Boardwalk Empire (season 2) thread Vol. Season 1 Blu-Ray 1/10 *Best Buy 2 per store?!*

"Boardwalk Empire" wrapped up its second season earlier tonight with some surprising developments. I published my finale review a few hours ago, and I also got a chance yesterday to talk to the show's creator, Terence Winter, about how and why everything went down, coming up just as soon as I buy some stamps…
 
Obviously, we have to start with Jimmy's death. Was that something that was always planned, or was it a Tony Blundetto situation (from Winter's time on "The Sopranos") where you realized at some point down the line that it had gone too far, and Nucky would not let this stand?

 
It was more of a Tony Blundetto situation for us. It's funny: I never really thought of it in those terms, and it's ironic that Tony Blundetto is the one killed him. But it was really the latter. Once we started plotting the season out, when we were honest with ourselves, we said, if the idea was to bring Nucky from (Jimmy telling him) "You can't be half a gangster anymore" to the point where he crosses the line and is engaging in gangster behavior himself, meaning he's the guy who pulls the trigger, if we're telling that story honestly, there was no way Jimmy could survive this, and moreso, if Nucky's going to be a gangster, he's got to be the one to pull the trigger. Otherwise, he's still delegating things to people.
 
We waffled. Once we started to come to that conclusion, there was a good number of months where we really wrestled with it, asking, "Is there any way? Can he kill someone else? Let Jimmy off the hook?" And the honest answer kept coming back to "No, this is it." It ended up working out for us in a way. Just given the fact that episodic TV being what it is, the audience is so in tune to the rhythm of things: Okay, well, they'll never kill a main character. If this happens, it'll happen in season five. You're always trying to stay ahead of them and defy expectations. In a way, it's great. My hope is that as soon as Jimmy sees Nucky and says, "I want to make things right," everyone's going to say, "Oh, !!%$, he's gonna take him back now and it's all forgiven,"and then at the end, that's not the case at all. I'm really hoping to piss a lot of people off early in the hour who think this is phony and we're just trying to undo the situation we just spent 12 episodes creating.
 
In that way, it really serves the storytelling in a big way. In another way, you're taking a stick of dynamite to a major character and a big part of the first two seasons' arc. Jimmy's obviously one of the co-leads of the series. For me, that's the challenge of what we do. Okay, now where do we go from here? You introduce new people, new conflicts and life goes on from there. It's alternately scary and challenging at the same time.
 
Let's talk a little bit more about the hesitation. We've talked in the past about how good Michael Pitt is, you've seen it, everyone's seen it. How hard is it to say, "This is not going to be a person on my show anymore"?
 
It's very hard. You know what you have. It's not a question of, "Okay, we'll cast someone else, and we'll have other characters and other actors." That's very true, but those people haven't been written for yet, they don't exist yet and I don't know what their situations might be. On the one hand, I know Michael, I know what he can do, what he can do as a character, it's all there, it's great. So selfishly, in terms of making it easier for everybody, you go, "Why don't we just keep this guy around?" But if you want to have a series that has some balls and really honest storytelling, then we've dug ourselves into a position where we pushed our main character into a corner and we really want this guy to come out as a gangster, then this is the only option. And anything short of that is phony and is cowardice on our part, because we're trying to preserve a situation that works better for us. We've been through a lot of conversations about this.
 
 
You referred before to Jimmy as one of the co-leads of this series, and this season it seemed there was a clear set-up where even if Nucky was 1, Jimmy was at least 1A, if not equal to Nucky. He provided a nice emotional balance: Nucky is cool and reserved and keeps everything to himself, Jimmy is hot and straightforward. How does that change the balance of the show without him there?
 
The season was very much about Nucky and Jimmy together. The balance of that was skewed according to the story. That was the story we were telling this season. Wherever we come back in season 3, there will be different dynamics, different characters, a different balance, whatever that is. Nucky will change too. Nucky this year seems very cool and reserved, and calm under pressure; he may not be that guy next year. He's crossed a major line now. We're going to come back to the series over a year into the future. Nucky's trajectory as a gangster has continued to grow. Nucky could have a different personality when we come back. And then depending on who he interacts with, it'll be a very different energy on the show. On "The Sopranos," not that Big @@*!# was as major a character as Jimmy, not by a long shot, but Richie Aprile was a nemesis of Tony's, and then he's gone. Then Ralph Cifaretto is there, and you get two seasons, and Ralph is gone and suddenly it's Feech  La Manna and Phil Leotardo. You're constantly reinventing the series even though you're keeping it the same series. People come and go, and leave and come back. That's sort of the job. It's almost like a magician: Look over here! Okay, now look over here! Just direct your attention somewhere else. Our job is to tell compelling stories so that people don't get fixated to what the show was in a particular season. The same thing Matt (Weiner) has done to "Mad Men." He's taken the detonator to that show a couple of times. The agency crumbles, and you come back and it's a different set-up. So similar in some ways.
 
What happens at this point to the Jimmy-adjacent characters? Is Richard still a part of the show? Is Gillian?
 
Yes, they're all still part of the show. Aside from the people who have been killed, they're all still part of our universe.
 
But Richard, the two people in the whole world he connected to after the war were Angela and Jimmy. They've now been murdered. I imagine he's not going to respond too well to that.
 
You go back and rewatch the scene with Richard and Jimmy at the end of this. Essentially, Jimmy is giving Richard permission not to come with him. Jimmy knows what he's walking into, he comes unarmed. Jimmy never expected to come back alive from the war. Nobody was more surprised than he was. He's kind of been the walking dead, for lack of a better term, since he got back. Even from the first encounter with Gillian, it was very weird; Gillian remarked, "This isn't my son anymore," he was different. Of course, coming out of the gate, it was an inappropriate interaction, she ran practically naked into his arms. So right out of the gate, you see this guy's got a lot going on behind there. In coming full circle to the realization of how deeply he's been manipulated by Gillian and how badly she's screwed him up psychologically, he's sort of taking the honorable soldier route and falling on his own sword, and he knows full well when that phone call comes, what it means and what he's walking into. He says to Richard, "This is something that I have to do," and Richard knows what he's talking about, and being a soldier himself, Richard allows him to do that. Otherwise, it would have been Butch Cassidy and the two of them would have gone out (together). Richard accepts Jimmy's fate also, and as his friend, offering to go and help him and says, "I'll kill them all if you want," and Jimmy says it's okay and goes out the door. Richard knows when he walks out the door, as does Jimmy. He knows he's walking to his death and this is what's coming to him. I don't know that Richard necessarily feels that he needs to avenge this.
 
We have to talk quite a bit about Gillian, but first there's this: how fearful should we be for young Tommy?
 
In what sense?
 
In the sense that now his mother and father are dead, and he's been left in the charge of his mentally unstable, incestuous grandmother?
 
I don't know how all of this has changed Gillian yet, I don't know if she's learned anything from this. Obviously, she says she used to kiss Jimmy's winky. I don't know if the winky kissing will be passed on through the generations. I hope not for his sake. In any event, even in the best case scenario, that's probably not a healthy relationship, but I don't think we need to be worried about him.
 
In terms of what happened last week (between Jimmy and Gillian), that's something that had been hinted at for a long time, since that first meeting that you talk about. Something was not right with their relationship. Did you know the whole origin story when you started the series, or did it come to you later?
 
It came to us as season 1 was developing. Searching back in my memory of how even Gillian developed, I knew I wanted his mother to be a showgirl, so if she's a showgirl, she can't be 50 years old, she's gotta be younger. So she's a young woman, so she had him as a kid. Why don't we push that as far as we can go, she had him when she was 13 years old. And if she was a child herself, they would have a very odd relationship; he probably grew up in dance halls, and around a lot of naked showgirls, seen his mother naked a million times. This has just been a strange childhood for this guy. So then if we're going to introduce her as some showgirl, let's do the mislead of people think she's his girlfriend, and the way to sell that is that she's overly affectionate. And then we said, wow, that's interesting. What if that's just a dynamic in that relationship? That she was a child herself when she had this baby, she's sort of stunted emotionally herself and never learned how to interact properly with this kid. And then as the series developed, then you start to see the characters come to life, and you see Gretchen (Mol) and Michael together, and how they look at each other, and you see what it looks like when she kisses him on the lips. You go, "God, this is really creepy." And then we said what-if what-if what-if, and we finally got to the origin story, and we realized it made perfect sense. Of course he joined the Army; he's trying to get away from this woman. We also knew that Jimmy and Angela hardly knew each other, and that baby was born. We didn't know the exact circumstances, just that he was in college and she was a townie.
 
You say everyone who wasn't killed is continuing. Van Alden seems to be in some trouble, but you also deliberately put him in Cicero, which is Capone-adjacent. I assume you have plans for him.
 
He'll be back. Good catch. I think the Cicero reference will be lost on 90 percent of the audience, if not more. But people who do know their mob history know that was a hub of activity for Capone around '23-'24.
 
But that gets back to what we were talking about before with Jimmy. I imagine you could have contrived a way to get him back into the Treasury office, but you said, "No, we've got to find a way to do something different with this guy."
 
It's the same thing. Rather than concoct scenarios that are stretching the bounds of credulity in order to make it easier for us - we already have the post office set, so let's just keep him here and figure out a way out of this thing - as much as it makes my life as a writer and my writing staff more difficult, you say let's push this as far as we can take it and we'll figure it out. Of course, we're sitting in the writers room now pulling our hair out, going, "What do we do now?" But that's the job and that's what makes it fun. Godwilling, if you can make it all make sense, it's so much more satisfying than having taken the easy way out.
 
One of the things that occurred to me when Angela died is that you have a whole lot of characters on this show, and I believe Nucky and Margaret and Jimmy were the only ones to appear in every episode. A lot of the other character would flit in and out, and we only saw snippets of Angela's story, and then she'd be gone for a while. We saw some of Nelson's story, and then he'd be gone for an episode. How difficult is it to maintain a throughline for all these characters when you have so many of them and there's not necessarily room or budget for all of them in there all the time?
 
It's difficult in the sense that sometimes you want to service your wonderful actors and characters more than you have a chance to. There's so many of them and you're telling so many stories in a finite amount of time. In terms of the storytelling itself, I don't find it that difficult. If anything, we have too much material and not enough time to tell the stories; you have to pick and choose what you want to do. In terms of how things interweave with each other, I find it really fun, it's really challenging to make the puzzle all fit together. Sometimes stories that seem to have nothing to do with each other will intersect late in the game. That can be the most satisfying thing to me, like, oh wow, this little thing we developed in episode 2 can pay off in a big way in episode 9. It's just like designing a crossword puzzle and you just put the pieces all together. I don't find it that difficult.
 
Well, you purged a fair portion of the cast in terms of the people who got killed, plus Lucy skipped town and hasn't been seen since. Do you ever think, "Maybe we can pare it down," or is your intention to bring in a whole bunch of new people to replace the ones you eliminated here?
 
It's a little of both. I'd like to explore more aspects of some of the characters, deeper aspects of characters we've gotten to know a little bit: Rothstein, Luciano Lansky, Capone, Chalky, Richard. Those are people who already exist and I'd like to get to know more about them. On the other hand, they also need conflicts and people to butt up against. So there will be new characters and new situations.
 
Is it simply Margaret knowing that Nucky has lied to her about Jimmy that causes her to sign the deed over to the church?
 
It's not just Jimmy. I think she felt completely duped. As soon as Nucky came home and said Jim Neary had committed suicide, she's been down this road before. I think she made her decision at this point, that this guy will never change. The whole sappy story about God and the family - it's not that she doesn't believe he loves her and the kids, because he does, but in terms of him learning any kind of lesson or changing in any way, I think she knows things are pretty much the same, if not worse. The Jimmy thing at the end just caps it for her, she knows he's absolutely lying and that Jimmy didn't rejoin the Army. In giving away that land, signing the deed over, it's that all debts are paid to God. This is it, her bill is paid, she can move on, she found the happy medium between confessing her sins and purging herself of all that stuff and not having to put Nucky in jail, and then she writes a massive check at the end and thinks, "Okay, here it is." Now she can be done with the religious stuff and the God stuff forever, and where that leaves her and Nucky, I think she can wield can wield a great bit of power as Mrs. Thompson now, and how they fare in that relationship will be one of the storylines of season 3.
 
Her storyline evolved more than a lot this season. She started off as Nucky's co-conspirator, he's completely candid with her about his business, and then she retreats back to God after what happens with Emily. How did you sketch that out to get to this point at the end?
 
The idea was that everything was going along fairly well, and it's a series of downward spirals for Margaret. She's alienated from her family, they reject her. In a moment of weakness, feeling horrible for herself, confirms what they've said about her: that she's this horrible person, and she deserved to be sent off to the workhouse, and then encounters Owen, who is a somewhat familiar voice at least, someone from where she is and is relating to who she used to be, and they sleep together. And on the heels of that, Emily is stricken with polio. Margaret was a woman raised in the latter part of the 19th century as a Catholic in Ireland. As much as you can be a thinking, logical person, that stuff is so ingrained into your personality, I think it's very very difficult for her to not start to question God's role in this stuff and to look at why this is happening. "Why is God doing this to us? What did I do?" She didn't have to dig very deep to say, "I'm sleeping with the man who killed this child's father, and regardless of my reasons, my lifestyle has inflicted this child with this illness." In some ways, that's a very narcissistic view of the world, but growing up Catholic myself, I have no problem thinking Margaret thinks this way. And taking it further, she's being asked to testify about the very thing she feels she's done wrong, which is that Nucky killed this man. She's really spinning wildly out of control in the sense of thinking "Maybe if I set things right with God I can undo this horrible situation." Maybe in her analysis of this, she doesn't realize the rational side of her is totally competing with the religious side, and that not a lot of good is going to come from this. The situation won't be undone by putting Nucky in jail and putting her kids back in poverty again, so she arrives at the place where she can live with herself and think that Nucky loves these kids, he loves her, can marry him, confess her sins to God, have her cake and eat it, too. And then she realizes she's been duped a little, and she fights back.
 
Well, in terms of being duped, how much can Margaret - and how much can we in the audience - take seriously anything that Nucky says?
 
How much can they believe it?
 
Nucky says a lot of things, and says them very convincingly, but is willing to turn on a dime and do something else.
 
From this point on, I think anything he says, certainly for her, can be called into question. I don't think she can trust anything or take anything at face value.
 
You wrote for another show where a guy lied all the time, so what are the challenges that come from having a profoundly dishonest central character?
 
It depends on who he's interacting with. Is he up against someone who knows him and knows not to believe him? People lie to each other all the time, they lie to themselves all the time. People believe things because they choose to believe them. It's easier to believe your 15-year-old isn't smoking pot, even if you have all the evidence there and he's lied to you 10 times already. It's sort of that thing. For convenience's sake, very often people in relationships: Tony and Carmela, he'd lie to her about where he was that night, and she'd accept it even though she knows it's not true. Obviously, Margaret might not believe Nucky anymore, but that doesn't mean she won't choose to say, "I accept what you say, and let's not fight and let's move on, it's just easier for everybody." In terms of other characters that he deals with, it's a question of who they are and how well they know him and what they choose to believe or not to believe.
 
Why is it that Nucky chooses to kill Jimmy and spare Eli? Is it simply a matter of choosing blood over friendship?
 
Yeah, I think at the end of the day, as sinful as it sounds, I think blood is thicker than water. In the final analysis, I think the bigger bet is on Eli. I don't think he completely believes Eli, either, but he feels he can move forward with Eli a lot easier than he could have with Jimmy. In some ways, Jimmy's a mercy killing.
 
It's clear, as you said, that when Jimmy gets the phone call and doesn't bring his knife, he knows it's coming. Does he know it earlier in the episode? Because it seems like some of his interactions with Tommy, for instance, are that of a father getting ready to say goodbye.
 
I think he knew. I don't know that he knew exactly when it was coming, but this finale was Jimmy mopping up all the business he could, preparing knowing that at some point in the future, this was going to happen, whether it's now or next week or next month. He's going to do as much undoing of the damage he's caused as he can, he's going to psychologically say goodbye to his son, say goodbye to Richard, and get his affairs in order, and then he's ready to ship out.  
 
Did you know when you introduced Dunn Purnsley that he was going to somehow wind up as Chalky's sidekick?
 
No. Eric LaRay Harvey was just so powerful in that role that it's one of these examples where you cast somebody and I said, "Ohmigod, this guy's great, we've gotta bring him back." And we knew we were going to do this storyline with the strike, and he's such a great instigator, such a !!%$-stirrer and such a terrific actor, and we loved the dynamic between him and Chalky and knew that he was our guy.
 
I need you to clarify something related to that, because I appear to have been profoundly wrong on this: is Chalky illiterate?
 
Yes.
 
Okay. So why does his wife give him the book?
 
They're pretending to not know that he is. They go along with the fiction that he doesn't like to read, in interest in helping keep his dignity there, they're all pretending.
 
I mentioned Lucy before, but is she coming back, or has she left forever?
 
We may see her again. I wouldn't say gone forever, but she's alive. Much like on "The Sopranos," people come and go, and they pop back into our lives, and we may see her again, I'm not sure where or when. But she's out there. People travel, but she could pop up back in Atlantic City, or elsewhere.
 
Manny somehow survives all of this, and winds up being a prop in what Nucky does with Jimmy. Do you have plans for him going forward?
 
Yes, he'll be back.
 
There was this idea that the young turks were going to rise up and overthrow their masters. Obviously, it didn't work out for Jimmy, and in the last episode, Meyer and Lucky go back to Rothstein and offer to put him into the heroin deal. Did they decide it wasn't worth the effort to work around him right now? What happened?
 
They just took part in a coup attempt that failed in Atlantic City, and for now it's, "Let's reassess and move forward." Obviously, Rothstein's going to find out what happened with Jimmy and that they were a part of this, so better to smooth things over, involve Rothstein in this deal and reassess where they are in a year or two. Which is what happened. In reality, they did involve Rothstein in their heroin business. But as the 20s progressed, they started to come into their own. That's the thing: for every Luciano and Lansky, there are thousands of Jimmy Darmodys who are footnotes in history - these guys who made a run at it, didn't make it and died died trying. That's sort of the point. In our big sweeping crime story, it's why isn't Jimmy Darmody in the history books? Well, A)because he's a fictional character, but B)not everybody became Al Capone. Only one person became Al Capone, and there are hundreds or thousands of people who wanted to be and tried, these low-level alcohol/drug dealers who were never able to get their act together in the way that those guys did.


A must read interview with Alan Sepinwall and the show's creator Terrence Winter.

Link

I don't know why so many of you hate Margaret... Nucky lied RIGHT TO HER FACE after he married her. Considering he's said how Margaret is the one person he can open up to and trust, for him to lie like that? Come on.. it's clear Nucky is not a good person, I don't know why he gets a pass but Margaret is so evil. The interview suggests her signing over the deed could be the end of her religious struggles.. and by giving the land to the church, she allows herself to stay with Nucky with less guilt
 
"You dont know me, James."
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Second time in the entire series we see Nucky with a gun and hes puttin work in. Im sure hes done his fair share in the past hopefully we see some of that next season.

"Im not seeking forgiveness"
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Finally caught the finale and
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When Jimmy and Gillian were talking about the Commodore's will and Jimmy was talking about how the will would transfer to his son when he died I was wondering if that was a bit of foreshadowing. Then when Jimmy told Harrow that he was going to meet up with Manny along I knew what time it was.
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Like someone mentioned earlier Jimmy had to have known his time was up and he seemed at peace with it. Otherwise why put yourself in a hostile environment like that defenseless? I wonder where this leaves Harrow? Jimmy seemed to legitimately care for him and didn't see him soley as a killing machine. And if you thought Gillian was crazy before, she's gonna be hysterical when she finds out about Jimmy, seemingly the only man she ever loved (
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), is gone.

While I'm sad to see Jimmy gone I understand why he had to go from Nucky's standpoint. You can't keep around the dude who tried to have you killed. It's bad business.
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Michael Pitt's acting in Jimmy's final scene was superb.

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@ how Nucky beat the case. That montage where they show the prosecutor going over her opening statement, Nucky and Margaret getting married, and Jimmy and Richard making the treasurer type up the recanting of his previous testimony and subsequently killing him was brilliant.
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Margaret throwing wrenches in Nucky's plan yet again.
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 She read through his !@@$!%@* and realized he hadn't changed at all (as evidenced by him killing Jimmy) so she screwed him over.

Interested in seeing how their dynamic changes in Season 3.

Great finale for a great season of a great show.
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^ That article BigJ posted 
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, a must read.

Feelsgoodman that I caught the Cicero reference on my own (
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), and that Richard/Gillian will not be forgotten about.
 
I kinda had a feeling that Jimmy was going to get off'd this season; the offing of his wife made me more surprised.

But yeah, solid season overall. Can't wait for season 3.
 
Big J 23- thanks for posting that, good read

WOW! The replies in here have already summed up what I've been thinking. Amazing show. It was tough watching Jimmy get killed, he was such an amazing actor it's too bad we
won't have anymore scenes with him but I understand why it had to happen. Maybe the most shook I've ever been from a TV show

I can't wait until season 3. Definitely looking forward to seeing the younger crew come up and as someone mentioned, hopefully Siegel will play more of a role in the show.
There's so many different people that can be brought in, the writers really have a job in front of them.

Only 2 seasons in, and this has to be my favorite show of all time.
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thanks for the read big j......


so Harrow doesn't feel the need for vengeance on  Jimmy's death?

I hope to see more of Harrow and hope his character has stability going forward. He was on the verge of death himself and now that his friend/boss is gone, the one who gave him opportunity, I wonder how he'll come around.


 
 
curious to see what becomes of Harrow now that Jimmy is gone.  They can't write him out in the next season.
Does this mean I need to change my avy? 
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Originally Posted by dyyhard

thanks for the read big j......


so Harrow doesn't feel the need for vengeance on  Jimmy's death?
 
Re-watching the scene it's clear to Harrow this is what needs to happen and what Jimmy has accepted. Otherwise he would have gone with Jimmy to protect him, but he respected his friend's wishes.
Thankfully Winter says he's still apart of the show, but it will be interesting to see how they use him. Without Jimmy he's on his own so we'll see where he ends up. If he follows his advice and lets go of being a soldier or if he finds someone else to follow and attach to.
 
http://insidetv.ew.com/2011/12/12/michael-pitt/
[WARNING: The following interview with Boardwalk Empire costar Michael Pitt contains spoilers about Sunday night's second season finale.].


The brooding, ambitious Jimmy Darmody is no more. But the actor who played him, Michael Pitt, says he respected producers’ stunning decision to kill off his pivotal Boardwalk Empire character in the show’s second season finale Sunday night.

“I like it,
 
Originally Posted by toine2983

And if you thought Gillian was crazy before, she's gonna be hysterical when she finds out about Jimmy, seemingly the only man she ever loved (
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), is gone.

I think she knew Jimmy was gonna die, remember she told Tommy that he was gonna be a big man in this city someday after she seen the doggy tags
 
HBO made a great point explainig how Jimmy "died back in the trenches" and stating that his life was basically a downward spiral since he arrived home from the war...


He died a long time ago....dude was molested as a child and the icing on the cake was when him and his mom fornicated. His mom ruined his life...and this was long before everything went down in that Princeton hotel, NJ room. He WANTED to die in the war. Hence the reason for signing up and trying to escape his life back in the US.
 
Can I please bring something up about last night's episode that doesn't pertain to any of the characters...which is...what the hell was up with that pony dude's face? Was that real, make-up, CG? His face was unreal ugly, like his nose...DID ANYONE PEEP THAT MAN'S FACE?!?
 
Originally Posted by Shox23

Originally Posted by toine2983

And if you thought Gillian was crazy before, she's gonna be hysterical when she finds out about Jimmy, seemingly the only man she ever loved (
sick.gif
), is gone.
I think she knew Jimmy was gonna die, remember she told Tommy that he was gonna be a big man in this city someday after she seen the doggy tags
Yeah, Harrow usually takes long to respond but when she asked if Jimmy went out it's like they both knew and were basically saying it aloud.
 
Originally Posted by Shox23

Originally Posted by toine2983

And if you thought Gillian was crazy before, she's gonna be hysterical when she finds out about Jimmy, seemingly the only man she ever loved (
sick.gif
), is gone.

I think she knew Jimmy was gonna die, remember she told Tommy that he was gonna be a big man in this city someday after she seen the doggy tags


I remember that scene now and you have a point.

She seemed really calm about to me though, given how infatuated she was with him.
 
Gillian + Harrow will make an interesting. I feel like they kind of foreshadowed it before Gillian found Jimmy's war tags. Harrow looking into the room where Gillian and Tommy were playing with the toys, it seemed as though he might have joined them before Gillian decided to take Tommy to bed. Harrow gets his family. Gillian gets someone to love her. Tommy loses.
 
^That's cold blooded. Harrow can adapt to raise a kid or at least do his best. Tommy doesn't lose when he inherits millions. He probably has a better shot at being straight and narrow if Harrow goes straight and raises him.

Gotta watch out for Gillian though.

I wonder if there will be a time skip when we get to season 3 and how long it will be.
 
Harrow is going to go HAM next season. 
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-Still can't believe they killed off Jimmy.
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-Did anyone notice that Nucky told Margs that Jimmy re-enlisted, that means if the get rid of the body, Tommy can't inherit the Commodore's estate. Nucky might go after it, after he finds out what ole girl did? 

-But Harrow is going to go HAM next season. Jimmy was his entire life, first person to since his sister not to look at him like a monster. Nuck better be ready to sell out Slater and Manny to satisfy Harrow's blood lust. 

-I knew Jimmy was a dead man when he told Tommy how he could hide from Gillian whenever he wanted. 
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Real talk? In a TV show this popular, has there ever been a death like this? Such a important character, going so early? I can't remember 

Wahlberg and Scorsese better be working on blowing up Pitt's career 
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RustyShackleford wrote:
Real talk? In a TV show this popular, has there ever been a death like this? Such a important character, going so early? I can't remember 

The Wire murked characters at will. Bodies death will always and forever be the most gut wrenching death to me.
I was pissed to see Jimmy get done in especially since he REALLY NEVER WANTED to have Nucky killed. The close up shot of his face when they decided to go through with it makes more sense now. He knew what was gonna happen to him.

Eli will get handled in jail.

I really hope Schroder gets killed during a sex scene for signing that deed to the church.
 
Originally Posted by RustyShackleford

Harrow is going to go HAM next season. 
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-But Harrow is going to go HAM next season. Jimmy was his entire life, first person to since his sister not to look at him like a monster. Nuck better be ready to sell out Slater and Manny to satisfy Harrow's blood lust. 
If you read the interview with the creator posted by Big J Harrow probably won't go wild. In the whole finale, Jimmy is telling Harrow to promise him to try to come back home, he's going to make things right, he doesn't need him to come with him, etc. Harrow will probably try to get what Jimmy had and hold on to it. I highly doubt he's gonna try and be a one man army on Nuck. He'd fail and eventually die once Nucky is wise to him. Highly doubt he gets anyone to join that cause. Aint no money in it.
-Did anyone notice that Nucky told Margs that Jimmy re-enlisted, that means if the get rid of the body, Tommy can't inherit the Commodore's estate. Nucky might go after it, after he finds out what ole girl did?
That's a possible interesting angle but given the old guy who had the will, Gillian will convince him to do otherwise just like he rolled with what Jimmy did when he tore up the will. Nucky isn't going to stand by with the church having his money. He'll kill the father and keep it moving, he got money from his bootlegging still too.
Real talk? In a TV show this popular, has there ever been a death like this? Such a important character, going so early? I can't remember
Nah, nothing new in television.
 
Originally Posted by RustyShackleford

Harrow is going to go HAM next season. 
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-Still can't believe they killed off Jimmy.
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-Did anyone notice that Nucky told Margs that Jimmy re-enlisted, that means if the get rid of the body, Tommy can't inherit the Commodore's estate. Nucky might go after it, after he finds out what ole girl did? 

-But Harrow is going to go HAM next season. Jimmy was his entire life, first person to since his sister not to look at him like a monster. Nuck better be ready to sell out Slater and Manny to satisfy Harrow's blood lust. 

-I knew Jimmy was a dead man when he told Tommy how he could hide from Gillian whenever he wanted. 
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Real talk? In a TV show this popular, has there ever been a death like this? Such a important character, going so early? I can't remember 

Wahlberg and Scorsese better be working on blowing up Pitt's career 
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What a messed up situation
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Originally Posted by RustyShackleford

Wahlberg and Scorsese better be working on blowing up Pitt's career 
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For real. He doesn't have any projects lined up on IMDB, but I read he is in a band, so he may focus on that for the time being.

He's a great actor, I'm sure he will get work.
 
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