What's that egg inside the mini-dome?
Neal Baer: That's too easy. We will answer that question, but it's not what you expect. It's all coming together. This is a crucial element to the rest of the season: What is this egg, what does this mean and what does it keep out of the dome?
Why is the dome making people have visions of the town?
Neal Baer: That question is completely addressed in the last episode of the season. It's so much a part of the next six episodes. We will be speaking to what the dome can and can't do, why it's doing it and for what reasons. The visions are really going to be profound.
Is this Big Jim's turning point to be more like his novel counterpart?
Neal Baer: Boomer and Ollie were preventing the town from getting access to water, so was Big Jim being evil or was he doing this to save the town? That's always the wonderful part about Big Jim — that it's not like he gets off on killing people, but the only people he's killed have threatened Chester's Mill. Ollie was going to keep everyone from getting water and we'll get into that next week in a big way. In the preview for next week, you see Junior (Alexander Koch) putting his rifle at his dad. Big Jim loves his son more than anything and then the town. He's not just this soap opera Joan Collins character. He's not just J.R. fromDallas. I think it's an Emmy-worthy performance by Dean Norris next week. It's leading to a breakdown, so Big Jim needs to figure out what to do. Retaliation is definitely in Big Jim's vocabulary.
Read Full Article @TV Guide
Neal Baer: That's too easy. We will answer that question, but it's not what you expect. It's all coming together. This is a crucial element to the rest of the season: What is this egg, what does this mean and what does it keep out of the dome?
Why is the dome making people have visions of the town?
Neal Baer: That question is completely addressed in the last episode of the season. It's so much a part of the next six episodes. We will be speaking to what the dome can and can't do, why it's doing it and for what reasons. The visions are really going to be profound.
Is this Big Jim's turning point to be more like his novel counterpart?
Neal Baer: Boomer and Ollie were preventing the town from getting access to water, so was Big Jim being evil or was he doing this to save the town? That's always the wonderful part about Big Jim — that it's not like he gets off on killing people, but the only people he's killed have threatened Chester's Mill. Ollie was going to keep everyone from getting water and we'll get into that next week in a big way. In the preview for next week, you see Junior (Alexander Koch) putting his rifle at his dad. Big Jim loves his son more than anything and then the town. He's not just this soap opera Joan Collins character. He's not just J.R. fromDallas. I think it's an Emmy-worthy performance by Dean Norris next week. It's leading to a breakdown, so Big Jim needs to figure out what to do. Retaliation is definitely in Big Jim's vocabulary.
Read Full Article @TV Guide
Why does it have to be "that'll be answered in episode x" all the time with this show?
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ReplyDeleteBecause the answers should be told organically throughout the story, or would you prefer it if the dome just takes control of Norrie and starts spouting answers left and right?
ReplyDeleteThat's not what I'm talking about at all. I'm criticizing the producers for always answering interview questions with "that'll be addressed in episode two", "that's a question we'll answer on episode eleven" is all.
ReplyDeleteWhy are you even complaining about that? Would you prefer a vague answer like ''we'll answer that in the last half of the season''?
ReplyDeleteI'd think knowing in when certain answers are coming would get someone more excited.
It sounds amauterish. It feels like they're afraid people wouldn't be interested in the show if they didn't know exactly when they'll get the answers, so it's like they play defensive, while I'd much rather be surprised by that organically-given answers you talked about, By telling us exactly when to expected desenláces, it's like they're telling us "don't worry, we're not Lost, we'll give answers, don't stop watching, we have plans, pretty please".
ReplyDeleteNothing too specific. I mean they were all "tune in and see" answers.
ReplyDeleteI get that approach for this kind of a story, but the show better deliver....
My main issue with these types of answers is that they create a lot of hype because promise a lot. So if the show doesn't live up to that it can be problematic.
ReplyDeletelove this show. really has me gripped
ReplyDelete