Another fairly solid episode. I liked it because it focused mostly on Jake and Sadie and sidelined the Oswald stuff. As I suspected, Bill and Marina is a thing that is happening. I'm okay with it as long as it's organic to the story.
Sarah Gadon is luminous as Sadie. When Jake mouths "I love you" to her, her smile lights up the whole screen. T.R. Knight also does great work as Johnny; he's creepy and weird and virtually unrecognizable from his days on GREY'S ANATOMY.
The bit I didn't like was the trip to the brothel and Deke having to bail them out. Jake is already keeping enough secrets from Sadie; this just seems like one complication too many to add to the pile. The book established the friendships between Jake, Deke and Mimi so that their acceptance of his secrets felt much more natural, and that they were still friends afterward. Here it feels like both of them kind of turned on him.
Oswald is still boring. I guess it's hard to make someone interesting when you're bound by their actual history.
Oh, and of course Johnny's driving Christine.
Sarah Gadon is luminous as Sadie. When Jake mouths "I love you" to her, her smile lights up the whole screen. T.R. Knight also does great work as Johnny; he's creepy and weird and virtually unrecognizable from his days on GREY'S ANATOMY.
The bit I didn't like was the trip to the brothel and Deke having to bail them out. Jake is already keeping enough secrets from Sadie; this just seems like one complication too many to add to the pile. The book established the friendships between Jake, Deke and Mimi so that their acceptance of his secrets felt much more natural, and that they were still friends afterward. Here it feels like both of them kind of turned on him.
Oswald is still boring. I guess it's hard to make someone interesting when you're bound by their actual history.
Oh, and of course Johnny's driving Christine.