Watched a bit of it this morning (thanks, DVR!), and am about halfway through. Van Alden's like a ticking time bomb, especially after last season, and his wife seems like a lot of laughs (hooooo boy).
I dunno. . . I'm likin' it so far. For all the reasons heretofore stated. Ya gotta figure they're building toward some epic showdown, but Nucky has hardly anyone on his side at this point. They appear to have completely departed company from history, BTW. I guess that makes rerb happy, as he fucks history in the face.
I like the way the line runs up the back of the stocking.
Watched Sunday's episode last night (God bless DVR!), and... wow.
Gretchen Mol and Dabney Coleman had a terrific scene together, followed by one hell of a finale scene 'twixt the two. All I gotta say is Mol looks magnificent and what she inadvertently did to Coleman would be no surprise to any hetero male.
Originally posted by June Thomas, the Easily Bored
The trouble with Boardwalk Empire is that the stakes feel so low—all they’re doing is fighting over bootlegged liquor in a corrupt seaside town. When critics call those other shows Shakespearean, they’re thinking of Hamlet, King Lear, or Macbeth. If Boardwalk Empire were the work of the Bard, it would be a minor history play—a Richard II or Henry VIII.
More than anything else I’m currently watching, Boardwalk Empire reminds me of what William Goldman once dubbed “the snob hit.” In his Broadway chronicle The Season, he defined the snob hit as a play whose audience is “convinced that the ‘average’ theatergoer wouldn’t understand … or like it.” In other words, it must be good, even if nobody is particularly bowled over.
Please do kindly fuck off forever.
Last edited by Captain Russ; 10-27-2011, 04:01 PM.
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