Spoiler alert for both seasons
E01
1. The acting textbook written by Gene, given by Ryan to Barry. The cover title is Hit Your Mark and Say Your Lines
While Barry is a hitman (killer), Ryan is Barry's mark (assassination target). Hit Your Mark is a pun, kind of funny.
2. Ryan's driver's license shows that he is from Madison, Wisconsin, which is probably why his stage name is Ryan Madison.
Similarly, the driver's license page shows that his address street is Butternut Road... I always feel that Butternut and Ryan match as a silly womanizer. It must be deliberate.
E02
Gene asked the students to use Ryan's death to improve their acting skills. At first it sounded quite anti-human. This unexpected and heartless angle was also one of the laughs that the audience got; however, Barry’s shocked expression when he heard the words was very likely to be different from that. The audience's surprise is different-being able to use it means that the students in the acting class representing normal people can experience the fear, doubt and sadness caused by the sudden death of people around them. What Barry is at a loss is that he is too accustomed to killing and has successfully isolated himself from the possibility of trauma caused by the assassin’s violent death to his relatives and friends, so that he cannot use it as Gene said. Ryan's death came to experience and interpret sadness. He started to feel that something was wrong with him.
Then Ryan's father appeared on the memory at the end of the film, and Barry failed to isolate for the first time. He said that he had never seen anything like this before-the people he killed before had no temporal connection that would make him have to watch the grief caused by death as this time-but Sally's feedback to him was such a negative emotion. It's normal, everyone is used to watching it and getting out of it, even if you are an actor, you should be good at using it. This is actually the equivalent of catharsis in real events that fictional drama can bring, and it can even be said to be an upgraded version-the drama career that Barry is pursuing on the surface, at this moment, completely overlaps with the emotional experience of immersing in real life that he really needs to develop. Break the isolation, as Sally said, "getting to that, taking that apart and dealing with it, it's called being human".
And the next sentence is "that's what acting is", and when I read it again, I found that the lines are really exquisite.
When Barry was talking on the phone with Sally on the balcony, Fuches in the background was fighting the Chechens bravely—though it was clumsy. For example, he smashed an empty wine bottle on the table before he was caught trying to use it as The weapon, I didn't expect that the bottle was completely smashed and couldn't be used, and it hurt my hand. As for why Fuches is such a dish? The answer In the conversation between Fuches and Barry a minute ago, Fuches also joined the army during the Vietnam War, but did not leave the United States at all, so strictly speaking it is "during'Nam" not "in'Nam", and it is also a logistics cooking class. of.
In this scene, it can be seen that Barry is really not a typical killer who is sensitive to danger. On the contrary, it can be said to be extremely slow. Unlike NoHo Hank in the second season, he found someone to snipe him out of the window, and the opponent fired three shots before Barry realized it. Responding to dangers-this is quite realistic. I still don't understand how Al Pacino glanced at the curtains in "The Godfather 2" and realized that someone was about to shoot the bedroom.
The tools of the Chechen gangsters are really ancient-in addition to the Dell computer thick enough to make me suspect that the script was set in the background, there is also the old-fashioned boombox in the background of the scene in which Fuches and Barry were kidnapped in the basement, which is really a god. Mom is outrageous.
After the Chechen gang took Fuches as a hostage and forced Barry to vote for them again, Barry made a death threat before he left, speaking very harshly, but he didn't seem to be angry at all. The Barry in the first season is a very lethal type but looks extremely calm. Even his eyes are clear and calm. There is no shadow of the anger issue in the second season. The contrast between the two seasons seems to be great, but in fact It is reasonable within the plot logic-Barry is not really attached to Fuches emotionally, so hurting the latter will not make Barry angry. His protection of Fuches is more under the control of the latter for so many years Habit dictates that it is a kind of morality. In the second season, Barry got angry several times, all of which have the trigger conditions that he did not have in the first season-a sudden attack and death of a friend on the battlefield. At that time, Barry was still a mentally healthy child, and it was reasonable to be angry and demented. ; Sam’s injury to Sally, and Barry’s personality is the world’s favorite Sally, so it’s still very reasonable; Fuches’s injury to Gene even involves friends who will directly cause him to lose the entire acting class, accompanied by Barry’s consciousness By the time Fuches used and kidnapped himself for a long time, the ending could not be more reasonable.
And NoHo Hank commented "he cares about Fuches; that's just nice" after hearing Barry's threats. The first time I saw it, I only thought it was a laugh. The second time I saw it, I found that Hank was pretending to inadvertently mention it to Barry. Fuches may be killed by Goran, but in fact he borrowed Barry's hand to "kill each one of" them ambush. Hank is smart and polite without worrying about shed hair, it's great to have one.
E03
Send a bullet to the Bolivians, it would be a ghost if it wasn't for a deliberate rhyme when writing the script. I suspect that they thought about the plot of send a bullet first, and then decided to write the opponent as Bolivian.
(Thinking that the guest of Vinny Vedecci in snl is Robert Deer Niro, and then Vinny said "the deer from the Deer Hunter is here"-this kind of rhyming stalk with low IQ is written by Heide himself.)
I think Barry is a very interesting person, not as extreme as he seems to be honest. For example, when he scolded Hank, even "you bald fuck" came out...to touch the cute bald again. And finally when Hank nagged and threatened with Fuches, Barry grinned disgustingly and hung up the phone to laugh me to death.
Speaking of cute bald guys, Hank not only drinks water from a little fox cup, but also has a bunny decoration next to his computer (.)
Sally is also very cute as a part-time party princess, using her crappy English accent to pave the way for Macbeth.
Loach was super excited and gossiping when he informed Janice of his new discovery that Ryan's death was because he was involved with the wife of the gang boss and was bought to kill someone. This made him decisive when he discovered that Barry was a hired killer in the second season. The absurd plot of the new lover who threatened him to kill his ex-wife became more natural. That's great. However, it seems that this turning point was planned from the beginning. Bill Hader and Alec Berg talked about the role of Loach in the first season when they were planning to let him hire Barry to kill in the second season. Write the background of its being cheated.
After the entire performance class was interrogated by the police station, Barry and Gene apologized for their poor performance in the class just now, behind the poster of "The Elephant Man". It may be a coincidence. After all, it is a classic movie, but at this stage, Barry's position in the acting class and even in society is indeed close to the elephant man.
In this episode, Barry's first fantasy appears, do groceries with Sally. The funny thing is that there are two rows of shelves, of which only half is for soup, and the rest are for soft drinks. However, the product logos on the top of the head are all [SOUP]. In the performance class, Barry said that he thought of grocery stores. Thinking of the soup, it exposed the fantasy attributes of this paragraph from the first second, and I didn't notice it when I saw it for the first time.
Finally, Bill Hader should really consider wearing more button down shirts in real life. So cute social animal.
E04
In the opening movie, Barry's expression on the pillow when Sally registered for Barry's Facebook account was so invincible, happy and cute. It's just like a smiley cat.
One thing I like about Bill Hader's performance of Barry is his speaking voice. It is not the same as his usual high pitch tone in interviews, but it is also not his low or broad masculine voice during various impersonation. It’s just a little bit lower than his own habit of speaking. The point is to speak softly sweet and soft spoken to the extreme. It makes people feel that Barry is really low self-esteem and pitiful like a confused puppy with no home, but the same. When the voice communicates with the killer profession, it is too low-key, which makes people shudder.
The rehearsal of Glengarry Glen Ross was too legit. Barry's version was completely reasonable in terms of comedy effects. Looking back at the original version of Alec Baldwin, I felt that the man was pretending to be advanced. I discussed it with my friends before and concluded that one of my unproductive jokes is stupidly funny, this paragraph has reached the level of stupidity in my ideals. And when Barry was reprimanded by Gene, Natalie's nervous reaction in the audience showed that she also had this kind of dominant personality, so Sally killed her just like Barry.
After Barry was asked by Gene to regain his spine as a human being, the camera instantly switched to Barry pretending to be angry at Fuches-I love the neurotic editing of this show-it can be said that studying acting and studying life are the same thing for Barry again. , But there is no fury at all, still bad acting.
And after re-reading this paragraph, I think Barry’s dependence on Gene in the second season is more reasonable. Gene teaching Barry to act is completely teaching him to be a man like Barry imagined his father-in fact, in the fifth episode of the first season, Barry imagined himself. The father in China gave his children similar instructions. I really laughed when Henry Winkler said "peel potatoes".
Jon Hamm's cameo. When I first watched it, I never thought about why this plot was arranged. I just think it’s okay. Anyway, it’s fantasy (the second time in this season). Jon Hamm may happen to be near the shooting location and is Bill Hader’s friend. I guess he’s here. By the way, it will bring a little surprise to the audience. This time, the purpose couldn’t be more obvious, because Jon Hamm’s most classic screen role, Don Draper in "Mad Men", is a notorious big dominant. Ham himself is also dominant because of his overly handsome, handsome and sexy dad. synonym. He is strong, chic and confident, exactly what Barry is trying to achieve in this episode, and being friends with such a person may prove that he himself has become a dominant personality in Barry's fantasy.
However, pipedream soon fell and overturned. Jon Hamm asked "can I take a shit in your house?", and Barry once again happily and almost apologeticly agreed, and five rooms are available for you to choose-still Gene Criticize his deferential personality. He woke up in an instant when he did this in his daydream, and Barry's smile suddenly disappeared while driving, laughing to death.
I have to mention the J Crew outfit...I really laughed at that cropped ankle-length trousers, which is more uncomfortable than Bill's women's clothing in the episode of Documentary Now Grey Garden. The independence of Barry's role is thus completely established: I can imagine Bill Hader wearing ankle pants with loafers, after all, he has won the man of style of the year (manual dog head), but Barry can't. And that polka dot pocket square, that jacket, that terrible curl on the forehead, absolutely right.
Pinocchio's motion capture brother gave me a strong sense of sight of Ivanka Trump's husband, which is not a good thing. The actors acted very well, and the physically uncomfortable little white faces are hard to find.
After watching the second season, I came back to see Fuches before I realized that the look in his eyes when he threatened Barry at Natalie's party was really scary. In the first season, I saw Bill & Alec mentioned in the behind-the-scenes footage several times that Fuches is a bad guy. I didn’t take it seriously. Now I found out that Stephen Root played really well, which made the audience's impression of him almost keep pace with Barry— —I always felt that he really took care of Barry. Although he was a bit snobbish, but after two seasons, I looked back and thought about everything he had done and said, only to realize that this man really didn't have the heart.
As for Sally's reaction to Barry sending her laptop, and later Barry's reaction when she interrupted her and Ivanka's husband look-alike conversation, it couldn't be more reasonable to me. Looking back at Sally after the end of the second season, it is really easy to understand her. Barry's various actions at the party are forcibly showing that she is a dominant, and this is disgusting to her-the sequelae of the last abusive relationship is that she is extremely sensitive to the so-called "toxic musculanity" and being brokered One day with unspoken rules, she couldn't see that Barry was actually a poor sweet guy. In other words, the reason why she expressed her favor with Barry in the first two episodes is precisely because she knew from her subconscious that Barry was a gentle and lovely person who was suitable for her trash can, but then Barry was too eager to claim his right upon her performance. She was terrified. The trauma in the last relationship made her unable to understand from the audience's thinking that Barry's performance was only socially awkward. And once this misunderstanding is resolved at the end of the season-during the many actions of Barry, Sally realizes that the reason why she can casually get angry with Barry is precisely because Barry does not have the "toxic musculanity" she fears and hates-they are in Together, it makes sense. This is not a romantic drama either. It doesn’t matter whether Sally is a bitch to Barry or not. What’s important is that her role is well written (by Sarah Goldberg)—Barry/Sally’s emotional line is completing two The role of the character arch is excellent, and I think it is enough.
Easter eggs: When Bill and Alec were writing this episode, they originally planned to make [send laptop] a bonus item for Barry/Sally's emotional development. Bill's assumption at the time was that Sally would happily accept the gift, what a great gift and wow thank you. As a result, when this plot was presented at the writing room, it was met with unanimous complaints and strong opposition from all female screenwriters-"NO THAT'S CREEPY!!" So the progress of the Barry/Sally line had to be reset. It can be seen from this incident that Bill Hader and Alec Berg, no matter how interesting they are, they can't get rid of the straight thinking hahahahahahaha.
In addition, this episode was directed by Bill's ex-wife Maggie Carey... Sally was shot beautifully! ! (unimportant)
E05
Okk, I don't think The Elephant Man is purely a coincidence now-while waiting for Janice's interrogation result with Jermaine in the theater corridor, Barry once again appeared under the "Elephant Man" poster. In this episode, his identity as a veteran/murderer is not accepted by the collective subconscious as a metaphor for the identity of an elephant man, which is more prominent by arguing about Macbeth's moral theme.
When Fuches answered the phone, the sentence "Dis isss Ramon" was too soulful and laughed at me. In Bill Hader's play, there is always someone who does impersonation.
The joke of Toxic musculanity is too obvious, but I still like it. The essence of Barry really is a repeater.
Barry’s two daydreams in this episode-the first is to take a family portrait. His imagined son is Mikey, a blond kid; the second is that he went to school to meet the teacher because of a fight with his son. This time his son is brown. Fat, called Danzel, grieved to complain to him. He told his son not to persuade, to believe in yourself, and not to let others influence your opinion of yourself. Obviously, the reason why the son in the first dream is blond is because the focus of this dream is that he and Sally form a family. The child should be like Sally; and in the second dream, the son has brown hair like him. Chu's son is equal to himself. He hopes that someone can tell himself like his father that his classmates in acting class are meaningless to his judge. (The first time I watched it, I didn't find that Barry had a daddy issue at all. This time I saw everything foreshadowing. The linkage between the second season and the first season was written very well.)
In the second season, Hank went to Lululemon to find Barry and said that if you didn't help me kill, I would be dead, but he was hurt by the countless i don't fucking care of Barry. In fact, the same scene was staged in the first season of this episode: if Goran cancels the stash house raid because of the lipstick camera, Hank will be dead-and Barry’s reaction is the same as in the second season, "i don't care" ","I'm serious too, he should kill you". It's just that Hank's existential crisis was automatically resolved because Fuches advised Goran to continue to act, and it did not trigger an incident similar to Hank's threatening revenge against Barry in the second season. On the other hand, this time Fuches accidentally saved Hank's life for his own benefit. At the end of the first season, Hank saved Fuches' life for his own benefit. I really doubt that this reincarnation was not intentionally arranged by the script. Inadvertently inserting willows, they all have to be paid when they come out.
The place I liked the first time I watched it: Fuches asked Barry to kill Taylor in the hotel room, and the show card was "sometimes you just have to shut up and do your fucking job"; the next scene was Barry coming to the theater During the rehearsal, Macbeth had a dispute with his classmates. The words he used to justify Macbeth (and himself) ostensibly came from Fuches. It can be seen that Barry is indeed a fool who was brainwashed by Fuches. However, what is really interesting is that there are two inconsistencies that I did not find on the first time: First, despite similar actions, Barry is not the same as Macbeth in personality. He does not have any desire for power or ambition to drive the latter to commit murder, Fuches Not even his Mrs. Macbeth, Fuches does not feel remorse for instigating Barry to kill; second, the same words from Fuches and Barry mean completely different meanings. Fuches comforted Barry, he must obey the instructions to kill and fight at the same time. I believe in my heart that Barry, as the perpetrator of so many murders, is extremely guilty and hopeless (see Fuches's speech when he thought Barry had killed the little girl Lily in the fifth episode of the second season, or what Fuches said to Barry under his frustration in this episode "You take out who you're told, when you're told, leave arbitration to the fucking pearly gates"-this means that Fuches thinks that the day of judgment against Barry may eventually come at the gates of heaven), but Barry thinks He obeyed the instructions to kill is a shield for all his murders-he also sincerely believes that he is innocent at this time. (The time to doubt life hasn't come yet, at least until he kills Chris.)
Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh, I see Barry is actually so cute. Yes, he's deeply human, the depth of the personality is too human to have any possibility to bear the price of being a god, nor to enjoy the judging pleasure that can be brought by taking life away. His problem is that he is still in ptsd so that he is not sensitive enough, and going to the acting class is actually the treatment process for his ptsd, but the treatment is too simple and rough, and there is no clinical placebo/narcotics during the period, and the pain caused is particularly strong. It may even lead to collateral damages such as the deaths of Chris, Janice and others. I have a saying that Bill Hader is so perverted I love you.
As for the role of Taylor, it's too fantasy + comedy to play, and there is nothing to say and the laugh is over.
Finally, after this episode of Big Rat*, he immediately sliced his head. After Barry told Fuches about Taylor's existence in the parking lot, he immediately cut the two of them back to the hotel room. Fuches yelled in the bathroom outside the camera. The timing of the editing in these two places was absolutely perfect. Totally badass. I really love the rough rhythm of this play.
*Seeing that some netizens in the oil pipe comment area pointed out that Barry shoots the big rat corresponded to and later he killed Chris (rat=informer)...... This interpretation is too legit-Chris couldn't do it? Then Barry will do it for him (Hit the plush toy of the playground mouse for him & let him keep it secret forever)-It's not overly interpreted at all, but it's still terrible. This drama is indeed allegorical, and it is too cruel in order to deliver the most effective information in the shortest time.
E06
The main line of this episode has no hot spots, only miscellaneous:
Hank started arranging home decoration when he first entered the stash house. The table tennis table and the French glass windows are exactly the same as when he took over the Myanmar temple at the end of the second season. The character integrity is absolutely perfect.
The apron brother held a photo of Sally's dressing dress: "Barry have sex with nun", laughing to me.
Henry Winkler was 74 in the first season, but Gene actually told Janice that he was only 47 this year? ? ? That's horrible fun. I think that the old Chechen killer also said that he was only 45 before, and he clearly looks 85. Okay, let us forcefully interpret the wave beyond the laughing point. It is doubled to be a careless professional killer or a failed Hollywood actor. Senile. So, as a professional killer and failed actor, does Barry look a little too young, after all, he was born in 1979 (Bill Hader himself 78).
While Barry seriously tested the possibility of leaving the latter to take over the murder business at Taylor's house, there was a lot of pornography in the background, which was too disturbing hahahahahahaha. The key is that Taylor said look at what this chick does to the dude's ass, the selection of films tastes peculiar.
In addition, Taylor said to Barry i'm a marine, just like you is really unconvincing and funny-look at Taylor’s arm, and then look at Barry’s. No wonder Bill’s fitness coach persuaded him to act. Computer speakers in the army.
What I saw at Taylor's house: a large jar of petroleum jelly, Ben & Jerry ice cream, a few cheap takeaway coffee paper cups, an oversized bag of party size corn flakes, and empty beer bottles placed around. Lots of band/team/sexy girl posters. It seems that the coffee table is a safe. The lower part of the soft chair Barry was sitting on looked like a toilet.
Barry's daydream (fifth time in this season): Put on a sweater cardigan for Daddy! One more daughter! (Where did the blond son go?) There are three Oscars, three Emmys and three Golden Globe trophies in the living room display cabinet hahahahahahahaha.
Gene called Shakespeare the Bard and learned.
The I LOVE YOU teaching method is really great! ! ! Sally hates Barry and feels a bit pitiful. He is embarrassed to treat him this way, but in the end he still feels indifferent. It's the right way, Sarah Goldberg. I like her more and more. Barry's last two sentences i love you are really poor dogs.
Call Taylor:
Barry: I'm gonna put a fucking bayonet up in your ass.
Also Barry: Hey man! ... the plane thing is kind of like a different VIBE.... Laughing and sick.
Sally and Gene asked for the role of Macbeth, tusk, I did exactly the same thing when I was a kid.
All Chechen staff will not change magazines hahahahahahaha.
It turns out that it takes a while for the bullet to pass the physical distance after the gun is fired. Does it really take that long? It feels almost a second. After the end of the movie, there is no music in the outro, and the wind blows in the wild. It's great.
Finally: The voice of Bihed in this episode is not Barry's at all, it's his own, super dorky.
E07
The perfect episode. The two highlights of this episode, Chris/Barry in the car, and Macbeth the queen is dead.
When Chris said "I can't live like this; we could go to jail" to Barry, Bill was reciting the same lines silently, looking at the first half of the line. Two explanations: one, he was unprofessional, and he read the lines he wrote for his opponent's character; second, he deliberately did it, implying that Barry himself was also saying i can't live like this to himself. I prefer to believe in the second one, after all, the first one is too buggy.
The reason why Barry gaffes at Chris and even killed him is not only because Chris would surrender and threaten himself, but also because the remarks in Chris' car destroyed his belief in telling self-deception in every sense— —Chris, as a normal person, told him that normal people can’t kill. Normal people will feel fear after killing. Normal people can’t calm down. Normal people will be defeated by moral sense, and you are a pervert. This is where Barry is really offended. He feels that Chris is accusing him as a normal person, telling him that you will never get and don't deserve to be redeemed-this is Barry's death. And then Chris realized that Barry might have killed himself for this, and turned to say I know you're a good guy, it's too late-he can't convince himself, let alone that he plans to break the pot after being offended without seeking morals But Barry, begging to protect himself. Otherwise, with Barry's soft-hearted character, it would be difficult to kill Chris even if it is dangerous to him, but at this time he in the car has entered Iraq/the end of the second season. But the first season did not break his anger issue. Now that I look back, I feel very round.
In addition, there are two important points that I missed when I first watched this scene:
1. Chris first told Barry in a state of excitement that he told his wife he was going to the gym when he went out. After Barry yelled desperately why did you say that, Chris changed his words and said that he didn't tell his wife he was going to the gym before going out. , But told her that she was coming to see Barry. At first I thought the first sentence was a lie, but this time I understood it, and the second sentence was-Chris is saving his life. And Barry's old fritters, it must be seen that Chris changed his words completely to bluff and warn Barry that if Barry killed himself, his wife would also know that the matter was related to Barry, which is not true.
2. Barry [chosen] not to kill Taylor for two reasons: First, they are both former marines; Second, Taylor saved his life from the Bolivian gangster. And Chris met both of these conditions-he was even better than Taylor in other aspects, but Barry [chosen] to kill him. So this drama is! very! carve! meaning! To highlight Barry’s moral dilemma, Bill Hader & Alec Berg, you two have no intentions! ! I don’t know how many parallel structures are packed in an episode of 30 minutes. Are you writing a paper? ! This is really the fucking comedy in a comedy. The funniest thing in all stories is destiny (it's called fortune, not destiny). The funniest plot is to talk about personal [choice] issues in front of destiny.
As for Macbeth's game, it should be the best player of the two seasons. The rhythm is perfect to the scary quick editing; the double subtext of "the queen is dead"-Barry imagines anyone telling Chris’s wife Chris’ death, and Barry’s first experience of the spiritual fear brought about by violent death and the murderer’s Moral pressure; Macbeth's lines before the queen is dead, I have already lost my fear, and it just fits Barry's previous killing machine state; even the monologue of tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow after Sally is self-obsessed with English accents. The control freak becomes a natural expression of Barry's emotional infection... This scene is too delicate, it is a condensed form of the whole fable of the show, although it is straightforward enough, but good is good, and it doesn't matter if it is straightforward.
Another comparison structure that is not straightforward, and may not be important, but is the highlight here: Hank notified Fuches of Barry's "death", which is actually a preview of the queen is dead later. It’s just that Hank and Fuches are both funny, and the audience also knows that Barry is not dead. The misunderstanding here is mainly to complete the comedy effect, so it may pass with a smile, but in fact this arrangement is definitely an intentional parallel.
Of course, there are two big bugs in this episode: First, how did Barry and Chris run so far in a desert with almost no cover after a car overturned without being noticed by the Bolivians, so that the motorcycle Brother Che needs to ride a bike to find them; Second, Chris was disguised as suicide by Barry. The two had hanged out many times. Chris' wife also knew about Barry's existence. Would the police not want to investigate Barry? But these are not important. The show discusses moral themes, not how Barry is open or how spicy the LAPD is.
Miscellaneous:
The opening flashes back to Ryan's clip. I finally know who he looks like-he looks like Garnett Hedland when he was young.
When Hank talked with Fuches for the first time, the newly bought babka bread appeared on hand. The key was how it seemed that the two breads were stacked on top of each other with cream in the middle and turned into a cake? ? ? ? If that's the case, it's too funny.
Barry was only discovered when he received Sally's text message on his phone when he was hiding in the back of the car. This arrangement made the audience hate Sally. The second season converged more, probably because I realized that writing such an exaggeration would really make people hate the role and even abandon the drama.
Gene's passage of God is damn funny:
"Are you on drugs, Barry? Because getting clean is an important part of an actor's journey. A little story to illustrate: I was doing Long Day's Journey into night at the Pasadena playhouse with a bunch of cokeheads. It's usually about a three- hour play. We could bring it in just under 37 minutes. We thought we were great. Apparently we were unintelligible. It was the beginning of the bad years, Barry."
In the photo wall of suspects in the police meeting, most people in the acting class used photos from the site, full of dramatic tension, ie scratching their heads and posing, only Barry used the frontal big-headed blue-bottom ID photo hahahahahaha. When Loach investigated Barry again in the second season, he used the site photos, nice detail.
A close-up of Barry’s frenzied wrist backstage after performing the play. On the bracelet is Psalm 91:1, "He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will abide in the shadow of the Almighty." The shadow of the Almighty God symbolizing morality finally landed on Barry was on his head, but the price was that he killed his only friend and learned morality from his virtue, wow.
Finally, the title of this episode, "loud, fast and keep going", I like My Mystery, ah, ah, it should be the favorite title of the two seasons, obviously without any allusions, it is nothing more than a guide for Gene in class. ——If I have to say it, it’s also a metaphor that Barry can still keep going after the off-road vehicle with Cowboys From Hell at the beginning rolls over — but why is it so loud and sound that it fits this episode so well!
E08
I have praised enough for the three starting now of the last episode of okk. This is probably the reason why I suddenly realized that I liked the show very, very, very much when I watched it for the first time. Combined with the second season, he pitifully told Gene about his past in Iraq, saying "ever since then I don't think I deserve a good life", I have a thousand reasons to sympathize with him and understand him wish him the best of luck and god we all want this man to find his fucking salvation——but the role of Barry may not be that good at all, he may not be worth it at all, (crossed out) although i mean it's Bill Hader!!! (crossed out), the most impressive What shuddered was when Janice browsed his Facebook page and found that he actually went to attend Chris' memorial ceremony, wearing a memorial t-shirt with Chris' name printed on it, and taking a photo with Chris' wife and children with a smile on their faces? ! We have seen a lot of Barry’s human nature and conscience since eight episodes, otherwise I really want to ask [Where is this man’s conscience], as for now I can only lament alright alright alright you have a fucking conscience, that I know, but man you're a big fat fucked-up liar. What kind of wall skin can make a thing like killing someone and pretending to be suicide and then appearing casually beside Chris's relatives? In "The Irishman," Robert De Niro couldn't even make a phone call. The basic shame of human beings, my friends, but what about Barry? The psychological quality is so good that I really don't deserve to be a human being. After crying on the stage, dropping a chair under the stage and smashing two photo frames, can you continue to pretend if you turn your head back? That acting therapy is fucking working miracles on you, man. But obviously the entire second season is a response to Barry’s ethical disintegrity at the end of this season, especially at the end of the second season, it provides a very miserable but also very satisfying response, that is, Barry, okk we all love him, not worthy Get any good ending. In the end, if he could commit suicide like an old Chechen killer, it would be cheap for him. Damn, I really need the third season.
In this episode of vacation house Sally's lines are very few, but Barry is very articulate, so that no matter how many times I watch it, I feel super unreal and super like another daydream of Barry. The fact is that when Sally starts to look at Barry with a happy and admiring look, when Barry starts to behave like a normal person and even tries to persuade Janice to let him go, Sally stops being a real character and Barry starts looking like a hypocritical bad guy. I really like this design. It makes the audience realize how this drama is different from other film and television works, by imitating the dynamic way of characters in normal film and television works.
Miscellaneous:
After the police press conference declared that Ryan was in collusion with the gang and deserved it, Ryan's memorial photo was removed from the wall of the bar. Poor Ryan, even if he died, he still had to take care of Barry.
In addition, the unloading of the photo only shows the uncle of the bartender. It is said that it is Bill Hader's father-if it is true, it is the father who took the 11-year-old Billy boy to watch "A Clockwork Orange". He got up on the bed and pulled his father to watch "Taxi Driver". That summer, he sent his son to his grandparents’ house and played "Eight and a Half" on TV. That was when his son was in elementary school (the movie above also happened Bill Elementary School) I went to talk about the standup for two months and ended up failing to give up. As a result, his son grew up and became one of the most successful comedians in the United States. I don't know if the information is reliable.
As soon as Hank appeared on the stage, "no way, Jose" I'm sorry I got hurt with laughter.
The role of Goran is really good, and the actor is so good that he hung up the camera and gave a three-second close-up to show respect, puff.
In the second season, Hank’s barbecue bus "Last Words", confessed that he is not suitable for this business, it turned out to be a pavement in this episode-Goran directly told him that you're weak. God, that hurts.
When Barry rescued Fuches from the backlit of the garage door, he looked disgusted + walked in very calmly + unreservedly opened the switchblade to untie Fuches, but he was so handsome. I don’t allow two of the most handsome shots of Bill Hader in the two seasons. Although the final shooting of the pilot was very handsome, it was beaten by an insatiable fuck. And i'm so self-awared (or not) that i shouldn't regard Barry holding a gun as more attractive than him without a gun, so let's hope a flick knife doesn't count. But if you count other characters, s2e5 ends Fuches is the most handsome hahaha.
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