![]() ![]() Rather than come up with a story that would be specific to Shogun World’s setting and Japanese history and culture, he just shoehorned the gunslinging narrative he wrote for Westworld. About Press Copyright Contact us Creators Advertise Developers Terms Privacy Policy & Safety How YouTube works Test new features NFL Sunday Ticket Press Copyright. In Season 2, “Paint It Black” signifies that Sizemore is a goddamn, unoriginal hack. In context, the specific track also highlighted Hector and Co.’s willingness to resort to violence and a certain sense of nihilism. In Season 1, the use of “Paint It Black,” a “modern” song, was meant to highlight the artificiality of Wesworld’s Wild West setting. ![]() In both instances, a cover of “Paint It Black,” plays, only in Shogun World it’s performed with traditional flutes and Japanese instruments rather than on a player piano. So starting tonight, we’re going to follow up each episode with the myriad. Viewers are still talking about episode one's use of an orchestral version. In Shogun World, the ronin Musashi (Hiroyuki Sanada) and his dragon-tattooed accomplice try to steal from the teahouse where Akane ( Pacific Rim’s Rinko Kikuchi) operates as a geisha. We don’t have many answers yet, but HBO’s sci-fi brain teaser will surely parse out a few from week to week. Published: Tuesday, 11th October 2016 at 7:45 pm Save The musical references are fast becoming a feature of Westworld. Hector and Armistice’s bloody attempted robbery of the safe in Maeve’s brothel wasn’t exactly unique. See, when Sizemore wrote narratives for all of Delos’s various parks, he self-plagiarized quite a bit. When Maeve, Sizemore, Hector, Armistice, and the two doofus technicians Felix and Sylvester get captured by some rogue swordsmen and taken into Shogun World, they see new sides of themselves. ‘Paint It Black’ happens during a really big action scene, and it has all these great ups and downs the shooting, the talking and so I bring it down and then back up a bit, which was a lot. This post contains spoilers for Westworld* Season 2, Episode 5. The instrumentation is a little different in Shogun World. Except, the last time we heard the Rolling Stones’s we were in Westworld. Seeing it in episode 5, season 2 was quirky and fun but I can’t help but think the latest version (cheap knock off) was milking a good thing and Press J to jump to the feed. It’s based on the ‘70s Yul Brynner film of the same name, but now it’s a TV series. Its about the guilt of still living life in all its realness and beauty while your loved one cannot experience it. But its also about the pain of watching someone you love struggle with depression, and be plunged into a world without color, without meaning. The genre-swapped musical cover in the fifth episode of Wesworld’s second season probably sounds familiar - not just because it’s a cover of a well-known song, but because we’ve actually heard this very song before on the show. Its widely believed 'Paint it Black' is about coping with the death of a loved one. ![]()
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