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Goat sounds like old man comic
Goat sounds like old man comic





goat sounds like old man comic goat sounds like old man comic

We're obviously heading down a path where he turns to crime as a way to get people to notice him, but in the meantime we're seeing that his social awkwardness isn't just confined to his dealings with the cops, but to his inept wooing of records clerk Kristen Kringle (played by Chelsea Spack, who's styled more retro than any other “Gotham” person we've met to date). With Lil Wayne and Selina reduced to cameos and Fish absent altogether, “Spirit of The Goat” also got to finally let us know Nygma as more than just the guy who loves riddles(***) and hates that no one else cares about them. But his arrival just as things were getting very uncomfortable for Jim – and which made things even more uncomfortable with Harvey – was a good capper to the episode. He is either woefully naive or a genius, and given where we know the character is eventually going, he had better have something damn clever up his sleeve for next week.

goat sounds like old man comic

I'm assuming both Bruno Heller and Cobblepot have a plan for what's going on here, given the danger he's putting himself and his good “friend” Gordon into by appearing there – or even by returning to Gotham in the first place and letting Sal Maroni know his true identity. (**) Played by Dan Hedaya, who once upon a time played a classic Disapproving Police Captain – opposite Gregory Hines and Billy Crystal as tough cops! – in the underrated “Running Scared.” This episode may have gotten bonus points if Dix had told Harvey and Jim, “You are detectives. Seeing that he was once the eager beaver Gordon type in his partnership with Dix(**) is a familiar twist, but still one that adds good shading to the character and the current partnership – especially since that partnership is about to get very ugly with the arrival of the decidedly not-dead Penguin at GCPD headquarters. Until now, Harvey's been a bundle of jaded veteran cop cliches coasting on Donal Logue's charisma (ditto Gordn and Ben McKenzie). (*) Law of Economy of Guest Actors told me that Susan Misner (Stan's wife on “The Americans,” among many other recent roles) either had to be the real Goat, or the woman behind the Goat, so to speak.

GOAT SOUNDS LIKE OLD MAN COMIC SERIES

It tackled the class warfare that's been a key theme of the series to date, gave us a villain with a codename and costume, but one that didn't seem too big for this world at this point, and – most importantly – it gave us some much-needed backstory and shading for Harvey Bullock. The chase for the Goat – revealed not to be a supernatural force, but underclass revenge dreamed up by a talented shrink(*) – hit both of those requirements. One of the show's bigger issues to date has been generating Cases of the Week for Gordon and Bullock that fit the strange world of Gotham City while also not feeling like a pointless distraction from whatever Oswald or Lil Wayne is up to. In the weekly juggling act that is “Gotham,” “Spirit of The Goat” was probably the most effective episode yet at keeping enough balls in the air in interesting ways. A review of tonight's “Gotham” coming up just as soon as I get tangled in some hussy's demon purse…







Goat sounds like old man comic