Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they all self-implode in different ways, perhaps by going after each other. Then Mattson takes over, or Gerry/Frank/Karl launch a search for a new CEO.
Ha. If Gerry becomes CEO!!
Or cousin Greg…
https://amp.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2023/may/24/will-roman-die-could-cousin-greg-be-king-our-predictions-for-the-succession-finale
So many calling it for Greg:
https://time.com/6281792/greg-succession-finale-theory/
https://www.theringer.com/platform/amp/succession/2023/5/24/23734253/succession-series-finale-cousin-greg-waystar
It would be such an excellent scene if we saw Greg sitting at a huge executive desk, berating someone mercilessly - who then turned out to be Tom.
I am team Not Greg. I have seen the Greg idea compared to making Bran Stark the King of Westeros. Gonna be a nope from me dawg.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they all self-implode in different ways, perhaps by going after each other. Then Mattson takes over, or Gerry/Frank/Karl launch a search for a new CEO.
Ha. If Gerry becomes CEO!!
Or cousin Greg…
https://amp.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2023/may/24/will-roman-die-could-cousin-greg-be-king-our-predictions-for-the-succession-finale
So many calling it for Greg:
https://time.com/6281792/greg-succession-finale-theory/
https://www.theringer.com/platform/amp/succession/2023/5/24/23734253/succession-series-finale-cousin-greg-waystar
It would be such an excellent scene if we saw Greg sitting at a huge executive desk, berating someone mercilessly - who then turned out to be Tom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Given that all the season finale titles have derived from John Berryman's Dream Song 29 in some way, I wonder what line of the poem the finale will derive from, and what that will say about the series?
https://www.distractify.com/p/all-the-bells-say-succession-meaning
Here's the poem fwiw:
There sat down, once, a thing on Henry’s heart / so heavy, if he had a hundred years / & more, & weeping, sleepless, in all them time / Henry could not make good. / Starts again always in Henry’s ears / the little cough somewhere, an odour, a chime. //
And there is another thing he has in mind / like a grave Sienese face a thousand years / would fail to blur the still profiled reproach of. Ghastly, / with open eyes, he attends, blind. / All the bells say: too late. This is not for tears; / thinking. //
But never did Henry, as he thought he did, / end anyone and hacks her body up / and hide the pieces, where they may be found. / He knows: he went over everyone, & nobody’s missing. / Often he reckons, in the dawn, them up. / Nobody is ever missing. //
Maybe "Too late" -- but he's already used This is Not for Tears and All the Bells Say, which surround that. So maybe, if one of the kids really does betray everyone else, "And hide the pieces, where they may be found." Or maybe "In the Dawn."
This is very cool! I did not know this before. I love these kinds of things. I like "And Hide the Pieces, Where They May Be Found" as a last-episode title, but it might be too long. Maybe just the first or second half of that line.
Or perhaps, "He Went Over Everyone" -- a sort of metaphor for Logan's spirit/influence reaching from beyond the grave.
I also like "With Open Eyes," or "A Thousand Years Would Fail to Blur," but no specific ideas of how those lines would relate to the plot.
Aaaand the finale is called "With Open Eyes"!! So I was right about it being a quote from the (Berryman not Whitman doh) Dream Song that the other season finale's have quoted from, and YOU, PP, were right about the phrase. Nice work, us.
Given the context of the part it's being pulled from ("Ghastly, / with open eyes, he attends, blind. / All the bells say: too late. This is not for tears; / thinking. //") I don't think it sounds like the finale is going to be a hearts and flowers ending for everyone. To me it suggests a range of things: the people in charge don't know what they're doing; generational trauma continues to haunt and affect the family, and get passed down, etc; nothing is really solved.
Oh, that's neat! I am the PP. This was a fun game! I'm so glad you posted about the poem -- I never would have known about that.
The best part of Sunday's episode was Ewan's speech. I was so, so happy they brought Ewan back. It was an amazing speech, so well-written. The actor seemed so much older and more tired, as is often the case when one loses a sibling.
The second-best part was Kendall's speech. I wouldn't be surprised if Jeremy Strong refused to rehearse that scene ahead of time -- it would make sense based on the New Yorker profile about him and his devotion to method acting. He did a stellar job with it.
I also liked the elaborate family crypt that Logan acquired in a deal with an internet pet-supply magnate. ROFL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think they all self-implode in different ways, perhaps by going after each other. Then Mattson takes over, or Gerry/Frank/Karl launch a search for a new CEO.
Ha. If Gerry becomes CEO!!
Or cousin Greg…
https://amp.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2023/may/24/will-roman-die-could-cousin-greg-be-king-our-predictions-for-the-succession-finale
So many calling it for Greg:
https://time.com/6281792/greg-succession-finale-theory/
https://www.theringer.com/platform/amp/succession/2023/5/24/23734253/succession-series-finale-cousin-greg-waystar
Anonymous wrote:I think Kendall's showing a lot of the ruthlessness that's been shown to be needed, supposedly -- I think he's going to win CEO. I think it has to be at great personal cost -- Roman commits suicide or is severely hurt? His relationship with Shiv gets utterly broken?
The only way I see Shiv winning is by using the waiter death against Kendall somehow. But by getting Collin on his team maybe Kendall has averted that possibility.
I think it would be a great play if actually Shiv and Kendall were working together to eff over Lukas. But Kendall really didn't know about Shiv's doublecross until election night, so that's not really a thing. But it would have explained Shiv wanting Lukas to publish his fraudulent numbers that might have worked to Kendall's advantage in pillaging the village.
I'm worried for Roman -- his comments were so out of control leading up to the funeral, showing a lot of instability, and then his breakdown and almost a reversion to a childhood state followed by near self-harm -- it's getting dark. And Kendall doesn't seem to care and is even making things worse for him mentally, which makes me think Roman is going to get hurt and in part it will be Kendall's fault.
Anonymous wrote:Questions: was the funeral televised? Did everyone see the Roman meltdown or just the people who were there?
And, does anyone think they can possibly wrap this up satisfactorily with only one more episode? I’m really having trouble picturing that.