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Post by marion on Oct 25, 2021 19:31:32 GMT
So Ed is a psychological construct then, is he? Or isn’t he? It seems as if he definitely isn’t avenging Yuki.
She is very easily persuaded isn’t she? I mean she just fell in with Ed’s (decidedly poor) plans without too much convincing, although if he is her construct I guess she would, 😂😂. Also, she resisted taking the gun for about one minute! Then allowed him to plant her prints all over it, although as she was caught holding it that didn’t really matter.
I’m quite intrigued now as to which way this will go.
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Post by geometryman on Oct 26, 2021 6:28:52 GMT
Good point. It would explain her falling in far too easily with Ed - he's all along seemed distinctly unnatural to me and now you've got me thinking the programme is deliberately portraying him so.
I thought at first the husband was making her handle the gun to get her prints on it in order to frame her, but seems it was just to support whatever he'd told the police.
Does (did) Yuki even exist? I guess so, since she tried pumping her husband's work colleague earlier on, who said he couldn't talk about her.
Looking forward to the next episode.
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Post by marion on Nov 15, 2021 13:58:01 GMT
I thought this deflated as it went along. The acting by the last episode was very flat and there was no real tension. I had guessed a strangers on a train type of situation, not expecting an actual train! But what could have been a very strong thriller was in the end just ordinary (but not bad) with phoned-in performances imho.
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Post by geometryman on Nov 15, 2021 14:30:27 GMT
I agree, it started off as a promising psychological drama but then went downhill. I found the finale quite unbelievable and a big disappointment, which pretty much spoilt the whole thing for me. Incredible that she was able to track down the former garage owner and get all that info out of him - yet stupid enough to leave her mobile where the kids could get it, when it was so important that they shouldn't. Oh, well.
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