05-24-2016, 06:41 AM
(05-24-2016, 06:22 AM)Hexenadler Wrote:(05-24-2016, 06:02 AM)irukandji Wrote: You're assuming regret and remorse prevented him from strangling her. There was nothing in the episode to indicate that.
For crying out loud, THE ENTIRE EPISODE WAS MOTIVATED BY REGRET AND REMORSE. Nick felt both because he was responsible for Juliette's metamorphosis in the first place. THAT'S WHY HE BACKED DOWN.
All of these emotions were in plain sight, but you seem to voluntarily turn a blind eye to them. Irukandji, you've reached the point where you're flat-out refusing to acknowledge any evidence that contradicts your interpretation of the show, no matter how many holes a rational critic could poke in it. If a scene or piece of dialogue in an episode disproves your take on a story, you simply deny it exists. Arguing with a person like yourself is like trying to talk to a brick wall. At this rate I can't see how we can continue to talk without a flame war erupting, so I'll take the initiative by just walking away.
What was Nick's answer when the scoobies asked what they should do about Juliette? He said "KILL HER". He didn't say, 'let her go she didn't mean it', or 'bring her to me', or 'she can't help what she is'.
He said, "KILL HER".
That isn't my interpretation, that's the show. Nick didn't spend the episode with any type of remorse or regret. He went after the royals to murder the king and ended up murdering the king's guards. He apprehended Kenneth and murdered him. He sought out Juliette to murder her. Where's all this regret and remorse you're talking about? It's not in the episode to be sure.
In case you didn't realize it, Hexenadler, the forum is about interpretation. Just because you come up with some explanation of what you think is evidence and point out what everyone should see doesn't mean you're right. And just because I see something doesn't mean everyone should go along with it either.
You want to quit the discussion, quit the discussion. You want to disagree, disagree. That is the point of interpretation, not trying to force what you call evidence onto everyone else and getting angry when they don't agree with you.
The best way to frustrate a cyberbully is to ignore him.