infuriating. And frustrating. And poor Aidan. :knife:
For some reason it's been the most disturbing episode so far.
Too predictable and unbelievable (not possible for me to let go the disbelief) in my opinion... And felt quite similar to Midsommar (the end? lol) .
I've always hated Miranda... she has 0 empathy.
I don't think bisexuality was horribly adressed here. Sure, Carrie is biphobic, but it was more than normal more than 20 years ago, so, having that in mind, at least they exposed it and kind of normalized it. When Carrie walks away she doesn't say it's wrong, she just states she's not used to it because of her age (which nowadays would be almost 60).
"Christianity? Again?" Great post-credits.
I'm enjoying the intensity.
Poor Iris, that last scene was so emotional.
I hope to die like that as well. :'(
This means that Cersei will have to die.
There are funny and very funny parts, but If you are a person with a reasonable amount of empathy it's hard not to pity and have a hard time seeing how they treat some of the people "forced" to be involved in this...
What are the requirements for a movie to have the romance genre and how does this not meet them
Not bad for a Hollywood movie.