Colonel Nasty
Member
Fuck you Shos for doing that to Ray.
Good god, I don't think I've ever hated any show as much as I hate Girls right now. That finale was terrible and yet the critical praise continues to roll in. I can't believe Sepinwall called Adam heroic in his review.
SHIRI
OPERATE
At the end of the finale, Adam literally kicks her apartment door down when she won't let him in, and it's the most heroic damn thing I've seen on television in forever.
Adam's barechested run to the rescue was unexpectedly thrilling, and kind of a perfect synthesis of so many things "Girls" is about: social anxiety, the way technology transforms the nature and meaning of how we communicate, the struggle to pick a direction and identity in life and, most of all, how the very things that make us great can also make us terrible (and vice versa).
that concluding sequence with Adam and Hannah was one overflowing cauldron of emotion. I need some time to let it sit with me, but that was one dazzling piece of filmmaking: at once a bundle of familiar tropes and something that felt wholly new and exciting and moving.
That's supposed to be satire, right? That can't be serious.I thought it was awful. Just...nothing worked. Marnie and Charlie learned their lessons and are back to square one, but this time not only are they, like, so totally in love and happy, but they're also rich! *eyes roll back into head*
The ending between Hannah and Adam was extremely cheesy and it didn't work at all for me. At first I thought it was a parody or something, but they actually played it straight. I'm actually shocked by how awful that was.
That was the best part of the episode.
Did anyone read Sepinwall's review? I was shocked by the amount of glowing hyperbole littered throughout:
I literally threw up in my mouth from reading all of that.
I don't understand. How exactly did Marnie grow this season?
Did anyone read Sepinwall's review? I was shocked by the amount of glowing hyperbole littered throughout:
I literally threw up in my mouth from reading all of that.
I also thought Tim Goodman's review was odd. It's not so much a review of the episode as it is a diatribe against the super duper misogynistic fans who just don't understand the genius of Lena Dunham. His closing comment is essentially "Haters gonna hate".
So this finale left us with these possible plot lines for next season:
1) Charlie loses all of his money because his app company is a piece of shit straining his and Marnie's relationship.
2) Roy becomes ambitious and successful operating the new location in Brooklyn Heights leaving Shoshanna dismayed with her breakup decision.
3) Hannah makes a swell mental recovery because her and Adam are back together in some way or another.
4) Jessa reappears mid-season with a sense of liberation through accepting some weird eastern religion during her time as a monk in a monastery from a far away land.
If it were any other show I feel like they'd be ripping it for the same things they are gushing about. It's a weird thing to see.
Pretty much encapsulated the inconsistency of the season. Subpar at best.
Season one was interesting. This one was terrible.
Man, I love this show. It has some of the most complicated characters on TV. They're deeply flawed human beings, and in ways that actually make them less likable (as opposed to the typical TV character whose flaws make them more sympathetic or more conventionally entertaining) while still having virtues and competencies and even, yes, moments of heroism.
And as Sepinwall said, both sides come from the same place: the thing that makes you terrible also makes you awesome. Just look at that last scene. The exact same instinctual behavior that leads Adam to destroy his work in a fit of anger is what leads him to come save Hannah from herself. The same willingness to transgress boundaries that lets him come into her house and stalk her lets him break down her door at the end and rescue her.
This is the Empire Strikes Back downer ending (dark dark dark), only ironicized (the dark is presented as good) and folded in on season 1 (what looks good but is actually dark is where we were at the beginning of the show, which retroactively changes the whole show). Shosh falls from honest, innocent naivete to lying her way through a breakup so she can fuck somebody else (welcome to being an adult). Ray finds a reason to care and then loses it. Charlie and Marnie get back together out of neediness, insecurity, and inertia, which is a recipe for disaster (again). And Hannah and Adam are terrible for each other, except when they're not. Everybody's going in painful, ridiculous circles, looking for happiness from (and for) the wrong people.
Girls is a show about people who think they're moving forward when they're actually moving backwards. (And then sometimes, somehow, they move forward.) I can't wait for next season.
Walter White has more redeeming qualities than Hannah.
don't diss adam, he is the man! At least he has an excuse for the things he does. He is crazy.Adam is a psycho pseudo-rapist but apparently by letting him also do stuff right of a bad romcom people are ready to forgive.....
Didn't he also force some pedo-fantasy on Hannah in the very first episode?
Walter White has more redeeming qualities than Hannah.
Man, I love this show. It has some of the most complicated characters on TV. They're deeply flawed human beings, and in ways that actually make them less likable (as opposed to the typical TV character whose flaws make them more sympathetic or more conventionally entertaining) while still having virtues and competencies and even, yes, moments of heroism.
And as Sepinwall said, both sides come from the same place: the thing that makes you terrible also makes you awesome. Just look at that last scene. The exact same instinctual behavior that leads Adam to destroy his work in a fit of anger is what leads him to come save Hannah from herself. The same willingness to transgress boundaries that lets him come into her house and stalk her lets him break down her door at the end and rescue her.
This is the Empire Strikes Back downer ending (dark dark dark), only ironicized (the dark is presented as good) and folded in on season 1 (what looks good but is actually dark is where we were at the beginning of the show, which retroactively changes the whole show). Shosh falls from honest, innocent naivete to lying her way through a breakup so she can fuck somebody else (welcome to being an adult). Ray finds a reason to care and then loses it. Charlie and Marnie get back together out of neediness, insecurity, and inertia, which is a recipe for disaster (again). And Hannah and Adam are terrible for each other, except when they're not. Everybody's going in painful, ridiculous circles, looking for happiness from (and for) the wrong people.
Girls is a show about people who think they're moving forward when they're actually moving backwards. (And then sometimes, somehow, they move forward.) I can't wait for next season.
Hannah gets waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay too much hate.
Any hate she gets just helps to slightly balance out critic's unwarranted elevation of the marginally talented Lena Dunham.
Any hate she gets just helps to slightly balance out critic's unwarranted elevation of the marginally talented Lena Dunham.
So people overly hate her character because the don't like Lena? Thats why I don't take the criticism from this thread seriously. Its like people are just trying to hate it.
So people overly hate her character because the don't like Lena?
Hannah is an awful human being. Its unsurprising the character is so despised.
That's not at all what he said.
So people overly hate her character because the don't like Lena? Thats why I don't take the criticism from this thread seriously. Its like people are just trying to hate it.
Hannah is an awful human being. Its unsurprising the character is so despised.
Man, I love this show. It has some of the most complicated characters on TV. They're deeply flawed human beings, and in ways that actually make them less likable (as opposed to the typical TV character whose flaws make them more sympathetic or more conventionally entertaining) while still having virtues and competencies and even, yes, moments of heroism.
And as Sepinwall said, both sides come from the same place: the thing that makes you terrible also makes you awesome. Just look at that last scene. The exact same instinctual behavior that leads Adam to destroy his work in a fit of anger is what leads him to come save Hannah from herself. The same willingness to transgress boundaries that lets him come into her house and stalk her lets him break down her door at the end and rescue her.
This is the Empire Strikes Back downer ending (dark dark dark), only ironicized (the dark is presented as good) and folded in on season 1 (what looks good but is actually dark is where we were at the beginning of the show, which retroactively changes the whole show). Shosh falls from honest, innocent naivete to lying her way through a breakup so she can fuck somebody else (welcome to being an adult). Ray finds a reason to care and then loses it. Charlie and Marnie get back together out of neediness, insecurity, and inertia, which is a recipe for disaster (again). And Hannah and Adam are terrible for each other, except when they're not. Everybody's going in painful, ridiculous circles, looking for happiness from (and for) the wrong people.
Girls is a show about people who think they're moving forward when they're actually moving backwards. (And then sometimes, somehow, they move forward.) I can't wait for next season.
She's an average human being.
She's an average human being.
I haven't noticed anything wrong with her acting.I hate her character because she's both poorly written and poorly acted. What other reason would I need?
She's an average human being.