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Sally recounts how in the good old days (1993), she and a couple of indie rockers were expressing their artistic admiration for one another with a heroin-heavy threesome at the Hotel Cortez. In doing this favor for Donovan, they neglect killing the bullet-wounded Countess, who gets fixed up by Hypodermic Sally (Sarah Paulson): the catch is that she has to endure Sally’s stories about her past, and so do we.
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Instead, Iris and Liz accidentally shoot and kill Donovan (Iris’s son), though they’re able to drag him from the hotel before he passes, so that he won’t turn into one of those stereotypical, tortured Hotel Cortez ghosts.
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Perhaps my non-theory that “Hotline Bling” is the only thing that can kill the Countess was more right than I’d assumed: in its absence, she does not die. Alas, “Hotling Bling” is nowhere to be heard. In that episode, seen from the perspective of the Countess (Lady Gaga) and Donovan (Matt Bomer), Iris (Kathy Bates) and Liz Taylor (Dennis O’Hare) had stormed into the Countess’ room and begun shooting - a killing spree set to Drake’s “Hotline Bling.” In “Battle Royale,” it changes the perspective to Liz and Iris, seemingly only to set the murder to a different song. It takes us back about 2 minutes before the last episode, “She Gets Revenge” finished. Interestingly, the episode begins with a Big Question (not really) - almost reminiscent of Rashomon (not really) - about subjectivity and the fluid nature of the past (not really).
#Murder set pieces threesome scene series
Do you watch American Horror Story to be revolted by body horror? Do you watch it for the possibility of wonderfully tawdry love scenes between celebrities you never would have expected to be in the same project, let alone sharing a tawdry love scene in it? Do you watch it for amusingly nonsensical cameos? Or for the sometimes hilarious (when it’s not incredibly boring) emotional illogic of its characters? If any or all of these are the reason you, remaining AHS enthusiast, watch it, you’re in luck: Season 5 Episode 11 (“Battle Royale”) certainly has it all, and thrives on everything the series does best (and does best by doing worst).