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Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Sat Jan 29, 2011 5:48 am
by cassysj
Interesting his top of the food chain remark. Josef in the first episode talking about Food mouthing off to the farmer. They figure out quick that they are king of the jungle.

Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Sat Jan 29, 2011 5:50 am
by allegrita
I just re-watched the scene with Mick walking the gurney along the hall, and Beth running up to tell him about the Cleaner taking Gerald away. He spoke so contemptuously to her then. He was still in apex predator mode in a major way. Not at all in a mood to tolerate Beth and her pushiness at the moment.

Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Sat Jan 29, 2011 5:53 am
by cassysj
The Buddist monk story of Josef's is one of my favorites

Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Sat Jan 29, 2011 5:55 am
by nutmegger911
allegrita wrote:I just re-watched the scene with Mick walking the gurney along the hall, and Beth running up to tell him about the Cleaner taking Gerald away. He spoke so contemptuously to her then. He was still in apex predator mode in a major way. Not at all in a mood to tolerate Beth and her pushiness at the moment.
Wasn't it just poetic when the door slammmed leaving her on the outside looking in?

Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Sat Jan 29, 2011 5:57 am
by Lilly
nutmegger911 wrote:Where's Mattola? Was he one of the enforcers?
Here's a cap...

Image

Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Sat Jan 29, 2011 5:59 am
by allegrita
cassysj wrote:The Buddist monk story of Josef's is one of my favorites
Oh, yeah... that whole scene is just gorgeous. The fire, Josef dropping blood in the drinks, Mick on the couch, Josef's body language when he told the story... sigh. It's perfect.

Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Sat Jan 29, 2011 5:59 am
by nutmegger911
We're gonna have to start calling you "mad skills Lil"

Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Sat Jan 29, 2011 6:10 am
by jen
I've watched Dr. Feelgood a few times before, but there were things I saw this time through that just jumped out at me this time.

Mick is really very open (well, he seems open compared to Josef 'Mr. Paranoia' Kostan) for a vampire who knows the rules, knows what they are risking by talking to humans and yet he chooses to tell Beth. Of course, this is kind of an afterthought after she found out what Mick was at the end of OOTP. Besides, he has known Beth for 22 years at this point.

So, in for a penny in for a pound. He tells her that people had been hunting them for thousands of years [sounds like there is a sense of history there] and stresses the importance of keeping the secret.

Beth was really amazing. She remained focused on what she had seen and asked questions. Through it all, she seemed to keep firmly in mind that this man had saved her life a short time before.

Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Sat Jan 29, 2011 6:14 am
by Lilly
nutmegger911 wrote:We're gonna have to start calling you "mad skills Lil"
Honestly, this wasn't my discovery. Someone noticed it long ago. I thought everyone knew or I wouldn't have shouted it so randomly. :blushing:

Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Sat Jan 29, 2011 6:20 am
by jen
This episode just had a lot of victims.

First, Gerald Stofsky is the victim of a hit and run driver.

Next, Dr. Pollock is the victim of Gerald Stofsky, who really is not in control of his actions. I don't believe that he set out to kill Dr. Pollock, he just needed blood and then the good doctor was right there.

Then, there are Dr. Pollock's victims--the convenience store clerk, the he approached saying that he was a Dr that he immediately proceeded to drain and then his wife.

Dr. Pollock was quite intelligent to reason it out through the firestorm of the bloodlust and heightened senses. Mick and Guillermo spoke briefly about what it was like when they were first turned.

Sadly, we see Dr. Pollock lose all trace of the person he was as he becomes an inhuman monster. This was a responsible physician, the kind of man who would stop to render aide at an accident scene.

Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Sat Jan 29, 2011 9:15 pm
by jen
This episode gave us so much information that was foundational for the series. It really undergirded a lot that came after.

I'm sure that this has occurred to other folks before, but doesn't it seem like the process of staking a vampire has two different parts? It's like the stake goes in and that does the initial paralysis, then there is a second step, twisting the stake or driving it deeper than produces a more intense result. Like when Gerald Stofsky stakes Mick, then digs it in a little deeper and Mick reacts to the second staking, differently.

Also, it seems like there are degrees of paralysis depending on how old the vampire is. Dr. Pollock was frozen in midexpression. Mick was still able to whisper to Beth, 'take it out!' and Coraline after Mick staked her to save baby Beth, was able to get up and look out of the window at them before falling back into the flames.

May all be my imagination, but I thought these were interesting.

Jenna

:hearts: :flowers: :hearts: :flowers:

Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Thu Feb 02, 2017 12:40 pm
by Lucy
jen wrote:This episode gave us so much information that was foundational for the series. It really undergirded a lot that came after.

I'm sure that this has occurred to other folks before, but doesn't it seem like the process of staking a vampire has two different parts? It's like the stake goes in and that does the initial paralysis, then there is a second step, twisting the stake or driving it deeper than produces a more intense result. Like when Gerald Stofsky stakes Mick, then digs it in a little deeper and Mick reacts to the second staking, differently.

Also, it seems like there are degrees of paralysis depending on how old the vampire is. Dr. Pollock was frozen in midexpression. Mick was still able to whisper to Beth, 'take it out!' and Coraline after Mick staked her to save baby Beth, was able to get up and look out of the window at them before falling back into the flames.

May all be my imagination, but I thought these were interesting.

Jenna

:hearts: :flowers: :hearts: :flowers:
But notice....his lips don't really move....he only has the strength to push out the words....

============

BIG question, after all these years:
If strength comes with age..........why was the vampire Dr able to fight Mick for so long???? Shouldn't Mick put the vampire slap down on him quicker?

OR was it because he went feral at his turn???

Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Thu Feb 02, 2017 1:04 pm
by MoonMarg
I always thought it was because he was a feral new turn. :chin:

Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Thu Feb 02, 2017 1:21 pm
by Lucy
MoonMarg wrote:I always thought it was because he was a feral new turn. :chin:

:twothumbs:

Re: Dr. Feelgood (Episode Three)

Posted: Thu Feb 02, 2017 6:07 pm
by MickLifeCrisis
And I always wondered why Josef was moving and gasping when he was staked in SB, whereas Mick was totally paralyzed. Hmm... going along with the "twisting the stake in deeper" idea, maybe Josef's stake wasn't in deep enough because it was a human who staked him. The other examples we saw were all vampire staking other vampires, so they would have the strength to get it in pretty far the first time.

:chin: