Cannes Film Festival 2013

'Boardwalk Empire' - 'The Ivory Tower': Mama's boy

Jimmy and Nucky each scramble to clean up Jimmy's mess

<p>Michael Pitt in "Boardwalk Empire."</p>

Michael Pitt in "Boardwalk Empire."

Credit: HBO/Abbot Genser

A review of the second episode of "Boardwalk Empire" coming up just as soon as I turn on the vacuum sweeper...

"And the world turns." -Nucky

Nucky Thompson is a hard man to get close to, though several characters in this episode keep trying to do so. Jimmy wants back in after the rift he created with the Canadian Club heist. Agent Van Alden wants very much to find out how a county official lives like a pharaoh. And Margaret Schroeder seems eager to put the memory of her murdered husband and miscarried child behind her if the kind and generous (and wealthy) Mr. Thompson were to ask her to do more than vote Republican.

But of course Nucky is showing a different face to each of them, as Steve Buscemi's effortless performance demonstrates the many roles a man in Nucky's position must play.

With Jimmy, he's a cold mob boss, forcing his one-time protege to cough up an additional three grand he doesn't have. And when Jimmy finally produces it (in part by stealing back the jewelry he just bought his mother), Nucky immediately bets and loses it all in front of him. It's a cruel lesson, but an effective one. Jimmy wants to be a big-time gangster, but Nucky operates on a scale Jimmy can't comprehend. To Jimmy, that money was everything; to Nucky, it was nothing.

With Van Alden, Nucky is a smooth politician, fending off the G-man's every question with various lines of prepared bull - like the notion that Mrs. Schroeder's late husband Hans could have been responsible for the massacre in the woods - and though Van Alden believes not one word of it, Nucky shows no chinks in his armor.

And with Margaret, he's someone far more tender and vulnerable, but only so much. Her life with Hans was so awful that she seems eager for his attentions (note how disappointed she is when the "Mr. Thompson" at her hospital bed is Eli, not Nucky). And something in Margaret strikes a chord in Nucky in a way that Lucy, for all her eagerness in bed, can't. But Nucky feels guilt over the role he played in Margaret's miscarriage, and with Hans as the fall guy for the massacre, he can't afford to get too close to her. But you can see, right before he answers her question about what he wants from her, that he wants her just as much as she wants him.

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When you have a pilot as expensive as last week's episode was, and when you get a noted feature director to helm it, there's always the fear that episode two will be a disappointment. But Tim Van Patten very much carried on the Scorsese style, give or take a few of the pilot's little flourishes. (The episode didn't open and close with an iris the way the pilot did, for instance.) Big Jim's Chicago funeral had the visual sweep of many of the pilot's bigger sequences, the shot of Van Alden lighting his match at Margaret's house looked very much like a Scorsese shot, and the sequence where Van Alden tells his boss how Nucky's business works was very evocative of Henry Hill doing the same for the "Goodfellas" audience.

So the show still has the visual flair Scorsese brought. It still has that incredible cast, and Terry Winter giving those actors great material to play (and not having to lay out quite as complicated a story this week), and it has a world with storytelling possibilities as limitless as Nucky's power seems at this moment.

No let-up. At all.

Some other thoughts:

• I may have to start a regular This Week in Van Alden Creepiness feature, though here I'm not sure I'd be able to choose between the moment where he tells the clearly bruised and battered Margaret that he's sure Hans was a fine and decent man, or Van Alden writing a letter to his wife lacking any degree of warmth or affection. I've only ever seen Michael Shannon play weirdos (even the guy in "World Trade Center" was unsettling in his military focus), but he's fabulous at it.

• The episode tries to give us a deeper understanding of Jimmy, too, and in keeping with that we get to meet Gretchen Mol as Gillian, who at first seems like a mistress he's gone to after Tommy interrupts Angela's attempt to make love "the French way," but who is revealed to be Jimmy's mom. (She obviously had him very young.)

• It takes Arnold Rothstein a long time to get through to Nucky, but in the interim, Michael Stuhlbarg gets to deliver a wonderfully menacing little speech to Frankie Yale (the guy who whacked Big Jim) about the cue balls. "The moral of this story is if I'd cause a stranger to choke to death for my own amusement, what do you think I'll do to you if you don't tell me who paid you to kill Colisimo?" (Reminds me a bit of a famous scene from Robert Altman's "The Long Goodbye" where a gangster slashes his girlfriend's face to prove a similar point to Marlowe about how dangerous he is.)

• Al Capone, on the other hand, isn't so much with the intimidating speeches, instead taking the direct approach towards showing his displeasure with the reporter who wants a statement about Big Jim's murder.

• The Ku Klux Klan are seen passing out fliers on the boardwalk. The show takes place only a few years after the release of D.W. Griffith's "The Birth of a Nation" rekindled interest in the KKK among certain virulent portions of society.

• Meanwhile, the Commodore reveals that his own prejudices extend to disdain for women, as he makes his argument against women's sufferage by shaming his uneducated maid with a question about the League of Nations that he knows she can't possibly answer.

• Nucky tries to help his friend George (who later stumbles across the not-quite-dead guy from the woods massacre) by telling his blonde companion about his plans for a big Atlantic City beauty pageant. The year after season one takes place (when season two, which HBO recently ordered, will presumably be set) would bring the Atlantic City Pageant, which would a year after that morph into Miss America. I haven't been able to find anything connecting the real Nucky Johnson to the pageant's founding, but I haven't looked very hard.

• Eli is Nucky's enforcer, but we see when Nucky complains about the disposal of Schroeder's body  that Eli doesn't appreciate being lectured by his older brother.

• The screeners HBO sent out back in July didn't have the main title sequence attached, so the first time I saw it was last week, and I have to admit that I don't love it. The music ("Straight Up and Down" by The Brian Jonestown Massacre) is anachronistic, which might be okay if the rest of the series were more stylized and didn't lean so heavily on the period music, and the overall tone doesn't really feel like the show that follows.

What did everybody else think?

Alan Sepinwall may be reached at sepinwall@hitfix.com

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Alan Sepinwall
Sr. Editor, What's Alan Watching
Alan Sepinwall has been reviewing television since the mid-'90s, first for Tony Soprano's hometown paper, The Star-Ledger, and now for HitFix. His new book, "The Revolution Was Televised," about the last 15 years of TV drama, is for sale at Amazon. He can be reached at sepinwall@hitfix.com

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  • Default-avatar

    Jim

    Love Boardwalk Empire. Steve Buscemi is a great choice.

    September 26, 2010 at 10:11PM EST Reply to Comment
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      gladly The moment when Margaret asks Nucky to tell her what to do was so wonderful. I swear, I think Nucky was torn for just a moment about what to tell her. Steve Buscemi played that so perfectly.

      September 26, 2010 at 10:59PM EST
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    Julius

    This is the show you guys were raving about? I don't see it. The characters aren't compelling or new; nor are the stories so far. Deadwood was a fantastic and interesting look at a time and place. This not so much. I'll wait for the Omar speech in the next episode but this better get real good real fast.

    September 26, 2010 at 10:12PM EST Reply to Comment
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      Tommy I actually thought tonights episode was amazing.

      September 26, 2010 at 10:26PM EST
    • Default-avatar

      Damn It's only the second episode. Damn...

      September 26, 2010 at 11:31PM EST
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    Tim

    Absolutely love this show. It's just as great as The Wire was.

    September 26, 2010 at 10:16PM EST Reply to Comment
    • A little early for that, no?

      September 26, 2010 at 10:28PM EST
    • 5740_140244010504_505705504_3467212_3589155_n_talkback_profile

      Omagus Yeah, let's not get carried away yet. I like what Boardwalk Empire has shown us thus far but it has a while to go before earning comparisons to The Wire.

      September 26, 2010 at 11:19PM EST
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      Big Sully Easy bro. I've really enjoyed it too but thats an insane comment. 2 solid episodes does not make it a classic yet. The Wire is the best show of all time

      September 28, 2010 at 1:13PM EST
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      Trilby Are you serious? In what way does it even compare to the Wire? It's on HBO is the only similarity I can come up with. In terms of quality...? [smacks head]

      September 28, 2010 at 3:28PM EST


  • Any show that drops a reference to Frank Hague is a show going after my heart.

    September 26, 2010 at 10:25PM EST Reply to Comment
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      jerseygirl Yes, I thought the Frank Hague reference was great...commented out loud to myself!
      You must be a Jersey City guy!

      October 4, 2010 at 1:50PM EST
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    kdc

    As Jimmy Darmody is desperately trying to raise the money demanded by Nookie, at one point there's a scene where he returns late night to his apartment and appears to be in pain sitting down, is counting some cash, and avoids his wife. Am I crazy to see something sexual hinted at there?

    September 26, 2010 at 10:38PM EST Reply to Comment
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      Carter No, he didn't take one in the keister. He walks with a limp. He caught schrapnel in WWI.

      September 26, 2010 at 10:44PM EST
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      JLS He also showed pain because his stash (and honorable discharge papers) were hidden behind the hot-radiator.

      September 27, 2010 at 2:25PM EST
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    Jeff P.

    Agreed, fine episode. I'm curious about Arnold Rothstein, though. In John Sayles fabulous adaptation of "Eight Men Out," he's played by the heavy breathing, overweight Michael Lerner. In this he's a suave, handsome arch villain who couldn't be any more different. Does anyone know which type is closest to the real Rothstein?

    September 26, 2010 at 10:38PM EST Reply to Comment
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      Jenny This one's closer. Rothstein was very suave. Lucky Luciano said on several occasions that Rothstein was the man who taught him how to dress.

      September 27, 2010 at 1:10AM EST
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      Frank To go along with your question, Was Al Capone really that short? I always thought he was a big guy.

      September 28, 2010 at 1:16PM EST
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    daggor

    I am not impressed. I may not watch next week. The "Cue ball" speech didn't have any menace to it. The characters are flat. The race to get the $3,000 was weak - there seemed to be little danger. He was threatened by Nucky, but... the reunion with the mother wasn't emotional. I know I'm supposed to be shocked and heartbroken that Jimmy went back and stole the gift back from his mother, but there was nothing to build up that emotion. The story arc Buscemi had in "Sopranos" handled the dangers of addiction to money & power much better. The only character I find myself wanting more of is Dabney Coleman's.

    September 26, 2010 at 10:47PM EST Reply to Comment
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      Thomas I disagree. That scene with Gretchen Mol was wonderfully written.

      September 26, 2010 at 10:55PM EST
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      A.P. I agree. I'm having a hard time relating to, even caring about, the almost all of the characters.

      But it's still a better show than most of what's out there, I think I just let myself get overhyped.

      September 27, 2010 at 4:28AM EST
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      trilby I know, right? Maybe if you're a history buff, and that's a big maybe....

      September 27, 2010 at 10:36AM EST
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    Jonathan

    The intro is horrible....

    September 26, 2010 at 11:29PM EST Reply to Comment
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      Dale Cooper It is indeed very poor

      September 27, 2010 at 10:00AM EST
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    GMan

    I enjoyed this episode much more than the pilot. Scorsese is a historic movie director but I thought his style was a little broad for television. This episode was much more crisp, and started to reveal a few of the themes I'm hoping to see in this show, the raising of the stakes in criminal enterprise and the overall power of money in the U.S. This is the decade that helps bring about the Depression, and this needs to be the story of Paradise before the fall. Looking forward to this season now.

    September 26, 2010 at 11:29PM EST Reply to Comment
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      LStock5034 I agree completely. But I think they need to change the theme music played at the beginning to something that reflects that era.

      September 29, 2010 at 9:19AM EST
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    Mike

    I noticed one discrepancy. When George was driving to drop off the girl, they stop in Hamilton, NJ. After doing a quick search, it turns out Hamilton is north of Atlantic City and he clearly states that the girl is from Baltimore

    September 26, 2010 at 11:36PM EST Reply to Comment
    • The town was Hammonton. It's the blueberry capital of the world. The route might make sense: http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=atlantic+city,+nj&daddr=Hammonton,+New+Jersey+to:baltimore,+md&geocode=FbumWAIdcWWQ-ykhx1xuV93AiTFiUmfpQ8tvSg%3BFRrOXAIdL5uK-ylVBhe50SfBiTEolf0RrklXww%3BFRGGVwIdo_1u-ym3g_TWrgPIiTFY5yNCqJZIBA&hl=en&mra=ls&sll=39.495563,-74.624634&sspn=1.212327,3.532104&ie=UTF8&ll=39.576056,-75.52002&spn=1.210922,3.532104&z=8

      September 26, 2010 at 11:52PM EST
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      jerseygirl Hammonton...Pine Barrens...hmm

      October 4, 2010 at 1:53PM EST
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    cgeye

    It's not just "certain virulent portions of society" -- out West, the KKK fielded candidates, won elections and controlled entire states. Remember that Confederates fled to the West after the Civil War, and transferred their hate objects from Negroes to Mexicans. They never died, and they only needed the anti-immigrant push behind Prohibition to take their sheets out of the closet.

    Interesting, should the BWE team tackle the Negro Problem -- then again, like MM, they just might make for handy windowd ressing, but little else.

    September 26, 2010 at 11:50PM EST Reply to Comment
    • Midnight_run_mca255950_talkback_profile

      sepinwall Unlike Mad Men, this show has an African American actor in the regular cast, albeit one who was only briefly in the pilot and not in this one at all. (Though Nucky does mention that he's giving Mickey Doyle's bootlegging operation over to Chalky White, Michael K. Williams' character.)

      September 26, 2010 at 11:56PM EST


  • I fell nodded off once....I can't believe I did that with an HBO show. BUT I know come next week, my husband will be watching alone. Sad cause I really wanted to like it.

    September 27, 2010 at 12:05AM EST Reply to Comment
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      Joe Are kidding? That was a very well written episode.

      September 27, 2010 at 12:39AM EST
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      rms88 EMA, you're right. I can't get over the fact that I'm watching a period film(s) in the practically in the dark--why bother with seeking interior locations that are supposed to depict the period? However, the opening sequence was nicely done and then the episode trailed off. I'll still check it on Demand.

      September 27, 2010 at 2:35AM EST
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    WheresWallace

    My This Week in Van Alden Creepiness moment was when the show disclosed that Van Alden was the one who took Margaret's ribbon and he pervertedly sniffed it.

    September 27, 2010 at 12:36AM EST Reply to Comment
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      Kendra I know. I was surprised mentioned the letter but skipped over the creepiest part of Alden sniffing the obviously pilfered ribbon. (The show focused on the ribbon in the hospital and then had her look for it when Alden first showed up at her house.)

      September 27, 2010 at 1:37AM EST
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    DC

    I always thought the use of anachronistic rock-and-roll was kind of a Scorsese trademark.

    September 27, 2010 at 1:41AM EST Reply to Comment
    • It made sense to me as Scorsese loves the Rolling Stones, and the Brian Jonestown Massacre are partially named after Brian Jones (and rip off their style of the Brian Jones days).

      September 28, 2010 at 9:33AM EST
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    berkowit28

    I'm finding it a rather superficial "spectacular". High on production values, lower on character and plot tension. But we'll see. I'll give it a few more weeks to get into its stride. I'm just getting the feelIng that, in spite of changing main characters' names to gain some artistic license, it's basically a sort of biopic and historical drama, which is limiting (s0 far) genuine drama. Instead we get a panorama of Atlantic City in the '20s. But maybe it just needs to time to establish the large number of characters until it gets into gear. We'll see.

    September 27, 2010 at 2:06AM EST Reply to Comment
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      A.P. You've expressed my feelings on this subject better than I ever could have myself. Thank you, I'll be using some of these terms when people ask me what I think about the show in the future [specifically, "low on character and plot tension"]

      September 27, 2010 at 4:30AM EST
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      DB Cooper Agree 100%. Beautiful, and Buscemi and Michael Pitt are doing nice things, but aside from those guys and Capone's scene-stealing, the characterization is flat, the plot meandering, and the diversions silly.

      I hated Deadwood after the pilot, and found Treme tiresome after two episodes, so I'm giving this a LONG leash. (Hell, I watched every John from Cincinnati - so I AM patient).

      But for now, it's just an "admirable" show. Far from compelling, despite it being squarely in my wheelhouse.

      September 27, 2010 at 11:18AM EST
    • Madmen_icon_talkback_profile

      LJA I'm with you. I feel like the actual show doesn't match the enormous hype. It hasn't really engaged me.

      September 29, 2010 at 11:30AM EST
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    Cade

    Thank you so much for these reviews. They really help with my overall understanding of the show. As with any new show, it is kind of hard to immediately learn all of the characters and these reviews help out a lot with regards to that.

    I have to say that, along with some of your other readers it looks like, I too liked this episode better than the pilot. That may be because I actually knew who most of the main characters were and didn't spend most of the time trying to figure out who was who, but it could also be because the story was less complicated.

    Finally, I can not believe some people are saying that they're done with this show after two episodes (likewise, I can't believe someone said it was as good as The Wire). A television season is a novel, and each episode is a chapter. You can not tell whether or not a novel is worth reading after having read only two chapters.

    September 27, 2010 at 2:26AM EST Reply to Comment
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    delacourte

    I thought tonight's episode was very good,well written and acted. Van Alden is the grown-up version of Creepy Glen on Mad Men. I know Alan thinks the Dabney Colman character was making a statement about women voters,but it could just as easily been about Negro voters, although in either case he would have gotten the same answers had he asked had he asked one of the poor laborers or one of the white showgirls.

    September 27, 2010 at 2:48AM EST Reply to Comment
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    A.P.

    My comment coming up as soon as I run the faucets twice a day:

    I was annoyed by how the scenes were tied in together in the pilot, with the audio of each previous scene used to connect to the next scene. I am glad this director for this episode didn’t arrange for each scene to begin/end like that, it wasn’t continuity - it was a cheap trick!

    Anyone else reminded of Alan’s blog when Mr. Giggly was told he was ‘out’? Supposedly his character was the weakest of the pilot, perhaps he’ll be slightly more minimalized this way.

    That hottentot joke in the beginning of the episode was not only a good insult by Nucky to the fed agent, but a racist jab that I felt knowledgeable for understanding. I really shouldn’t take pride in knowing about early 20th century freakshows should I? [Which reminds me, are there going to be midget jokes in every episode?]
    I also felt pretty clever knowing about the cue ball being larger than the other billiard balls, though I think most people who have ever played pool in a bar know that. I think this show is purposefully trying to reach it’s audience through pure hubris, no?

    I feel like Nucky’s manservant pulls the same type of jokes as Mrs. Blankenship did in Mad Men, oh, incompetant assistants. Although, later I was glad when the assistant recognized the cutlery chap in the lobby. and was shown giving nucky a nice massage. I suppose he isn’t AS clueless as Blankenship.


    I’m still not as enraptured by this show as I thought I would be, perhaps it’s the focus on mobster storylines that I feel distanced from (and perhaps even find clichéd?). Either way, this show is pitted versus Mad Men on my Sunday lineup - and while the two period pieces are totally different and mostly incomparable - if anything it’s made me realize I like character driven shows (with good plots of course) more than purely plot-driven shows. But I should give Boardwalk more of a chance to get me interested in it’s characters (but again comparing to Mad Men, I was obsessed with that show after the first episode).

    Though I have to admit I really enjoyed this episode’s end, with the zombie interrupted handjob.

    September 27, 2010 at 4:20AM EST Reply to Comment
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      DB Cooper I agree about the cue ball. Anyone who's spent an hour in a pool hall knows that the cue ball's bigger, and how that's necessary for the auto-return table.

      There's not a chance in hell that a "professional" geek would fall for that bet.

      Now, someone explain how a shotgun victim survives a week(?) in the woods in January. Or was that the Russian from Pine Barrens?

      September 27, 2010 at 11:21AM EST
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    Tommy

    This is the kind of drama that harkens back to HBO's glory days.

    September 27, 2010 at 4:54AM EST Reply to Comment
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    Tammy

    Boardwalk Empire is truly a great series

    September 27, 2010 at 4:55AM EST Reply to Comment
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    dougs

    I believe the opening titles somehow tie into Magritte and his Man with a Bowler hat and cloud paintings - statement on surrealism?

    I loved tonight's shout-out from Winter to Van Patten: in the brief glimpse of the racing wire room, we heard a guy say "White Shadow in the 5th." Nice.

    September 27, 2010 at 7:06AM EST Reply to Comment
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      KubricksRube Yes, I went straight to my Magritte book to see if I wasn't imagining it!

      September 27, 2010 at 10:35AM EST
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    Tijmen

    Personally, I think the title music is amazing, both as a standalone piece of music and for opening each episode. Optimistic with a tinge of melancholy, befitting the story of a hopeful America entering a new era. Easily my favorite intro after RJD2's baroque, stylish Mad Men theme.

    September 27, 2010 at 7:22AM EST Reply to Comment
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    @AllenW528

    Alan, I agree with you on the title sequence. It seems like an afterthought that comes across both as low budget and anachronistic.

    September 27, 2010 at 9:06AM EST Reply to Comment
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    mely

    I have to say, I agree with all the comments about the opening sequence. It doesn't fit with the rest of the show at all. Really disappointing, seeing how all the other HBO shows tend to have great openings. And I was really annoyed by the scene when the Commodore humiliates his servant - that was completely stolen from Kazuo Ishiguro's The Remains of the Day (the movie too probably, but I've only read the book), pretty much word for word. I expected better.

    September 27, 2010 at 9:26AM EST Reply to Comment
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      burth hah! it took me all day to remember where i knew the scene from, and then it hit me. good to see i'm not the only one who noticed it. I don't particularly mind though, it still makes for a great scene.

      September 28, 2010 at 7:14AM EST
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    JM

    It's no Deadwood...yet. But the frigid, puritanical Van Alden sure reminds me a lot of Sheriff Seth Bullock. (The letter? Come on. That prose was totally Bullock-esque. Robotic. Precise.) Let's hope there's a mean streak in Van Alden, too.

    September 27, 2010 at 10:32AM EST Reply to Comment
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    trilby

    Three words: The Roaring Twenties.
    Yawn....

    September 27, 2010 at 10:33AM EST Reply to Comment
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    mattpfeif

    Totally agree about the Main Title sequence. For a show with such panache, it seems out of tune. The question is; do the own up and alter it for season 2?

    September 27, 2010 at 10:48AM EST Reply to Comment
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    mattpfeif

    Totally agree about the Main Title sequence. For a show with such panache, it seems out of tune. The question is; do they own up and alter it for season 2?

    September 27, 2010 at 10:48AM EST Reply to Comment
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      DB Cooper The Blind Boys of Alabama will be performing it next season. ;)

      September 27, 2010 at 11:22AM EST
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    mojohand

    1+ your critique of the opening credits. I like the music (thanks for the identifying it) but it doesn't work here.

    September 27, 2010 at 11:47AM EST Reply to Comment
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    Brendan

    I thought the same thing about the title sequence... It really doesnt match at all. HAVE SOMEONE FROM HITFIX REFORMAT YOUR POSTS!

    September 27, 2010 at 11:50AM EST Reply to Comment
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