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Why That Shocking Succession Moment Happened Off Screen
Why That Shocking Succession Moment Happened Off Screen
And there’s some toothy poignancy to the fact that the Roy children spend what will turn out to be their final moments with their father taunting him for his inability to apologize, and that his last words to them as a group are “I love you, but you are not serious people.”
No amount of money or power or connections can undo what has already happened, nor give Logan Roy’s children one more chance to set things right with their late father. Their grief and shock at the sudden loss seems compounded by the sudden-onset realization that their relationship with their father will now always be what it is in that moment. There will be no more fixing, no further rounds of negotiation. The deal is done.
·slate.com·
Why That Shocking Succession Moment Happened Off Screen
‘Succession’s Brian Cox On Tonight’s Fatal Episode, Keeping Secrets, The Sh*tstorm To Come & Why Jesse Armstrong Needed To Move On
‘Succession’s Brian Cox On Tonight’s Fatal Episode, Keeping Secrets, The Sh*tstorm To Come & Why Jesse Armstrong Needed To Move On
You know, somebody said, would you ever want to play Donald Trump, I may have told you this before, and I said, well, no. Because I think it’s such a bad script, the Donald Trump script. But then I look at Donald Trump, and I think, God, he’s so lost. He’s just a lost individual, and he’s so full of shit, and the reason he’s full of shit is that he’s an abused child. He’s really an abused child, Donald Trump. A tragic figure. Even though a lot of these very right-wing individuals are repellant, ironically, from the actor’s point of view, when the actor gets into the skin of these guys, you begin to understand where they’re coming from.
·deadline.com·
‘Succession’s Brian Cox On Tonight’s Fatal Episode, Keeping Secrets, The Sh*tstorm To Come & Why Jesse Armstrong Needed To Move On
The Empty Sentiment of The Last of Us
The Empty Sentiment of The Last of Us
One of the most engaging aspects in the storytelling of The Last of Us is that, because Joel dictates how you move forward in the game, you’re implicated in his increasingly gray decision-making. On TV, the viewer is primed to be sympathetic toward a main character, so there’s not the same level of friction as experienced by the gamer. Story lines that feel alive as an active participant in the game instead feel hackneyed on television. Watching The Last of Us, I wanted to pick it up and shake it free from its preconceptions about what it has to do in order to be faithful to its source material and what it wants to do in order to be taken seriously as television. As a series, it says nothing new in either case.
·vulture.com·
The Empty Sentiment of The Last of Us