What did 'Have you travelled together before' mean at the end?
I feel so dumb. I know it's a threat but I don't understand it. What does she mean? What is she threatening them with? I feel like I missed something.
shareI feel so dumb. I know it's a threat but I don't understand it. What does she mean? What is she threatening them with? I feel like I missed something.
shareThis part has always confused me.
Maybe she's going to take them to Ireland before she kills them. Or like ... they're dying together so like ... bah, I don't know. lol
I laugh in the face of danger!!
Then I find somewhere to hide until it goes away.
My interpretation is that she meant either:
a. They're both departing their lives together... on their way to hell/afterlife/etc.
or
b. She's going to bury their bodies together or something like that.
It's just a menacing statement - I wouldn't read too much into it.
http://eugenicsbeginswithyou.typepad.com/
I interpreted it as "travelling to the afterlife", yes.
Kindof a funny line, if it wasn't a tad ambiguous in American vernacular.
I took it to mean they are going to get chopped up into bits and put in a bag.
shareHere's what I thought it meant.
Since she told Sheldon that she'd give them a ride through the justice system, I thought it meant that they were both going to be riding in the back of a cop car together.
"It's only after you've lost everything that you're free to do anything."
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I'm willing to bet both of their asses got thrown off the top of that building and onto the cold pavement. But, that's my take on it.
I assumed it was a play on various Irish phrases referring to death. For example, somebody who has died is said to have "travelled further on up the road" and people might say about a dead loved one "we'll meet them further on up the road" meeaning they'll reuiniute in heaven.
Another NYC Irish euphemism for death I used to hear from elderly relatives was "He's travelled out West, you know" That's more of a throwback to pre-Christian Irish folklore though with the West being the land of Tir na Nog. Also, the sun sets in the West. I asked my Grandmother why people said that and she said it was a gentler way to say somebody had died.
I think it's clearly implied that Tommy and her crew were planning to send them on a one-way trip to hell.
Hehehe, but you'd know you're wrong if you watched the deleted scenes on the DVD.
shareI think that when gangsters talk about taking someone for "nice long ride", that means they're going to be taken away and killed.
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I thought it meant they were shortly about to go to hell together.
"Joey, have you ever been in a Turkish prison?"
Yeah, to hell.
share