Sounds like someone just showed them selves into someone else's house. Any speculations?
Our killers arriving at Dougie's place maybe.
I see it as a joke about entering the lodge. How do you enter? There's no knock and no doorbell. Probably Hawk and co attempting to enter Glastonbury Cove?
Sounds like someone just showed them selves into someone else's house. Any speculations?
Our killers arriving at Dougie's place maybe.
This has been my guess as to what it means. Am thinking it's said by either Chantal or Hutch.
This brings to mind the question of where our Dougie will be at (mentally and physically) come Part 16. Do we think he'll still be at home? Or will Chantal and Hutch (assuming Dougie's their target) arrived at an empty house?
Or will Cooper be gone (on his way to Twin Peaks), and they (gulp) just find Janey-E and Sonny Jim?
I see it as a joke about entering the lodge. How do you enter? There's no knock and no doorbell. Probably Hawk and co attempting to enter Glastonbury Cove?
That's actually another good theory (I know you meant it as a joke, but then so much stuff that's happened in this show sounds like a joke).
There's a lot of speculation about Sonny Jim dying in the series, but somehow I feel like that is even too dark for The Return. Yeah, darker than Sarah Palmer even. I think the sadness surrounding Sonny Jim has more to do with his lack of a real father--as if he's a reflection of Richard, what Richard could have been before he went down the path he did. Maybe Sonny Jim is what Richard could have been.
A wild imaginative guess:
I believe Diane is close to confessing everything she knows, including the reason she is collaborating with mr. C against the FBI's back. My theory is that Mr. C has a child with her (Linda) and is keeping it hostage inside the motel or some other place that u can enter through the convenience store. Or even a real place.
Diane seems to be deeply traumatised when she refers to the last time she met with Cooper, it looks like the pain of a mother who lost her child. It must have been the time Mr. C took the child away from her.
Technically speaking, one of the coming episodes will have to be Laura Dern's big moment dramatic scene. I imagine this as a breakd0wn and the revealing of a very traumatised being behind the "fuck you" cynical attitude.
The expression "no knock, no doorbell" might be part of a very dramatic/heart-breaking description of the abrupt/unexprected arrival of Mr. C to abduct the child.
There's a lot of speculation about Sonny Jim dying in the series, but somehow I feel like that is even too dark for The Return. Yeah, darker than Sarah Palmer even. I think the sadness surrounding Sonny Jim has more to do with his lack of a real father--as if he's a reflection of Richard, what Richard could have been before he went down the path he did. Maybe Sonny Jim is what Richard could have been.
All next episodes will have dark and very sad moments. Most characters are hurt/destroyed/disillusioned/lost people. This won't be a joyride.
Dougie takes to living in a tent.
I agree about the dark mood of the coming episodes. I almost felt like Ed's love story was a way of the creators saying, "here's your happy ending, now let's get to the action".
I see it as a joke about entering the lodge. How do you enter? There's no knock and no doorbell. Probably Hawk and co attempting to enter Glastonbury Cove?
That's actually another good theory (I know you meant it as a joke, but then so much stuff that's happened in this show sounds like a joke).
I agree this is also a possiblity: someone describing the red room or the convenience store and how its a door u cant knock or ring the bell to enter.
I agree about the dark mood of the coming episodes. I almost felt like Ed's love story was a way of the creators saying, "here's your happy ending, now let's get to the action".
totally agree. this is why last episode felt like a finale episode. I think every episode from the remaining will feel like a last episode.
Sounds like someone just showed them selves into someone else's house. Any speculations?
Our killers arriving at Dougie's place maybe.
Hi Charlie,
Or maybe, Audrey finally goes over the threshold-portal-door that Charlie (no offense ;-)) tried to Tom-Sawyer her across last episode and wakes up in the real word.
Without anyone even having to knock on the door or ring the doorbell. 😉
- /< /\ /> -
I think it depends on the context in which the line is said (all episodes' titles have been actual lines, right?) If it means "There's no way to knock and no doorbell" it could indeed refer to an abstract-like place. Dougie's house has a doorbell, I believe.
If it means "Nobody answered to my knock, or to the doorbell" it's worrisome, it might mean an empty house.
If it means "I haven't heard a knock or the doorbell"... who knows? Janey-E suddenly confronted in her living room by a scruffy, tanned, leather-clad husband, as someone theorized? Wow.
I think it depends on the context in which the line is said (all episodes' titles have been actual lines, right?) If it means "There's no way to knock and no doorbell" it could indeed refer to an abstract-like place. Dougie's house has a doorbell, I believe.
If it means "Nobody answered to my knock, or to the doorbell" it's worrisome, it might mean an empty house.
If it means "I haven't heard a knock or the doorbell"... who knows? Janey-E suddenly confronted in her living room by a scruffy, tanned, leather-clad husband, as someone theorized? Wow.
to me it sounds like someone describing someone entering a place without a warning/unexpectedly. No knock, no doorbell.
My initial thought was Hutch going over the game plan "we kick in the door no knock no doorbell" since it's my first thought, it's wrong
i love it as hawk making a joke to frank about getting to the lodge
I really like the idea of it being about the convience store maybe it's the lady who unlocks the door almost scolding someone whose trying to get to Jeffries. "No knock no doorbell!" And holds up her keys.