Sean bean dies montage
Trust me, we don’t mind because, hey, Sean Bean. It’s all silly, especially when the accent could have easily been explained by dual citizenship. In a particularly clumsy piece of dialogue, Bean’s accent is explained in an exchange between Martin and Tina Majorino’s Special Agent Maggie Harris with a cutesy exchange about how they’re both military brats, but Harris didn’t live overseas and thus doesn’t have a “cool” accent like Martin. But the show’s dialogue needs work, along with its use of supporting characters. That’s fine, I love undercover spy/police stories, particularly ones that star world-weary cynical main characters. Martin receives several hints about who he really is from a man who is then murdered before he can reveal all, as happens frequently in spy shows.Įditor's Note: There are spoilers for the pilot. The pilot teases the real arc of the show: discovering the lost identity hiding under Martin Odum, who apparently is just one more legend. This leads to personality confusion, as when Martin takes on a particularly unhinged legend as a right-wing extremist to infiltrate a group planning a bombing.īut the bombing is only the crime of the week.
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It stars Bean as Martin Odum, a “legendary” FBI undercover agent who creates legends, aka false identifies, and inhabits them with ease. Legends has a ten-episode run on Wednesdays at 9 p.m. I may not know who I am, mate, but I’m NOT DEAD YET.The way Sean Bean’s craggy face commands the screen in the new television crime show, Legends, which premiered on TNT last week, is the show’s best asset.