He could cure cancer and I'll call him McPoyle. I was actually confused for a while by people calling him William.h1ag said:
I keep wanting to call him McPoyle.
He could cure cancer and I'll call him McPoyle. I was actually confused for a while by people calling him William.h1ag said:
I keep wanting to call him McPoyle.
I caught that too. Sounds like, in this future, that babies personalities can be determined while in the womb and if it isn't optimal, the baby can be aborted.schmendeler said:
so what was with the "embryo" comment the one tech made to the other? was it just a figure of speech or was it a reference to his actual birth? has technology advanced that far in this fictional future?
He had taken a bird from inside the park that he'd found dead, and was using his free time to write code that would bring it back online. He's been hired as someone in the "Body Shop" but he wants to get promoted to the Behavior Division.easttexasaggie04 said:
What was the point of the Asian guy and the bird? I felt like I was missing the point.
It showed that he has the ability to program / code at least on some level.....and Maeve is about to use him to most likely change her code / behavior.easttexasaggie04 said:
What was the point of the Asian guy and the bird? I felt like I was missing the point.
VERY early theory on that. But it seemed to me that the Asian "butcher" is also likely a host. The moments where he's having those similar flashbacks and same loop feelings as some of the hosts that we've seen almost seems to reveal that. Also, his dialogue with the other butcher after being caught working on that bird, that guy tells him he's "never going to be anything other than a butcher" - this is interesting because it could be our first look into another host breaking out of their loop and creating their own unique motives. This would be significant on many levels because not only would it be another host breaking out of his loop and seeking change, but it would begin to reveal that many of the employees in "management" are indeed hosts themselves.easttexasaggie04 said:
What was the point of the Asian guy and the bird? I felt like I was missing the point.
Yep. MIB has discussed knowing Laurence in another life and spending a lot of time with him.Ranger222 said:It showed that he has the ability to program / code at least on some level.....and Maeve is about to use him to most likely change her code / behavior.easttexasaggie04 said:
What was the point of the Asian guy and the bird? I felt like I was missing the point.
I agree this episode pretty much confirms the two storylines -- the town William/Delores went to last night was totally different than the one the MiB dragged Lawerence to a couple of episodes ago. That town just seemed like a regular border town while last night's town was basically Sodom and Gomorrah. It also seemed like Lawerence's character was completely different, meaning the storylines had changed over the years with Lawerence taking over some new role.
So the rest of the season will most likely go down that William / Delores keep on their quest and discover the maze some how.....but some other event takes place ("We haven't had an incident in 30 years" line from the first episode regarding the hosts) that keeps them from reaching it. Delores gets wiped clean, and we get the MiB coming back 30 years later to finish it. The only question I have is why it would take 30 years for him to finally be getting close again.
Again, thematically this perspective makes no sense.Ranger222 said:It showed that he has the ability to program / code at least on some level.....and Maeve is about to use him to most likely change her code / behavior.easttexasaggie04 said:
What was the point of the Asian guy and the bird? I felt like I was missing the point.
I agree this episode pretty much confirms the two storylines -- the town William/Delores went to last night was totally different than the one the MiB dragged Lawerence to a couple of episodes ago. That town just seemed like a regular border town while last night's town was basically Sodom and Gomorrah. It also seemed like Lawerence's character was completely different, meaning the storylines had changed over the years with Lawerence taking over some new role.
So the rest of the season will most likely go down that William / Delores keep on their quest and discover the maze some how.....but some other event takes place ("We haven't had an incident in 30 years" line from the first episode regarding the hosts) that keeps them from reaching it. Delores gets wiped clean, and we get the MiB coming back 30 years later to finish it. The only question I have is why it would take 30 years for him to finally be getting close again.
Quote:
So, just to refresh: the theory is that William and Logan's scenes take place 30 years in the past, and that William will age into becoming the Man in Black. Previous episodes have offered some evidence in support of the theory, some evidence against it (primarily that Dolores runs into William in the desert right after what appears to be an incident where she flashes on a memory of the Man in Black raping her), and the ambiguity of the robots' time-looped behavior to complicate matters.
After "Contrapasso," I feel more confident than ever that this is what's happening.
And I'm less happy about it than ever.
Quote:
Let's start with the new evidence. As William and Logan enter the bandit town of Pariah, Logan talks about Arnold's death and the park's financial woes as if they are very recent occurrences, and suggests their company could keep the place afloat if they up their investment; later, the Man in Black tells Ford that Arnold's death almost brought the park down with him "Almost, but not quite, thanks to me." And when William and Logan finally get to meet Slim's infamous boss, it's none other than Lawrence, who admittedly is available to be placed back into circulation now that the Man has killed him to use his blood to revive Teddy, but who appears to be part of a very different storyline from the one where we met him, in the same way that Maeve was once a mom on the frontier, and other hosts have had their roles switched. It's not impossible that this is all happening in the same timeline the prison guards from last week's episode, after all, know of Lawrence as a dangerous criminal in need of immediate execution but it's increasingly hard not to see this as the plan.
Quote:
And Dolores, who is the show's most sympathetic and interesting character, goes through a huge burst of character growth this week as she learns how to change the role she's playing without benefit of rewrite from Dr. Ford or anyone else back at headquarters. Ordinarily, this would be a thrilling development, since until now she had been trapped in the same sadistic loop, largely oblivious to her own victimization. The idea that she could go from damsel to gunslinger, and also that she is secretly working for someone else perhaps a bit of code left in her by the late Arnold? or whomever planted the transmitter inside the woodcutter? should be exciting. But if her swap of wardrobe and identity is happening decades in the past, then that means that we're not watching her go on a journey where she genuinely, irrevocably grows and becomes stronger, but one that will eventually be halted and reversed until she's back to being the doomed girl in the blue dress. There's a tragedy to that, obviously as with so many parts of the series, reflective of Memento and the way that Leonard's condition made it impossible for him to truly learn or change but one that, as with twist-based storytelling itself, becomes harder to take from many hours spread out over many weeks, as opposed to watching a film in one sitting, where it's especially cruel on a show that already has more than its fair share of that emotion.
Man, Sepinwall is stealing stuff I already said on this thread.OldArmy71 said:
Sepinwall believes that this episode confirms the two timelines theory, and he doesn't like it:Quote:
So, just to refresh: the theory is that William and Logan's scenes take place 30 years in the past, and that William will age into becoming the Man in Black. Previous episodes have offered some evidence in support of the theory, some evidence against it (primarily that Dolores runs into William in the desert right after what appears to be an incident where she flashes on a memory of the Man in Black raping her), and the ambiguity of the robots' time-looped behavior to complicate matters.
After "Contrapasso," I feel more confident than ever that this is what's happening.
And I'm less happy about it than ever.Quote:
Let's start with the new evidence. As William and Logan enter the bandit town of Pariah, Logan talks about Arnold's death and the park's financial woes as if they are very recent occurrences, and suggests their company could keep the place afloat if they up their investment; later, the Man in Black tells Ford that Arnold's death almost brought the park down with him "Almost, but not quite, thanks to me." And when William and Logan finally get to meet Slim's infamous boss, it's none other than Lawrence, who admittedly is available to be placed back into circulation now that the Man has killed him to use his blood to revive Teddy, but who appears to be part of a very different storyline from the one where we met him, in the same way that Maeve was once a mom on the frontier, and other hosts have had their roles switched. It's not impossible that this is all happening in the same timeline the prison guards from last week's episode, after all, know of Lawrence as a dangerous criminal in need of immediate execution but it's increasingly hard not to see this as the plan.Quote:
And Dolores, who is the show's most sympathetic and interesting character, goes through a huge burst of character growth this week as she learns how to change the role she's playing without benefit of rewrite from Dr. Ford or anyone else back at headquarters. Ordinarily, this would be a thrilling development, since until now she had been trapped in the same sadistic loop, largely oblivious to her own victimization. The idea that she could go from damsel to gunslinger, and also that she is secretly working for someone else perhaps a bit of code left in her by the late Arnold? or whomever planted the transmitter inside the woodcutter? should be exciting. But if her swap of wardrobe and identity is happening decades in the past, then that means that we're not watching her go on a journey where she genuinely, irrevocably grows and becomes stronger, but one that will eventually be halted and reversed until she's back to being the doomed girl in the blue dress. There's a tragedy to that, obviously as with so many parts of the series, reflective of Memento and the way that Leonard's condition made it impossible for him to truly learn or change but one that, as with twist-based storytelling itself, becomes harder to take from many hours spread out over many weeks, as opposed to watching a film in one sitting, where it's especially cruel on a show that already has more than its fair share of that emotion.
My pulled out of my butt theory on William's turn to the darkside is Dolores at some point gets her memory wiped and no longer knows who William is. The heartbreak/trauma of it all makes Williams turn bad.john32f said:Again, thematically this perspective makes no sense.Ranger222 said:It showed that he has the ability to program / code at least on some level.....and Maeve is about to use him to most likely change her code / behavior.easttexasaggie04 said:
What was the point of the Asian guy and the bird? I felt like I was missing the point.
I agree this episode pretty much confirms the two storylines -- the town William/Delores went to last night was totally different than the one the MiB dragged Lawerence to a couple of episodes ago. That town just seemed like a regular border town while last night's town was basically Sodom and Gomorrah. It also seemed like Lawerence's character was completely different, meaning the storylines had changed over the years with Lawerence taking over some new role.
So the rest of the season will most likely go down that William / Delores keep on their quest and discover the maze some how.....but some other event takes place ("We haven't had an incident in 30 years" line from the first episode regarding the hosts) that keeps them from reaching it. Delores gets wiped clean, and we get the MiB coming back 30 years later to finish it. The only question I have is why it would take 30 years for him to finally be getting close again.
1. The show has already told you that while Lawrence had a home and a wife, that isn't where he spent his time, so simply having a holdout and a true home doesn't prove two timelines. And his "cousins" in the first town, seem a lot like his posse referenced in the second. So, I don't really see that his story has changed.
2. The whole point of this show is what the greeter host said in the second show, "If you can't tell, what difference does it make?" As the park has progressed, they've created hosts that more and more resemble actual humans. How do you impact your guests, make them feel consequences or at least gravitas for their actions when they're untouchable. Simple - you make the hosts feel like real people so when you kill, rape, or whatever else to each of them, you get the thrill (or revolt in William's case) of actually killing someone. The robots from 30 years ago... not so much. They weren't real, it was obvious they weren't real, and so no one cared about what happened to them. Throughout the show, they've referenced how the old robots broke the illusion.
Now let's look at William, he's completely fallen for Delores, become wrapped up in her story, and wants to protect her. That's the evolution of the hosts that park management has been striving for, that you get the sense comes from the reveries, etc. All the while, those same reveries, which we believe are happening in present day so to speak (the behavior team talking to Maeve, Clementine, etc.), are causing Delores to lose her mind. It just doesn't make sense for that to be the 30 year old incident unless the reveries storyline is also 30 years old.
3. If William and the MiB are the same person, what is the character arc? He's gone from white hat to self-stylized park villain in search of the deeper meaning of the place? From what we've seen thus far, there just isn't a motivation for that to occur. Maybe they'll reveal something moving forward that makes him become evil, but thus far, nothing has really been hinted at that shows him moving toward this arc. He's pretty much rejected what Westworld stands for. So, in order to get sucked him, something bad would have to happen to him moving forward, but that's just pure speculation. It doesn't at all fit with his character right now, who's primary role seems to be the the viewer's conscience.
The only way this alternate timeline story makes sense is if William's story is happening 30 years after the park incident in which Arnold killed himself, at the same time, that's when Ford is having his conversations with Bernard, when the reveries are implemented, etc. and when Maeve is becoming self-aware. Then 30 years after that, the MIB (William is around) completing the story you see from Maeve. So, all of the other storylines are happening with William, and the MIB is the only one set 30 years later. Then of course, Ford not aging doesn't make sense, nor would there appear to be any real point to this reveal other than to say, the MIB was William all along, gotcha! I hope they don't go that route.
ce1994 said:
The best I can determine is Ed Harris is after something that exists and the only person that knows of it is Anthony Hopkins and Hopkins is going to stop him. They have already established Hopkins is ruthless so I do not know why he does not just have him killed.