Anonymous wrote:But there was the clip of a girl being held down by a bunch of girls on the grass and it looks like Camille's sister is trying to pull her teeth out. So she had help b/f but killed the girl in St. Louis all by herself?
Anonymous wrote:Wow - what an ending. I hadn't read the book, so this was all new to me. Let me see if I've got it all straight:
Adora killed Marion (the middle sister) through her Munchausen by proxy. She was also slowly poisoning Amma, and was seen biting baby Amma to make her cry, thus allowing her to pretend she had "another sick baby." (Such a shocking, sick scene.)
Adora tutored the two other girls - Ann Nash and Natalie. She devoted a lot of time to them, and apparently Amma was insanely jealous which led her (Amma) to kill them? What did the teeth represent? Also, Amma's friends helped her kill them?
It's implied that Amma kills her new friend in St. Louis. That girl's mother is looking for her daughter at the end, and Amma had been at the park with her. We also see that girl being assaulted against a chain link fence at the end. Her nails were painted pink - apparently Ann and Natalie both had painted nails too (done after their deaths). What's the deal with the nail polish?
Why would Amma kill her new friend - was she jealous that Camille liked the girl and thought highly of her?
Loved this show - the description said "Season 1". Will there be more seasons? I can't imagine how there could be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So stupid. Forensics would never have missed that.
Also, I hate when characters who are supposed to be good writers write bad examples of writing then get praised for it. Really if you’re wondering if you’re caring for your sister out of kindness or whether you have munchausen by proxy, then you shouldn’t be a guardian.
Actually the passage that the editor read aloud near the end of the show is the final few lines of the book. So I guess don't bother reading it? hah
Did you not bother to read what I wrote? It was only a sentence. I know reading is difficult for some people. But being smug comes so easily to some. Bad writing is bad writing—whether included in a book or or it’s adaptation.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone want to talk about symbolism? I took the frequent fan shots to symbolize things that offer comfort but are dangerous if you get too close- like Adora.
Was Camille’s choice of a Volvo a craving for safety?
Camille’s hair was short at the time of her sister’s death, probably as rebellion and/or protection against her mother’s attention. Why did she grow it long after that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So stupid. Forensics would never have missed that.
Also, I hate when characters who are supposed to be good writers write bad examples of writing then get praised for it. Really if you’re wondering if you’re caring for your sister out of kindness or whether you have munchausen by proxy, then you shouldn’t be a guardian.
Actually the passage that the editor read aloud near the end of the show is the final few lines of the book. So I guess don't bother reading it? hah
Anonymous wrote:So stupid. Forensics would never have missed that.
Also, I hate when characters who are supposed to be good writers write bad examples of writing then get praised for it. Really if you’re wondering if you’re caring for your sister out of kindness or whether you have munchausen by proxy, then you shouldn’t be a guardian.
Anonymous wrote:Is the book better than the series? I didn't really understand what happened in the series. Amma killed the girls? Who was Camille's father? I thought it was the sheriff. What was that creepy vibe between Adora and him? I could never see what works were written on Camille.
Patricia Clarkson did a phenomenal job. She seemed so inexplicably weird for the first 5-6 episodes, but then when you figured out what was going on, she'd been that way right under your nose all along. Smart.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone want to talk about symbolism? I took the frequent fan shots to symbolize things that offer comfort but are dangerous if you get too close- like Adora.
Was Camille’s choice of a Volvo a craving for safety?
Camille’s hair was short at the time of her sister’s death, probably as rebellion and/or protection against her mother’s attention. Why did she grow it long after that?