I get that. I’m just not sure I want to watch that. YMMV.
I never watched Breaking Bad. But ‘anti-hero’ doesn’t necessarily mean ‘dick’; an anti-hero may be an interesting character, have believable motivation, show development, and so on; a dick’s just a dick who does dickish things for the dick of it.
I think Jesse’s problem right now is that his sense of right and wrong has stopped making sense and he’s trying to rationalize it all. He takes his promise to his dad to “be one of the good guys” very seriously, and he believes that God doesn’t make mistakes and his having Genesis must therefore be part of God’s plan - but he sent a repentant Christian soul to Hell in a fit of rage without even thinking about it. Therefore, he has to tell himself that it was God’s will that he damn Eugene, and that he deserved to go to Hell. He’s probably also angry at himself that he backed out of his plan to use his Bene Gesserit Voice at the Sunday service to tell the entire congregation to “Serve God”, because God obviously gave him this power so he could use it to save people and be one of the good guys, and by not using it, he’s defying God.
He’s probably inching towards a breaking point that’s going to snap him out of this dilemma. If what I’ve read about the comics is going to apply here, it’ll probably be something along the lines of the angels telling him that God has gone MIA and hasn’t been planning anything for anyone ever since Genesis showed up that causes him to stop being a dick to his friends.
I enjoyed the comics long ago and tried to watch the first episode tonight. It was just boring and the characters were speaking drivel. I started fast-forwarding quite a bit and then just turned it off.
The comic was the most anti-religious thing I’ve ever read. The TV series reminds me more of those old leprechaun stories where the main character has to deal with an overly literal spirit.
I like it, but it makes me wonder why they even bothered to license the comic.
“Are you OK, Clyde?” “Not so much. Preacher shot my dick off.”
We get some background on Odin in this episode - his family died in a ski lift accident on a vacation he didn’t go on because of work, and that lead him to decide the only real god is “the god of meat”, which is what he’s been serving in accordance with Jesse’s command. Fiore confirms that it’s possible to bring Eugene back from Hell, but after Genesis breaks the coffee can and re-enters Jesse, the pair give up on trying and take off. I assume this means that they’re going with the Saint of Killers as their next best hope to get Genesis out of him for good.
I wonder - what is the Eugene that Jesse’s been talking to in this episode? The angels can’t see it. Is it a product of his own guilty conscience, or is it some other form of celestial being?
I genuinely teared up a bit when I realized what the whole subplot with Tulip and Brewski the dog was leading to - she fed him to Cassidy to heal his burns. Really felt like she’d formed a bond with him by the time she lead him to his fate, too.
Don’t know what to make of the final scene, where we see a man run down into some sort of control room, look at a valve where the needle is up to eleven, and press a “venting” button to lower it before sitting down to read the paper. Feels like some sort of gas explosion is coming up in the season’s denouement.
A very powerful episode I thought—comedic and darkly disturbing at the same time. Apparition Eugene was great. He reminded me of Tommy Gavin’s cousin Jimmy in Rescue Me. He’s real to Jesse and it’s the real actor playing the part. That’s what matters.
I believe control board guy is connected to the buildup of methane gas or something that we see every once in a while when those surface vents open up.
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