Hey <333 hope your fine? I already ask what your thought about the Beth dance scene but I didn't ask you what your thoughts on the Beth and fitzpatrick scene "Do It!" I'm gonna start to rewatch 3x08 and this is where the real hitman (boring plot) start so^^. Thank you <3
Did you get to it yet??? Thatās such a hard scene. Definitely needs mental gymnastics to make ok.
I personally didnāt hate the whole hitman premise. I didnāt love all of the execution, but Beth hiring a hitman makes sense. Fitz ended up being her conscience (you really have to see the final episode to fully understand this.) I hated the romantic overtone to his interest in her. Why canāt for once a man be interested in a woman simply because sheās fascinating or worthy of interest and admiration? Why does it always have to come down to sexual interest or possession? But setting all that aside, this whole unpopular storyline was Beth grappling with herself and her wants versus her responsibilities.
You have to remember, weāre still coming off all the betrayal and confusion sheās felt about Rio setting her up as his fall guy after she believed she was someone he actually cared about, Rio bullying his way into a business she made, Rio killing someone and threatening to frame her for it. She wants to believe in him. But heās made it so difficult for her to do that. She doesnāt see the subtleties of his own hurt and need for her to validate him. All she sees is someone whoās fixated on hurting her. There is a lot of shame for Beth in still wanting him, despite her belief that he not only doesnāt want her back, but actively wants to hurt her and those she loves. Beth also feels an enormous responsibility to her entire family and friend group. Everyone is depending on her. So for her, there is no other way. Choosing Rio would be choosing herself, and Beth has never chosen herself.
The way Beth goes about making the hit decision is extremely conflicted. You can see it to the bitter end.
She doesnāt want to choose this. Fitz, her conscience, forces her to choose. She has to weigh being who she wants to be against who she has to be for everyone else.
And in this moment, Beth chooses everyone else. Itās presented to us with a musical overlay, speaking to Bethās loneliness, her inability to choose herself, her sacrifice for those she loves.
Random , but Iām kinda new to your blog so I was wondering what your thoughts on the hit man plot? Did you like it? were there things in that storyline that didnāt work for you? IMO I believe they could have done more, you know? Why were Anne and RUBY, in particular, so OK about it? In season one, the idea of hiring a hitman was mentioned, but Ruby immediately shut it down and I know that a lot has changed since then . I just think itās kinda ooc that the girls never really questioned Beth about it and I feel like that was such a mistake and missed opportunity !!! what do you think? ALSO I donāt think Rio ever figured it out . I really wish he did . he deserved to know :/ ALSO IT WOULD OF BEEN SO MESSY the angst we could of had!!
Hi anon! I have all my thoughts on this compiled under my 'hitman plot' tag if you want to do some deeper reading, but I figured I'd still do a bullet point version, mostly because I'm just in the mood to talk about Good Girls, haha.
Overall
The hitman plot was an interesting concept with mostly mediocre execution
It had more lows than highs, however the highs that it did were so excellent that I think they did overall make me like the inclusion of the plotline more than I like the idea of it being left out entirely
What didn't work for me
Pacing: It felt like it stretched too many episodes for a show that usually bounces from plot to plot within just a few episodes. Good Girls otherwise has an extremely quick pace (sometimes to its own detriment) and so the fact that the hitman plot felt so slow felt particularly painful, I think.
Beth's feelings: Overall, Season 4 did a better job at communicating how Beth was feeling to the audience than Season 3 did, and I think it exacerbated the audience's frustration with the plot. I don't think the show demonstrated how Beth was feeling in the moment well, but I think they did explore how Beth was feeling prior to it, i.e. we know that Beth felt both guilty and a deep numbness when she believed Rio was dead, but it didn't feel like that was grappled with while she was planning to kill him again. The complexity of those feelings and Beth's refusal to engage with them would've been in-character and really interesting, but it became a missed opportunity.
Annie & Ruby's feelings: I agree with you that this was another miss, and the effect of it was probably GG's most egregious error. Annie and Ruby's lack of trying to investigate how Beth was feeling in the aftermath of all this trauma and extreme behavior simply made them look like bad friends, which is NOT what I gathered the show was trying to say or explore. It was a major disconnect.
Rio seeing Beth dance: Look, I just don't buy that Rioāwho has been Actively Avoiding Beth's house ALL seasonārandomly shows up at Beth's place at the exact moment the hit was supposed to happen to confront her about where all her money goes... only to not know what was going on at that point. I think it was a lame fakeout.
Resolution: I actually disagree with you, though, that Rio didn't know. I believe he discovered it when he took out who he thought to be "Dave," and that was why he pointed out to Beth that her "kahuna" wasn't trying to "put [him] away," but to "put [him] down." At that point, I think Rio had enough informationāand Beth's reaction was obvious enoughāthat he could piece it all together. While did I love season 3, I am glad this moment didn't throw us back into the pit of angst, though. While I do kind of like the light touch there was in his reaction, I did think his reaction wasn't as juicy as it could've been. Basically, I think it could've been a sort of dark, fun flirtatious momentāRio holding over her head that he's caught onto the fact that she doesn't want to get rid of him. \
What I would change
Beth's feelings: Literally the number one thing I wanted was Beth openly refusing to be the one behind the gun again. She had easy access to him! It would be free! It should've at least been considered! And of course her refusal would be padded with an excuse, but we would know, and I would love it.
Annie and Ruby: The number one thing I would change is how Annie and Ruby were utilized in it. I think Ruby's resistance to the idea could've been an easy entry point to exploring Beth's feelings and motivations. One of the things I really like about Beth's tangled feelings for Rio is that she straddles this line of genuine fear of what Rio is capable of at the same time that she's drawn to and attracted to that same aspect while she hangs onto this sort of implicit trust in him even when he demonstrates that she shouldn't. The push/pull of the logical side of her that knows he's dangerous warring with the emotional side that doesn't even think twice about the risk of visiting him at 3 am in his bar to confess that there is no baby when said baby is the only reason she doesn't have a bullet in her brain is fascinating, and Beth's hypocrisy, excuses, and lies are what makes her such a complex character. They had moments that shined with this, but I think they simply didn't fulfill the potential here. Adding onto the Annie-and-Ruby of it, though, I think after a few failed attempts of getting Beth to explore her feelings, we should've seen Annie and Ruby talking amongst themselves about what was going on with Beth.
Pacing: I'd do two key things. I'd nix Troy as a stepping stone in the plot, condensing the introduction of Fitzpatrick. I'd also change up the excuses for why progress wasn't being made. The paintball fakeout didn't entirely payoff for me, because I wanted more out of Beth's reaction to making the call, and I honestly just felt the "he's out of town" excuse was extremely lame.
Rio in Beth's house: I think the simple fix would've been showing him robbing her house so the reappearance of him inside of it didn't seem like as big of a deal as it was. But also... I just think he should've had a bigger clue. I think it's weird that when he decided not to murder her that he didn't even consider tracking her.
Resolution: I wouldn't actually change much, but I think I'd have Rio's reaction include some more kind of dark, flirtatious taunting. It's so close to 4.06 that I think it would've really worked in 4.04, and I think Rio kinda throwing back to Beth that he knows she had a hit on him and knows that she canceled it and has an inkling as to why she might've changed her mind, both as a nod to him knowing that she's still got a thing for him and as a nod to him being clued into her working with the Secret Service, would've been really fun.
What I loved
Ending on a positive note! There were some things I really enjoyed!
Beth's conversation with Max: The 3.07 scene where Beth confesses to Max that killing Rio wouldn't make him feel better, only that it would make him feel "nothing" is one of the best scenes of season 3, and one of the best scenes-about-Brio-not-featuring-Brio that there is in the whole series. I really, really love it.
Beth in the polka dot dress during her first meeting with Fitzpatrick: Literally obsessed with the fact that they put her in the same outfit that she wore when she was being her Utmost Self by wearing that modest dress to seduce Rio, acknowledging that she knows he likes her for her, in the same scene where she moves forward with the hitman plot but hesitates with the (teased) quick timeline. The fact that she was wearing it because her husband insisted upon it because he was jealous how she dressed up for Rio? And that she prioritized her drama with Rio over a celebration with her husband in the same moment? *Chef's kiss*
Beth's date with Fitzpatrick: Love love LOVE the contrast of Beth dressing differently than we've EVER seen her dress up for a man, emphasizing the contrast in how she views Fitzpatrick's versus Rio's attraction to her. I also love that it's a callback to 2.04 with the same color scheme and similar pattern, and that in both scenes Beth's pretending that "normal" is something she wants or is capable of being. Basically, I love seeing Beth lie to herself.
Beth duping Rio into handling Dave himself: Perfect, PERFECT execution of Beth's moral slide. She's still not the one behind the trigger, but she's the one making it get pulled on purpose, and it's even more tangled and gnarly because it's her juiciest manipulation of Rio and one that benefits him in such a twisted way. This is the kind of king shit that makes Brio Brio. And the heaviness she feels alone in the bar after? And the smile Rio gives to Beth when she gives her true-not-true "If I ever bake another cookie, I'll die" speech? UGH. God I LOVE THEM.
I fully believe Rio knew / knows about the hitman. I think he knew the day he showed up in Beth's kitchen to ask her why she was celebrating. I can't wait to see how it all unfolds.
I canāt wait to see how it all unfolds either, anon!Ā
Iām still flip-flopping on whether or not I think Rio knows about the hitman specifically, but I think he definitely knows that sheās up to something, particularly given sheās back on the payroll and is still living in an empty house.Ā
I think Rioās logical enough too (well, sometimes, haha) to know she wants him out of the picture again, and the way he told her in 3.11 that the only way that was going to happen would be to empty the clip - - it feels pretty pointed, yāknow?Ā
What did you think of the HITMAN 2 story? I personally didn't like it so much. I find the big amount of retcons quite annoying, and I feel like this sudden "reveal" that 47 killed Diana's parents heavily undermines their entire relationship. Love your blog by the way, please do keep at it.
Oh no you asked me about story so itās going to be an ESSAY answer - sorry in advance but I love these asks so thank you
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I have a weird love/hate relationship with HITMAN and HITMAN 2 when it comes to story. It seems to me that it balls up all the tropes it can into one hot mess (though thatās the Hitman series in general), but does so with some of the tightest cinematics Iāve ever seen.Ā
Iām not a fan of retconning. I think 6 is a very interesting character, and he gives us a wonderful opportunity to explore 47ā²s past, his emotions, and his trauma, all without making 47 do much of that work himself. 47 is such a tricky character for introspection that I think adding 6 into the mix to explore that side of him was an excellent idea.Ā
The retcon of Dianaās backstory makes me sad. I think itāll make for some interesting scenes, and I knew it was coming up in the games after theĀ Hitman comics, which Iāve ranted about a fair bit. Iām still hopeful our girl will turn it around by being more in control than she seems.Ā
TheĀ Providence retconĀ isnāt the worst thing in the world, and I think a few tweaks could streamline it with the original story. In general Iām not a fan of tying everything up in a neat bow when it comes to different characters and their motivations. Then again, the Partners are interesting, and Arthur Edwards is interesting, so I donāt hate it.Ā
Aside from the plot itself, I gotta say I love the writing. Those cutscenes are so sharp! How does that writing team come up with the most cliched stuff and then write it so well lmaoĀ
āThe Keyā and āPartners, Then?ā cutscenes in HITMAN really stand out to me. They do so much work at establishing these characters and what the stakes are, and itās so friggin smooth. And can we talk aboutĀ āOld Friendsā?? They gave 6 a monologue, and it WORKS. Granted that voice actor is incredible, but still, that cinematic was entirely him monologuing and it told us so damn much.Ā
HITMAN 2 continued this. Sure the cutscenes werenāt as pretty, but that writing was polished (except for the opening, that made me cringeee)Ā
āBlank Chequeā did so much to establish Diana and 47ā²s chemistry, history, and sense of companionship.Ā And it was effortless. Homecoming wrapped things up a bit too quickly in my opinion, but you have to do that in a cinematic.Ā āDead Endsā was an amazing piece for setting up the Partners.
So, overall⦠I havenāt really given you an answer :D I definitely had issues with the story, but Hitman seems to take liberties with being tropey when it can, because it can get away with it. Maybe the writers like to have fun with it. Theyāve definitely done a beautiful job with this when you compare it to Absolution. Even a classic like Silent Assassin doesnāt really hold up to this in terms of overall plot and characters. So, although I have issues with this story, for Hitman I think itās the best weāve had so far.Ā
ok so i just rewatched the scene where the girls and rio are at "carolyn's" house and noticed that there is a butterfly at the wall behind beth and it's quite interesting bc it's like the third time there we see a butterfly (at the wall in granny's room and at beths dress) so i looked up the symbolism of butterflies and it says that it's "a representation of resurrection, change, renewal, hope, endurance, and courage to embrace the transformation to make life better" so do you think it might be about beth choosing crime?
Ah, what a great catch, anon!
I think we definitely are seeing Beth change and flip her allegiance. And I do think she chose Rio at the end of the episodeābut not in a way thatās definitive and absolute. I just think the needle moved and weāre going to see that transformation process happen over the rest of the season.
I think of it like this:
3.07-3.09
Coming off of Lucyās murder, Beth is 100% committed to the hitman plot because she feels its the only viable solution. She tells Max they canāt go to the cops because, as Ruby says, āweāll all end up in that van.ā These episodes are the height of Beth struggling in her relationship with Rio. She tells Max she feels ānothingā and Annie explicitly says that āitās not a lifeā if all they do is work for Rio without pay, agency, or choice. She feels utterly trapped and sees this as the only way out. After Rio gets her fingerprints on the gun, sheās distraught, but once she has Fitzpatrick lined up, sheās proud of herself and feels incentivized because it ultimately means she will be free from him.
3.10
Beth passes Fitzpatrickās test, but sheās resistant to making the call and the needle nudges because sheās unable to watch it happen. She celebrates Rioās death, but has a brief moment of reflection looking out over the picnic table, remembering that there were better times between them. She insists no one was jilted, but corrects the girls when they say it was a āone and done.ā She chooses to let go of the door handle when sheās in the car with Rio, ultimately taking the chance that he wonāt hurt her and sheās proven right. Her inability to lie to him returns when she canāt come with a plausible excuse for where her money is goingāa marked difference from her cocky assertion that she ācanāt control the world marketā or the way she tries to play him when she dresses up in the polka dot dress. Sheās proud of her hot tub scheme and she gets frustrated, throwing a temper tantrum, when Rio doesnāt give her his full attention and stamp of approval.Ā
3.11
Bethās ire gets reignited when Rio āconsolidates,ā forcing Beth to print and wash while he takes a large cut of the profits. Sheās frustrated by his control over her, but she canāt help but feel flattered when he tells her that he ālovesā Boland Bubbles, asking him, āReally?ā Rio flirts and while Beth doesnāt flirt back, she is somewhat playful. She asks when it āgets to be mineā because she āmade all of this happen.ā She wants credit, but the fact that she asks also means things might be different if he were ever willing to let her have anything to herself. Rio essentially tells her that will never happen until she kills him. The moment is loaded, but when Rio leaves, Beth doesnāt look victoriousādespite the fact that she has an active hit on him.
4.01
When Lucyās body is found and Rio reminds Beth that he can and will use her fingerprints against her. While Annie and Ruby are fixated on contacting the hit hitman, Beth instead focuses on how she can offer him something he āreally needsā in order to try and get the gun back. After successfully bribing the inspector to look the other way, Beth goes to the bar and meet Rio to celebrate, trying to capitalize on the shared success (āIām making you bankā) by asking for the gun back because it ādoesnāt make senseā to hold it over her anymore. When Rio agrees and tells her that sheās right, Beth doubtfully asks, āI am?ā like she wants to believe him. However, when Rio doubles down and suggests that he might turn it over to the cops, Beth feels that sheās at the end of the line. Instead of scrambling to find another solution to her Rio problem, she instead prepares to be arrested, writing Dean the letter, telling the girls that she wonāt run, and that she āmay as well haveā killed Lucy herself. Sheās still committed to the hitman, but its with less fervor than before. Instead, sheās more actively playing the cat and mouse game. Even when Fitzpatrick visits her at the end of the episode and she asks him to move her up on his schedule, it lacks intensity. She emphasizes how much money sheās paid him, not how badly she needs Rio gone.
4.02
Annie insists that if they āpop [Rio], all of this goes awayā while Beth waffles over whether or not to go to dinner with Fitzpatrick in order to speed up the timeline. Sheās pushed to make this move, however, when Rio forces her hand to hold some of his money while sheās feeling āheatā about her books as it reminds her how āthe last time [she] did thatāāthat being held something for himāā[she] got tied to a murder.ā On the date with Fitzpatrick, Beth struggles to play her part despite the stakes. Despite being a canonically good liar, sheās really putting in bare minimum effort, diverting the conversation back to the job by saying she just āneeds [it] done.ā When Fitzpatrick asks her what the hurry is, she says, āHeās making my life hellāāwhich is a very different motivation than we saw across 3.07-3.09. At this point, Beth is focused more on how Rio is making life challenging for her and how much money sheās sunk into hiring Fitzpatrick, but sheās no longer feeling the same dread, fear, and hopelessness, all emphasized by how she asks Rio for things (like when the business gets to be hers or to get the gun back). She thinks she has leverage with him she didnāt before, and while sheās still moving forward with her plan, their dynamic is shifting and her resolve is weakening. It weakens further when Fitzpatrick asks her what life will be like when Rioās gone and Fitzpatrick challenges Beth when she says it will be ānormal.āĀ
4.03
Beth goes to Rio for help after Dean is arrested, believing him at his word when he says heāll cover the loan if she sinks the eight ball. Despite herself, she still trusts him, and she feels burned when she realizes the catch. When Beth complains about Fitzpatrick to the girls while bemoaning her predicament with Fitzpatrick, she says, āI wish heād put a bullet in me.ā Again, sheās less focused on him completing the job and more focused on her present problem. She only hits a breaking point when Fitzpatrick shows up and tries to get her to come to Fiji with him. Even at the exact moment sheās pushing him to complete the job, she says she wants āto be nothing like [him]ā which he points out is ironic considering she hired him. When he promises to fulfill the contract when he gets back, we get a lingering shot of Beth breathing heavily before she shakes herself off and finishes unloading groceries. Sheās still going through with her plan, but sheās pausing more and seems to be feeling doubtānot necessarily because of how she feels about Rio, but because itās becoming real and she seems uncertain if this is the kind of person she wants to be.
4.04Ā
Dave and Phoebe approach Beth, offering Deanās freedom in exchange for Beth becoming an informant. Beth insists that Rio will kill her and that she ācanāt do this.ā The Secret Service threatens that if she doesnāt do this, she, Annie, and Ruby will all get rounded up and arrested for their crimes. In order to avoid this, she goes to call off the hitābut Fitzpatrick is mysteriously gone. She clues Dean into the Nevada plan, but gives him no indication of how it could be possible, potentially signifying a lack of commitment. When she tracks down Fitzpatrick, her reactions have shifted. She doesnāt correct him when he calls them jilted lovers. She pauses before answering when he says she just canāt live without him and when he tells her sheās not the only side dish. Realizing that Bethās cut a deal, Fitzpatrick calls her on it, and she insists that āitās complicated.ā In order to wrap up the hitman plot, Beth cons Rio into taking care of Fitzpatrick for herāonly she gives Rio an honest monologue about how she canāt go back to her normal life in order to accomplish it. She says she wants normalcy, a fresh start, a blank slateābut she wants crime. When she succeeds in duping Rio, sheās not celebratory or pleased. Instead, sheās weighed down, feeling like this was her last resort. Again, sheās unable to lie to Rio. When he signals that he doesnāt buy that the person he killed was Secret Service, Beth can barely hold it together, further emphasizing that she can only lie to him when she threads that lie with a truth and when she has extensive time to practice. She says it herself: her commitment to the Secret Service plan and her manipulating Rio into doing her dirty work is because itās the āonly way this goes away.āĀ
4.05
When Beth waits for Rio at the sting drop, she nervously checks her phone, but never attempts to contact or call him. She insists he āknowsā and the Secret Service refuses to do anything to protect her, making her upset. Beth defiantly strips to prove to Rio that sheās not wearing a wire, then agonizes whether or not he knows. Beth then enjoys being The Banker and imitates Rio while creatively coming up with her own way of handling Penny, telling her to āwatch [her] back.ā Sheās having fun again, riding the hide of being successful, and regardless of the reason or the truthfulness of Mickās statement, sheās rattled when he tells her that Rio trusts her. Beth alludes to the idea that āsomeone is still watchingā directly to Rioās face in order to try to weasel out of remaining the Banker and Beth realizes sheās Rioās fall guy as much as heās hers. She then tells the Secret Service that Rio has a boss, AKA someone thatās an even bigger fish to catch than Rio himself.
4.06
The Secret Service refuses to pay the girls to make up the difference in what they are no longer making working for Rio so they rob the jewelry store and leverage the meeting with the boss in order to con the Secret Service into paying up, causing trouble for them and definitely not acting compliant or loyal. Beth has a dream that explicitly explores that she feels guilty that sheās letting Rio down and betraying his trust while feeling pressured to deliver for the Secret Service. Before going to meet the boss, Beth tells Dean that sheās āstuck for lifeā in crime. Phoebe and Dave do nothing to prepare or reassure Beth when sheās nervous about wearing the wire. Beth starts off the scene asking Rio if he wants to frisk her. Despite the fact that it doesnāt benefit her to announce this over the wireāor that she looks at her plate like sheās waiting for the correction from Rioāshe announces that theyāre partners at dinner. She becomes protective over the name āElizabeth,ā showing that sheāll only allow Rio to call her that. An intimate hand on her back causes Beth to become frantic and panic, furiously removing the wire and desperate to find somewhere to stash it. As you point out, costuming puts her in a butterfly dress. There are more butterflies on the wall in Rosaās house. A romantic song about softening and forgiveness plays. After tucking the wire away, Beth studies the photos of Rio growing upāuntil sheās interrupted, at which point she can barely form the words āI donāt knowā in answer to what sheās doing. The entire conversation works on two levels to be about the immediate moment and the larger operation to betray him, with Beth signaling that she might not be good enough for him or his business. Rio is telling her about the overlap between business and family in private, yet Beth takes no opportunity to try and ask him anything that might gather evidence for the case. Then, under the guise of trying to distract him from finding the wireādespite the fact that she had better means to do soāBeth initiates intimacy with him after meeting his family.Ā
4.07
Beth insists that she only hooked up with Rio to distract him from finding the wire, but her behavior in the episode doesnāt correspond with this. She refuses to wear a wire again. Although Dean knows that sheās working against Rio to cut a deal with the Secret Service, she lies to him about going to see Rio, dressing up, fluffing her hair, and putting on perfume. At the bar, she flirts with him. She tries to say that she didnāt want to hook up with Rio again, but Rubyāher best friend in the world who knows her better than anyoneādoesnāt believe her. She goes along with the plan the entire way, but itās painfully obvious that Rio doesnāt buy it and Beth is just sticking her head in the sand because what else can she do? When Rio asks if Beth is āreally gonna do this,ā she offers that they can back out of the deal with āCarolynā to use someone else instead, like sheās entirely willing to cancel this operation at the last second, instead of even attempting to convince him that itās fine. Again, subtextual clues are consistent and clear: costuming, blocking, and music all underscore that Beth aligns with Rio. She admits she felt like she didnāt have a choice, and when he gives her one, sheās able to go home to Dean, indicating that she picked Rio and crime. Sheās glassy-eyed and, in contrast to her scene in 4.05 with Rio, sheās unable to strip bare for him, getting into the hot tub with her own husband in her own home fully dressed.Ā
Her reasons for her lack of loyalty shift from actively fearing for her life to feeling like her life is meaningless under his control to feeling like he makes her life hell to working against him to save herself to feeling like she has no other option. Itās a gradual shift, and weāve only just crossed the line.
The monologue at the bar in 4.04āreiterated in 4.06 just before the startāset us up to know that Beth is committed to (orĀ āstuck inā) crime for life. Her dynamic with Rio is shifting, but only just. Theyāre trying out real, straightforward communication and honesty for the first time⦠ever. So far, itās more effective than anything else theyāve tried. But there is still a lot of holding Beth back, including the fight with Ruby, Deanās reliance on the plan, and her inability to take accountability for her actions.
While I think that needle nudged over the line to choosing Rio, I donāt think we should yet expect that sheās going to be clearly and completely on his side just yet. Itās still jumbled and complicated, but weāve already seen her admit to him that sheās working with the Secret Service only to duplicitously try to continue to do so in secret. I think weāll see a progression from that, even though Iām not 100% sure in which way weāll see it yet.
But I do think sheās now more loyal to him now than she is to the Secret Service and that theyāre only going to get closer, sheās only going to soften more towards him, and weāll see a lot of development from this point forward with the needle moving more and more towards Beth proving her loyalty to Rio.Ā
I am confused. Rio must have guessed that Dave wasnt Dave and wasnt the feds, I mean why would a fed try to kill him like a sniper ? So why kill him right after he realized? Why not keep him alive and ask questions to understand what is Beth playing at ? Also, Beth was taking such a big risk with this as it was obvious Rio would find out who Dave is...
Well, technically, weāre not sure that Rio shot to killāonly that there was a gunshot and then a fade to black. Itās possible that Rio did question Fitzpatrick beyond the point that we saw, but I am hopeful that Fitzpatrick is really dead.
I also donāt know that there is much that Rio needs to question exactly. I think he could put the pieces together fairly easily on his ownāthis person is not Secret Service, not Dave, and he's attempting to snipe Rio whenĀ Beth led him straight to the sniper, and the sniper clearly knew Beth because of how he was talking about her.Ā Rio also knows Beth was doing something suspicious with her money (hence why he took it away in 3.10) and he caught on that something was up when she was very pleased with herself and told him she was "incentivized" (3.09). Plus, Rio knows Beth wants to be out from underneath his thumb ("When does it get to be mine?" / "Next time, empty the clip", 3.11) and that she's angry at him ("This is your fault!", 3.05) and that she's scared of him (which was his intent when he took her to the car wash and refused to tell her what they were doing). In that sense, I don't think Fitzpatrick had any answers that Rio didn't already know. He can even piece together that Beth wanted to call off the hit since she wanted Rio to take care of him, and he can figure out why because she admitted to him that the Secret Service was offering her Witness Protection for turning on Rio.
I'm not sure if Rio felt like it was worth dragging out the interaction with Fitzpatrick (dangerous, as Fitzpatrick had already tried reaching for his own gun) to get confirmation on what was already a pretty solid theory that he can follow up with Beth about.
And yes, it was a big risk! Once again I think Beth had tunnel vision and failed to see her plan working out in any way but how she'd imagined it, which is why she was so caught off guard and why she lied so badly when Rio brought it up. She doesn't really know Rio's MO (nor do we) and I think she was banking on him taking care of it quickly and quietly without much fanfare.
The trailer said āthis seasonā so I donāt think everything we saw in the promo for 4x02 is going to show tonight. I feel like the hitman plot is going to go on for a few more episodes until we actually see Fitz ācompleteā the hit. Kinda wish it was over on tonightās episode tho lol
I thought the hitman plot was going to be over every single episode since 3.09Ā š
1. What OTPs in your fandom(s) do you just not get?*
Okay, itās not that I donāt get themāI actually like them, at least in ficābut I canāt come around to wanting Annie and Nancy to become canon. I think itās messy as hell, haha, and think it would just be part of a pattern of Annieās love life being a destructive tornado razing a path through any stability in Annieās life! Sure, maybe eventually the dust would settle, but I donāt think I could handle the angst it could cause Ben for Annie to somehow be involved in the potential breakup of his fatherās marriage... twice.Ā
What I love about Annie and Nancy in fic is that in all instances of it Iāve seen, weāve jumped past the turmoil of it and are just at the happy, smiley place.
10. Most disliked arc? Why?
The hitman. I think they fumbled and didnāt get into Bethās head enough about why she was unwilling to do it herself and whether she recognized if that meant anything. I also think it dragged and relied on too-obvious contrived reasons for it to remain unresolved. On top of that, I think they toyed with Beth having hesitation and regret (closing her eyes during the test, reminiscing over the picnic table) but those moments were way too brief and subtle especially contrasted with the weight of the rest of the scene (where she ultimately said yes, do itĀ and was dancing on his grave). Itās extra disappointing because I think it couldāve been an arc that really teased out and defined Bethās limits, regrets, and feelings about what she did to Rio. It couldāve been an arc where I understood and sympathized with Bethās fear or with her feeling incredibly powerless. Instead, I felt mostly alienated from herāand Iām not sure that was their intention.
22. Popular character you hate?
Iām going to be completely boring on this one, but I donāt hate any of the characters. I think characterization is one of the showās strong suits and I think all of the characters are pretty dynamic and interestingāexcept...
Okay, I do not hateĀ this character by any means, but if I was going to say that thereās one character that doesnāt resonate with me the way she does with the rest of the fandom?
Iād go with Rhea.Ā
I feel like I learned essentially nothing about her and I was extremely disappointed by how much Beth and Rheaās friendship was teased and how little we got to see of it and, by extension, Rhea as a person with either Beth orĀ Rio.Ā
On the flip side, I do see how itās fun to play with her in fic because sheās basically a blank slate.