Volume 3: The Hermit
- Episode aired Jun 14, 2019
- 1h 16m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
881
YOUR RATING
Now a detective, Martin investigates a murder suspect who is not what he appears to be.Now a detective, Martin investigates a murder suspect who is not what he appears to be.Now a detective, Martin investigates a murder suspect who is not what he appears to be.
William Baldwin
- Theo
- (as Billy Baldwin)
Michael Gonzales
- Valet
- (as Michael J. Gonzales)
Storyline
Did you know
- GoofsOn the Personnel Sheet for FBI Special Agent Viggo Larsen that Powers from the crime lab sent over to Detective Jones, the eye and hair color fields use the Canadian spellings -- Eye Colour and Hair Colour -- instead of standard U.S. Government American-English spellings.
Featured review
Martin's Vigilante Motivation: Such as it is!
TOTDY is a pretentious, self-indulgent, narcissistic,navel-gazing, misogynistic, slow-moving mess that does look great but offers nothing in the way of plot, character development, nuance, real tension or, indeed, meaning. It's what happens when a studio (Amazon Prime) just hands out money to a self-professed auteur without any restrictions. So far, so bad.
In Episode 3, things get more complex and more interesting. Well, they could barely have gotten less interesting. The pacing is marginally less somnambulist, there's even a smidgen of character development and motivation. Not a lot. Just a smidgen. We get to know how and why (why seems like too strong a term though) our central character Martin becomes a vigilante. Other than that, it's the same rot of symbolism without meaning, robotic acting, pretty but ever-so-repetitive photography, scenes being stretched out ad nauseam - and beyond, lines no human being would ever utter, and infrequent and pretty boring violence. It's all rot, me boy.
If you've made it to this point though, don't give up. The next three episodes are the best of TOTDY.
In Episode 3, things get more complex and more interesting. Well, they could barely have gotten less interesting. The pacing is marginally less somnambulist, there's even a smidgen of character development and motivation. Not a lot. Just a smidgen. We get to know how and why (why seems like too strong a term though) our central character Martin becomes a vigilante. Other than that, it's the same rot of symbolism without meaning, robotic acting, pretty but ever-so-repetitive photography, scenes being stretched out ad nauseam - and beyond, lines no human being would ever utter, and infrequent and pretty boring violence. It's all rot, me boy.
If you've made it to this point though, don't give up. The next three episodes are the best of TOTDY.
helpful•617
- ThomasMuf
- Jul 20, 2019
Details
- Runtime1 hour 16 minutes
- Color
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