Best Friends, For Never
- El episodio se transmitió el 13 ene 2022
- TV-MA
- 40min
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAfter Peacemaker's hazardous escape, tension and mistrust build within the team. Later, as Peacemaker grapples with his new assignment, he receives a surprise visitor.After Peacemaker's hazardous escape, tension and mistrust build within the team. Later, as Peacemaker grapples with his new assignment, he receives a surprise visitor.After Peacemaker's hazardous escape, tension and mistrust build within the team. Later, as Peacemaker grapples with his new assignment, he receives a surprise visitor.
Opiniones destacadas
Peacemaker's escape was both painful and well choreographed.
When he holds his fellow apartment owners hostage, it had shades of The Getaway.
The Butterfly Project is still hazy and the group are rather dysfunctional. Now they even distrust each other and have good reason to.
The scenes between Peacemaker and Vigilante did not do much for me. I guess it added to the comedy.
The most interesting part was Auggie Smith after he ends up in prison. Up to then he was just casually racist. Now he is more sinister as The White Dragon with his own followers.
The irreverent tones works well, Cena has the comedy chops and is happy to poke fun about his own body image. I would now want to see the plot to develop more.
Check it out. It is worth it.
Sorry for such long review.
John Cena continues to deliver a performance that transcends his wrestling origins, finding new layers of vulnerability beneath Peacemaker's aggressive exterior. The writing gives him space to explore Chris Smith's psychological fractures, particularly in moments where his carefully constructed worldview begins to crumble. His interactions with the ensemble cast reveal a character caught between his desperate need for acceptance and his inherent toxicity, creating a fascinating portrait of arrested development.
The cinematography deserves particular praise for its intimate character work. Director of photography Jules O'Loughlin employs tight framing during crucial emotional beats, creating an almost claustrophobic sense of internal conflict. The visual language shifts seamlessly between the heightened reality of superhero action and the grounded authenticity of family trauma, with lighting choices that emphasize the shadows lurking in every character's psyche.
Robert Patrick's introduction as Auggie Smith provides the episode with its most chilling moments. His performance radiates a quiet menace that speaks to decades of accumulated hatred, and the series doesn't shy away from the uncomfortable reality of how bigotry festers within families. The supporting ensemble - particularly Danielle Brooks, Jennifer Holland, and Steve Agee - continues to build compelling individual arcs while serving the larger narrative momentum.
What elevates this episode beyond typical superhero fare is Gunn's willingness to sit with uncomfortable truths about heroism, family, and redemption. The humor never undermines the serious themes, instead providing necessary relief from genuinely heavy material. The pacing allows for both explosive action sequences and quieter character revelations, creating a viewing experience that feels both entertaining and substantive.
The episode's exploration of consequences feels particularly relevant, as characters grapple with the real-world implications of their actions. This isn't a series interested in clean moral victories, instead presenting a world where every choice carries weight and every relationship bears scars from past decisions.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaVigilante and Peacemaker's target practice with Peacemaker was inspired by James Gunn's childhood in Missouri, when he and his friends used explosives to blow up things.
- ErroresAuggie Smith (Robert Patrick) is not really hand-cuffed when he's arrested at his home. When put into the police car, he uses a free hand to steady himself on the seat.
- Citas
Vigilante: Do you think I feel good when after some dude does some atrocious act, that I have to kill them?
Christopher Smith: I don't know...
Vigilante: When I find out someone murdered an innocent person, or sold somebody heroin, or did some graffiti, and I kill that person with my bare hands, their eyeballs popping out of their skulls... You think THAT gives ME pleasure?
Vigilante: [sighs] No...
Vigilante: Well, it does!
[laughs]
Vigilante: It gives you pleasure too, Peacemaker, that's cause we are born killers! What separates us from the other killers, is we only kill bad people. Usually... Unless there's a mistake! Now, do I sound like a fucking maniac?
- Créditos curiososAt the end of the credits, there is more of the scene shown from when Evan and Amber Calcaterra were at the police station selecting photos of who kidnapped them.
- ConexionesFeatured in Javo & Temoc: Top 10 Series: Lo 'mejor' del año (2022)
- Bandas sonorasDo Ya Wanna Taste It
(theme song) (uncredited)
Written by Trond Holter and Åge Sten Nilsen
Performed by Wigwam
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 40min
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido