Season one Liz, the scene just cuts to Tuan being folded into a suitcase.Wonder if season one Elizabeth would have believed him
Promo looks nuts.
Season one Liz, the scene just cuts to Tuan being folded into a suitcase.Wonder if season one Elizabeth would have believed him
Wonder if season one Elizabeth would have believed him
Did they show Martha just to torture us. Dying to see how everything comes together by the end of this series. She deserves a happy ending.
Season one Liz, the scene just cuts to Tuan being folded into a suitcase.
Promo looks nuts.
Great episode. Can't praise this show enough right now.
She would have shot him as soon as he gave the excuse.
Two adults throwing a kid against the wall and holding a gun to his face?Great episode. Wonder why they had the violence rating, though.
Oh yeeeeeeeeaaaah.Two adults throwing a kid against the wall and holding a gun to his face?
Wherever he goes all this going to shit is going to destroy his chances of running a conservative think-tank.- It honestly might be better for Henry if he heads off to a private school in New Hampshire. I guess the question is, when everything falls apart, do you want him close to you or clear of the wreckage?
This week, Thomas talks to Peter Ackerman, who wrote Episode 509, IHOP. Later, she chats with Alison Wright about how she sees her character, Martha Hanson, coping with life in Moscow.
Can someone school me on the Russian camps (I assume they're talking about gulags)? Why were people being arbitrarily sent there and why is it taboo to talk about?
We're on episode 9 and I couldn't even begin to tell you what this season is about. It has been entirely aimless and middling. Had to make up some itsfuckingnothing.gif plotline for Tuan to remotely spice shit up this week. This show used to have an actual plot, a moving force going through the season. When they announced a planned end of the show I absolutely did not think this was the way things were going to go. Thought it would be more focused than ever.
Maybe I'm in the minority, but this season is awful.
Its been pretty aimless for most of the show, which is why I never really understood why people rate it so highly. I like the show, but mostly for the 80s nostalgic elements, the Russia vs USA cold war spy elements, the great acting by Philip, Liz, and Stan, and the attention to detail. But story wise the show has always been very weak imo, with usually 2-3 explosive episodes per season and then the rest all quiet slow burning, wheels spinning nowhere episodes.
It would be pretty funny if Henry ends up a Wolf of Wall Street type, the complete antithetical foil to everything Elizabeth believes in.
The big surprise for me this season has been how much I have loved all the Russia stuff, its definitely slow but feels like you are getting a birds eye view into a system that is on the verge of collapse.
I see, but this seems like it occurred mainly in the 30s. Unless I've misunderstood, the characters are talking about events in the post war era.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Purge
Scroll down about halfway and look through the descriptions of the arrests and the nonsensical charges.
The camps they are talking about are forced labor camps with inhumane treatment (near-starvation level of food, never enough heat and clothing, backbreaking work).
Edit: Not really related to the camps and purges, but here's another good example of the Soviet system at work, the deliberate starvation of a few million Ukranians, probably to weaken the region under Soviet control.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holodomor
for your last bullet point I read it a bit differently. I thought Stan was maybe leaning toward revenge and then went to her for justification. I could be wrong lol.Decisions, decisions...
- I have no idea if Tuan is telling the truth, and I don't know what they should do there.
- It honestly might be better for Henry if he heads off to a private school in New Hampshire. I guess the question is, when everything falls apart, do you want him close to you or clear of the wreckage?
- Stan's gut told him that revenge isn't the answer, but he just got a mandate from Gaad's wife.
In other news, Oleg is kinda hosed at this point, isn't he? Not sure he makes it out of this if Stan comes after him with the KGB snooping around while he's also crossing the heavyweight food distribution mafia.
Henry is getting the ol' "fuck outta here character we don't know what to do with" card. They didn't do it completely out of nowhere at least (aside from making him a math genius this season), but it's pretty clear that's what they're doing.
Sooo, why did Liz and Phil never ask Tuan where he was all night past 3am when Liz was over there? It's not like he flew to Seattle to see his adopted family or was out in some train station talking to his sick brother, right?
Eh - given his relationship with Stan and his sudden ambivalence towards his parents, I wouldn't be shocked at all to see a Henry-themed blindside. I actually feel the same way about a lot of the more "languid" plot threads this season. It's as if the board is stealthily being set for some huge, game-changing crisis, and it's just not clear yet which straw is going to break the camel's back.
I don't want to try to make excuses for the show or anything, because I'm loving this season (even if it is a bit slower). But it feels like that's the point? The other seasons have had an overarching theme each time, and this season felt like it was going to be the agricultural theme. But that's almost ceased to exist because of the conflict going on with a lot of the actual characters.We're on episode 9 and I couldn't even begin to tell you what this season is about. It has been entirely aimless and middling. Had to make up some itsfuckingnothing.gif plotline for Tuan to remotely spice shit up this week. This show used to have an actual plot, a moving force going through a season. When they announced a planned end of the show I absolutely did not think this was the way things were going to go. Thought it would be more focused than ever.
Maybe I'm in the minority, but I'm not sure I'm enjoying this season.
We're on episode 9 and I couldn't even begin to tell you what this season is about. It has been entirely aimless and middling. Had to make up some itsfuckingnothing.gif plotline for Tuan to remotely spice shit up this week. This show used to have an actual plot, a moving force going through a season. When they announced a planned end of the show I absolutely did not think this was the way things were going to go. Thought it would be more focused than ever.
Maybe I'm in the minority, but I'm not sure I'm enjoying this season.
I see, but this seems like it occurred mainly in the 30s. Unless I've misunderstood, the characters are talking about events in the post war era.
I don't want to try to make excuses for the show or anything, because I'm loving this season (even if it is a bit slower). But it feels like that's the point? The other seasons have had an overarching theme each time, and this season felt like it was going to be the agricultural theme. But that's almost ceased to exist because of the conflict going on with a lot of the actual characters.
I don't know. It feels like the halted agricultural theme explains how the show has fragmented its plotlines a bit. Doesn't mean it's flawless, but it feels deliberate to me. But I understand if it feels a bit aimless to some, too.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Purge
Scroll down about halfway and look through the descriptions of the arrests and the nonsensical charges.
The camps they are talking about are forced labor camps with inhumane treatment (near-starvation level of food, never enough heat and clothing, backbreaking work).
I see, but this seems like it occurred mainly in the 30s. Unless I've misunderstood, the characters are talking about events in the post war era.
With the GMO crops, they thought they were stopping an operation aimed at starving out the Soviet people, then it turned out their enemy was actually doing work that could help people all over the world. This realization, however, came after they murdered a man working toward that goal.
It's more about themes now than season-long plotlines. The bioweapon, the agriculture stuff, and even Tuan, are related.
With the bioweapon, they believed they were working to help their country defend its citizens, then it turned out they were helping the Soviets murder people in a very gruesome way.
With the GMO crops, they thought they were stopping an operation aimed at starving out the Soviet people, then it turned out their enemy was actually doing work that could help people all over the world. This realization, however, came after they murdered a man working toward that goal.
With Tuan, they realized that their KGB insticts and methods just makes them look like bullies (although they might be more to that story, but at this point it sure seems like it was a wrong call, and that the purpose of the storyline was to cast more doubt on the work they do and how they do it).
At least to me, the show at this point is about the final erosion of Philip and Liz's belief that they are on the right side of history, and how there are very few, if any, winners in this game. That certainly includes Stan, Oleg, Martha, Gabriel, Tuan, and by extension, Henry, Paige, etc.
Other shows quickly build up a character over an episode or two (The Walking Dead is a repeat offender) to give more weight to their demise. The Americans has been doing this remarkably evenly for a remarkable number of characters. I understand why some find the pacing of the show a turnoff, but I definitely feel that it serves a purpose. There is no way that all major characters will end up dead by the end (which is the only way many shows do tragedy), but I believe the show is going in a direction where we will still be able to appreciate the full weight of their personal tragedies, even if that "only" means estrangement, loneliness, and disillusionment.
Right, I think the writers understand that Henry has been mostly forgotten the past few seasons (due to the emphasis on Paige as well as the actor's injury), and this is a clever way to use that for the story. We've overlooked him as Philip and Elizabeth have, and now he's attempting to move forward in his own, unexpected way. But I don't think they're going to simply write him by shuffling him off to boarding school, and you make a good point as to things accelerating towards a conclusion before that's even an option. If they stick to their estimated episode count, we only have 14 left.I'm surprised you guys are so certain we are actually going to make it to the fall so Henry can go to boarding school before the shit hits the fan, let alone the show ending for good. This season is almost over and next season is the last.
Nitpicking but the wheat is the product of simple artificial selection not GMO.
I wouldn't say it's completely solved, but the largest factor would be the end of the USSR / dissolution of communism. Russia essentially moved to a market economy in the early 90s. Gross oversimplification, but if you want more you've got some stuff to Google. And it was REAL rough for a while during the transition...This is probably a dumb question, but they talk a lot about food shortages in Russia, even showing it in the present day (of 1984). I assume this problem was eventually solved? If so, how?
And the Russian diet is still pretty awful; it's a lot of fatty meats and heavy breads and a shocking (to most Americans at least) amount of hard alcohol.
Edit: The actor who plays Henry was injured? I just googled it and couldn't find anything.
Possibly, though they did note that he broke his ankle right before they starting shooting S4, and as a result, he had to be seated for just about all of his scene this year. I'm not sure how limiting that is, nor do I have a good read on how strong an actor he is at this point.