MovieChat Forums > SheHateMe
avatar

SheHateMe (37)


Posts


Art imitating life, kind of, in a comical way Stevie in 5 years? (Slight Spoilers) Is it just me, or was this show prophetic? Would Bert leave Roger to work with Don? (Season 3) View all posts >


Replies


Haven't watched the show in years, which is odd to say - but I'd gotten wrapped up in online stuff in 2020, and my old laptop sucks at playing DVDs (got a desktop computer to be able to watch DVDs, but never use it - this show is the main one that I've thought of watching). Anyway, from what I recall gathering, she seemed to be meant to keep an eye on him... maybe to monitor if he were broken or otherwise compromised - maybe in part for safety. But having her as his spouse made it easier for him to live a double life without being exposed. The safety aspect is questionable, because she never saved him - but the former and latter make more sense. I also think she was bored, and loved Edward. She knew it wasn't the same guy. I believe she was the one who killed the tech guy so that they couldn't fix Henry and Edward - because she didn't want to lose Edward. It was like the wife was a counterpart to the therapist - another caretaker... but unlike the therapist, she previously only got to experience one personality... and everybody seemed to love Edward. It's ridiculous that they cancelled this show. I think they were going heavy into the cancel culture aspect, to the point where the apology just makes things worse. Towards the end, maybe around that part, it felt a little heavy-handed to me. They did in the end. That's how they found him on the plane with the vials of the original virus in his briefcaise. The movie hints at the loop playing out before, as Cole and Railly feel like they remember knowing each other before. In the beginning, there would be a Cole who went through his childhood having never seen himself die, and who survived the virus. Then once he went back, the loop started (I believe there's a loop for him at least). What did you dislike about the second half? (I literally just finished watching the movie.) Good point. This served as an unintentional Rorshach test for the TS, who seems to be in need of a better social life. While trying to critique people's responses and argumentation skills, he's missed the points that... YES the gay Asian reporter was a POS (one of the most unlikable characters, possibly), the wife cheated, then tried to blame the husband for being a bad guy - and made a conscious choice to assume the worst about him to absolve herself of guilt, the muslim cop not-so-subtly accused his superior of being bigoted, then was, in response, called out for specific work-related reasons that he couldn't refute, most of the people who were wronged were Caucasian (Nick, the women on the internet, even the kidnapper)... there's probably more I'm not thinking of. (This is a response to the post I'm replying to... I'm not here to go back and forth with the pedantic, delusional TS... I see no use in that.). "You don't mess with time"? Seems like it established how delicate time travel would be. They also established a rule or two. When they said they should go back to their time amd warn everyone, the one guy (forget his name) established that there was one timeline - and itbwas unchanged since they were still there. Man, that basically *is* the same song! 4 years later, I watched it on Prime, also. View all replies >