I mean, it's subjective so nobody is right or wrong, I just would have preferred it not have the comedic element to it. I found it distracting.
It's not really supposed to be comedic though. Also, yeah whether the scene worked for you or not is subjective but the point of the scene and what they were going for objectively needed them there doing that.
It definitely seemed to have a comedic element to it, at least the guy pretending to be Barry. But maybe that was just the show's way of saying that guy isn't a very good actor and oversells it heh. The woman was totally fine. I agree that I found it distracting *the way* that they acted it out, but I also think it's important to see the stark difference between how his memory is vs the way the audience interpreted it.
Right, but, the whole point of having them there was to show how wrong they were in their interpretation of what happened. They were trying to do a bunch of things in that scene, like to illustrate the difference between how people with no concept of war see things and the way things actually we for Barry, and to show that Barry was never really fully able to process his feelings about the first time he killed someone. The devastation on Barry's face as he has to lie and tell everyone that he broke down and cried after he killed those people, when he was really getting hailed as a badass hero, isn't earned without those two acting the scene out. The fact that they're bad actors isn't the point, the point is that they're assuming things went one way (a very unrealistic way, very much informed by Hollywood and the conventions of cinematic storytelling) when they actually went another way.
@Anthony_ yeah I think we're really in agreement on this, that seems to be what I said. Again, the only issue I had with it was that the guy's bad acting was distracting, but I think the scene was still necessary
Maybe I have a fucked up sense of humor, but them misunderstanding and misrepresenting what they heard Barry describing came off as a subtle cynical comment on Hollywood and was intended as a joke. I don't know, it doesn't really matter in the end but for me, I found it distracting and would have rather just listened to Barry have a monologue with the flashbacks to show that he was lying about how it felt.
Hank absolutely stole the premiere, but I think that was the intention. They're setting him up for a bigger role this time around and he's clearly the glue that will prevent Barry from leaving that life behind. I like the lead they got off the tooth, that's paying attention to details and it makes a lot of sense how it played out. My one small gripe is that Barry seems like the very obvious candidate as to what is going on here, being the new guy and clearly someone showing signs of PTSD after war. But everyone seems to breeze by that, even in the first season.
Did tonight's air already? I read that the show is on at 7pm EST on Sundays but it isn't in my HBO app yet
I think there's a very real possibility Fuches will die this season which I never would have said during the first season. My stomach literally dropped when they revealed he was wearing the wire There were also some really great jokes this week, I loved Gene not wanting Barry to do anything but the Afghanistan speech but then immediately changing his mind when he says he wants to do it about him