Friday, August 22, 2014

True Blood Season 7 Episode 10 Thank You the Final Episode



The curtain falls this Sunday night on one of the most popular HBO shows, the vampire drama series True Blood. Thank You is the title of the final episode of Season 7. The episode is expected to tie-up all the narrative loose ends including answer the question about Bill's mortality.

Sookie and Reverend Daniels are seen talking about the simpler times when they were unaware about the existence of vampires, werewolves, were-panthers, and shape-shifters. Sookies wants to know if God made us all, or some of us are mistakes. Rev. Daniels is surprised to know that Sookie is a fairy. The fairy is probably asking the question because of Bill's imminent death. He has refused to get cured because he wants to see Sookie happy. The final episode will see Sookie pondering over her future, with Bill or without him.

The final season is likely to see Arlene and Keith getting their happy ending and Jessica and Hoyt may, too. Jason and Bridget may set on the relationship path. The question is will Sookie find a miracle at the last moment and save Bill or accept that death is a miracle, too, and let go Bill. Also, the episode will see Eric and Pam planning something to tackle Mr Gus and his men.

Last week, there were spoiler reports that one of the original cast members will die in episode 9, which did not happen. Will an important character die in the final episode? Prior to the premiere of "True Blood" Season 7, there were reports that some of the fans' favourite characters are not going to survive the final season. The characters that have been killed till now, only Alcide can be called fans' favourite.

True Blood Season 7 Episode 9 Recap All Fanged Up



Believe it or not, the wait is finally over True Blood Season 7 the final season is now under way. Tune in each week as we recap and discuss the last chapter in the story of our favorite Bon Temps residents. When we last checked in on the gang, there was quite a crew at Fangtasia who had come together to get Bill healed from Hep-V. But Bill didn’t want to take Sarah Newlin’s blood. So what does he want?

He wants the true death, apparently. When the scene opens, we are still in Fantasia’s basement dungeon. Bill wishes to meet the true death, but can’t quite articulate why. After a couple of Cher/Moonstruck slaps to try to get the answers out of him, Sookie is held back by Eric. He doesn’t say anything, but we all know that since Eric just went through his own brush with death, he may be empathising with Bill. Jessica, in her grief, asks to be released and Bill grants her wish. He leaves Jess crying into Pam’s couture jacket, Sookie crying into Eric’s couture jacket, and us wondering what the heck is going on.

Sookie and Jess take a trip to Sam’s house only to find that Sam has skipped town with Nicole. He left two envelopes; one with a letter to Sookie that was sweet and invited her to visit him and Nicole when the baby arrives. He tells Sookie that he will always love her, but he wasn’t missing out on his life with Nicole or on raising his child. Happy Trails, Sam! Sookie and Jess head over to the bar to deliver the other letter. Arlene is looking dashing in her red dress and has declared Bellefleur’s open for business! They just need customers. Sookie announces to everyone that Sam is gone, and pulls Andy off to the office to share that Sam left a letter for him as well. It was a one sentence resignation letter, and not the heartfelt tear-jerker kind of letter he left for Sookie. Ha! Meanwhile, Jess and James put their differences aside to talk out their closure. He tells Jess that he is very happy with Lafayette, and Jess asks him to be Sookie’s escort home before tearing out of the bar at vamp speed. Where is she going?

Well, we end up at Hoyt’s house where he and his girlfriend Brigette seem to be having some trouble in paradise. She confronts him about not wanting to have children, then she confronts him about making eyes at Jessica. Just when he talks her down from the ledge, someone knocks at the door. It’s Jessica. Despite the fact that his girlfriend won’t let her in, she comes clean and tells Hoyt that she knows him, but he doesn’t know her because he doesn’t remember. She tells him that she messed everything up. Hoyt’s girlfriend isn’t having any of these Hallmark moments on her watch. Brigette tells Hoyt that if he wants to listen to Jess, he needs to leave the house...and know that if he does leave the house, it’s over. Hoyt takes a couple of beats, and walks out the door. Jess tells him about Bill (weren’t we supposed to be keeping this cure thing on the down low??) and said that she couldn’t look him in the face and not take a chance, and couldn’t imagine being with anyone else right now while going through this mess with Bill. Hoyt does the right thing, gives her a hug, and tells her to take a deep breath and tell him “the story of us.” Swoon! Is that how they train them in Alaska, or is Hoyt just growing up?

Brigette the Ultimatum Maker calls Jason and gives him the abridged version of the evening’s events. He grabs his keys and runs out the door. Meanwhile, the staff and their friends at Bellefleur’s bar are having a family style dinner. Sookie is at the bar, choosing not to participate. Arlene comes over and they have a nice moment, talking about survival and starting over. (Sookie turns that into a not-so-nice moment when she asks Arlene how she has started over SO MANY TIMES. Just what every widow wants to hear, right Sookie?) Anyhoo, Arlene asks Sookie if she has any advice on dating a vampire since she is dating Keith with the Eyes. Truer words were never spoken when Sookie tells Arlene she doesn’t want her advice on dating vampires. They laugh and Arlene gets Sookie to join the group and have some dinner. Eric visits Bill to try to get him to change his mind, but Bill is convinced that Sookie will never move on if he is still alive, and he wants her to be happy. He tells Eric that Sookie is attracted to their darkness the way they are attracted to her light because she is fae. Then he asks Eric to talk to Sookie, and try to warm her up for him before he calls on her. Eric reluctantly agrees. It’s actually very cool to see the two of them when they work together.

When Jason rolls up to Hoyt’s house, he promptly gets laid out by a fist to the face, courtesy of Hoyt. When he comes to, Brigette is driving his patrol car, and he tells her to go to his house. However, he lets her know there will be no sex at his house. When Brigette balks at the statement, he simply replies, “It needed to be said.” He had to remind himself of that very thing, later on that night by putting a bag of frozen veggies on his crotch. Later, Brigette can’t sleep and comes out to the living room to talk to Jason. He tells her the story of Hoyt and Jessica. Back at Hoyt’s house, he and Jessica are talking about the past a little more, and getting a little cozier. Then they get a lot cozier, as their story is being narrated by Jason as they make love again for the first time. After listening to the story, Brigette invites Jason to bed, but she tells him she is going to teach him how to be in bed with a woman without having sex. They share some secrets, and Jason reveals that he wants to have lots of children but is afraid of his future daughter meeting a man like him. Brigette is adamant with Jason that he is a good, sweet person, and he is a good man. It’s definitely something Jason doesn’t get to hear a lot.

Pam has demanded Sarah’s presence to dye her hair back blonde. Sarah whines and cries as Pam tells her about the plans they have to sell her like a whore. Meanwhile, Eric finds Sookie and tells her that Bill wants to talk to her. At first she refuses, but then agrees. Eric asks her to take it easy on Bill. Then he give her a ride and vamp-flies her home! He turns and gives her a Meaningful Look over his shoulder before he takes off again. He gets to Fangtasia and Ginger is at the bar waiting to bitch at him about not telling her he was cured. Having been a counselor to everyone else’s relationship, Eric was cranky and for some reason thought finally having sex with Ginger would make him feel better. In the most hilarious scene of the night, he sits in the throne chair per Ginger’s fantasy, rips off her undies, and lets Ginger climb on top. He bites her and takes a bit of blood, and then Ginger starts to seat herself...but she has a five minute orgasm before that even happens. Ginger immediately falls asleep on the stage and Eric, in shock, steps over her and excuses himself. He goes in search of Pam, who is tied up at the moment by Mr. Gus. Mr. Gus wants to know if Sookie knows about the cure, and just before Pam is killed, Eric admits that she does. Now Mr. Gus needs Sookie’s address. Speaking of Sookie’s address, we end the episode watching Bill make his way to her house and knock on her door.

Friday, August 15, 2014

True Blood season 7 episode 8 Sum Up

The end is well and truly nigh. For us anyway as True Blood season 7 creeps ever-nearer to its conclusion, there was a distinct air of finality to the proceedings this week. Finality and more than a touch of forgiveness. It seems that with Sarah’s capture, and the confirmation of her status as vampire savior, the spirit of cure and making things all better has somehow spread to the whole town – Eric’s as healthy as he’ll ever be, Hoyt’s a hero, Violet’s a big puddle, and things are looking up for everyone. Well, almost everyone. Bill’s Hep-V induced hallucinations have apparently gone to his head.

Yes, Vampire Bill is about to become Ex-Vampire Bill, deciding as he has to martyr himself for reasons known only to him. His refusal to drink from Sarah would, on any other day, be entirely understandable that woman is enough to put any self-respecting vampire off human blood for eternity but in a choice between painful death and a distasteful meal, surely the meal wins, no matter how distasteful it might be? The GoT-style no-one’s-safe massacre of the early part of the season is one thing, but it’s a whole different deal when the cause of death is self-inflicted, a deathly refusal of help that smacks of self-indulgence and a badly misplaced sense of nobility. And, to add insult to injury, Bill’s putting the last two people on the planet that he allegedly cares for in danger - if the Yakuza-types in the bar realise there’s a vamp not-curing party going on downstairs, Sookie won’t have the chance to live the Bill-free life he’s decided she’s got to have.

At least the ever-self interested Eric Northman hasn’t allowed his principles to get in the way of the lifestyle to which he’s become accustomed - having drunk from Sarah despite his distaster, his presence is assured for the rest of the season. As is his fortune, thanks to Mr Gus’s diabolical plan to turn New Blood into a life-long habit, rather than a one-shot cure. Of course, having admitted that the Corporation has already synthesised Sarah’s blood, Mr Gus has surely written her death warrant. Eric isn’t generally known for his patience, and he already has plenty of money. It would be a damn shame if she makes it out of the season alive.

While Bill and Eric are busy making Sookie and Jess, and Mr Gus respectively, deeply unhappy, the rest of Bon Temps seems to be happily reconciling left, right and centre. Hoyt and Jason are already drinking together, and Hoyt and Jess are already fixing to leave Bridget in dumpsville. Lovely as it was that Hoyt was involved in the Sweet Valley rescue, the end to Violet’s museum of death was a tad disappointing no bitch fight, no deaths other than her own one bullet to the back and the Sweet Valley mini-arc was over as abruptly as it began. It’s a shame to see Violet go though; she was just starting to get interesting before she went batshit insane. But then it seems that Jason does tend to have that effect on women...

The serious wrapping-up of storylines represented by all the reconciliation continued with Lettie Mae’s final visit from Tara. What’s in the front yard? A ton of regret. And a twenty year old unused revolver. Tara’s right, she should have used the gun when she had the chance on both of her useless parents. As touching as the forgiveness was, it’s a shame that there wasn’t something a little more interesting at the end of the trip down memory lane. Poor Tara. Her death was identical to her life all about her mother. Having taken care of so many of the season’s main storylines, Almost Home perhaps would have been better titled almost done. The cure is on the horizon, the H-Vamps appear to have given up terrorizing the town, anyone who’s alive and able to has reconciled, and even some who aren’t alive were able to forgive from beyond the grave. All of which leaves us facing the prospect of a lower-key ending to the show than we would ever have imagined. Bill’s martyrdom, closely tied in with Sarah’s survival, is pretty much all that’s left to deal with, and that’s the most surprising thing about this episode. While it’s true that the show began with Bill and Sookie’s relationship, it has since expanded to include many, many other characters and relationships, all of which are equally deserving of a memorable goodbye. Whether we’ll spend what time we have left in Bon Temps watching Bill kill himself remains to be seen, but let’s hope that True Blood can surprise us one last time.