Murder through the monologue


Slough, England:

Of all the serial murderers who run unbridled in the world of fiction, only two can leave with theirs giving us an incessant comment on the screen of their most internal thoughts without complexes. The first is Dexter Morgan (a more dedicated forensic specialist, we have not yet found). The second is Joe Goldberg, lover of glass cages with great interest in hosting his victims (live) in him until that turning point where he can no longer bear them.

It is the external and sometimes internally lovely, which worries us today with You Season 5 has dragged to an end. Since we have met him, Joe (Penn Badgley) has been disseminating murder and chaos wherever he goes, be it a bookstore in New York, a suburb in Los Angeles or within the rich confines of southern Kensington in London.

In his last and more ridiculous departure so far, Joe moves to New York from his brief but characteristically violent spell in London, having persuaded his intelligent love interest (Kate Lockwood, played by Charlotte Ritchie) of the previous season to marry him. Will you continue to flourish your married happiness? As you have already supposed, it does not.

A rocky road

We enter the season 5 three years in the marriage of Joe and Kate. Joe’s son, Henry, whom he had abandoned during the previous season, now lives with them. For the spectators who have forgotten, Joe had eliminated Henry’s mother during a previous match in season 3. Kate, who is in the dark above all this, is surprised to know that Joe is not the easy white knight to lead who was originally expected.

While Kate is perfectly happy that Joe Mate in command when the situation demands it, she cannot understand why she is not accumulated with an insomniac fault like other normal people (that is, herself). In other words, she wants to have her cake and eat it too.

On the other side of the equation, a wounded and baffled Joe cannot for his life, Kate’s opposition to the murder for what both have agreed is (their) greater. In Joe’s eyes, his past actions have shown that a more heroically guilty man has ever existed. (Related, he is still convinced that he is also the father of the year despite the problem of killing his son’s mother that time). Kate inhibits vis -a -vis murder Irk Joe end and pave your backlide while you meet your love most boring love: Bronga (Madeline Brewer).

If you are open to being emotionally manipulated as a spectator, unlike the inhabitants of Reddit and IMDB, you may be willing to overlook the objective opacity of Bronte. Bronte turns in Joe’s life through his bookstore largely empty and takes him successfully with talking about literature. (This can be one of the most incredible aspects of you: stumble with a man interested in literary fiction).

Unless it is a very credulous JOE occupied by delivering his heart, the true motivations of Bronte are still a question sign during the whole time in the program. However, since Joe’s new love is still as interesting as a bowl of squeezed brackets, he lacks emotional capacity to worry about what he does some of the things he does.

However, to compensate for the boring interlude of Bronte, the faithful spectators will be rewarded appearances of all the people that Joe has harmed over the years, in the same way that Seinfeld The end of the series brought back to Babu and The Bubble Boy for that glorious day in court. Not everything is lost.

Incredibly absurd

Kate has bigger problems than a rebel husband (or so). For example, his sister Raegan, who is acting in a very strange way, seems to be involved in all kinds of gloomy nonsense in the family business. Because he is not aware of Joe’s internal monologue, Kate has no way to realize that Joe does not have great guilt in this situation of Raegan. Without her knowing it (her husband is not sharing a mood after Kate’s reserves with respect to violence), Joe cannot resist entrusting to his wife’s affairs and dealing with Raegano in a special way.

Unfortunately for him and for us, things fall apart as if they were drawn by a fourteen -year -old writing fiction. That is what should say: never moves away from the incredibly absurd. Instead, he goes to the other side and hugs him as a lost brother a long time ago. Just when you think you know where you are going, a crazy turn of the plot comes to tear yourself down the course and place yourself in the next episode to tentatively verify if common sense will ever return.

Great news for those who hate common sense: it does not. And why should I? Rationality does not take place in a program about a well read serial killer with an attractive baritone, and will be relieved to know that as the stations advance, it is completely released from the shackles of cold logic. Erroneous identities, a switchero twin (sherlock from Sherlock It would be horrified), a great dependence on the knowledge of pop culture, the tropes of girls-fijados-boy, suspiciously clean glass cages without a digital footprint in sight, an office at the United Kingdom’s house that gives visas with the shortage of background verifications, a rich woman who can click on her fingers and make the murder charges in the air, this is not a short list. You It invites you not only to suspend your disbelief, but to destroy it in pieces.

Is this the end?

Who knows? When it comes to television, you can never be very sure if producers and writers will adhere to their word after promising that they have ended. For example, we all thought we had seen the last of Dexter after his questionable was a lumberjack in Dexter: New bloodAnd look at us now. Studying Dexter’s problematic youth in Dexter: Original sin To see what began your serial trip. On television, the dead can be revived at a manipulative moment ‘haha, he cheated you’, and the imprisoned can get out of jail, if they are dedicated enough. However, along this roller coaster of a trip, a question, however, remains unanswered. How Devils Joe keeps his glass cage so bright? Of all the things he shares with us, Joe never lets us enter that particular secret.

But don’t despair. Although Netflix swears, this is the last of YouWe can know Joe again one day. As the saying goes, anyone can be a murderer if he has a good reason and a bad day, and as Joe’s fans and wives get to know extremely well, here is a man who often finds good reasons in so many bad days. All you need is a more miserable day and an excellent reason, and you can kill again and Maim once again. And this time, let us know about that glass cage.

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