The other ghosts crowd around in the drafty hallway. The elevator—installed in 1927 by a previous owner, a reclusive film collector—has always been temperamental. But tonight, the full moon through the warped window of the landing casts a silver line directly onto the BD9 button.
Pat, the ghost of a scoutmaster with an arrow through his neck, squints at it. "We’ve pressed every other floor in this house for decades. Basement, ground, first, second, attic. Never seen that one before."
: The two eventually bond after Sam admits she misses having a mother figure to give her advice. Hetty confesses she felt she was a failure as a mother in life and appreciates the "second chance" to guide Sam.
Since "BD9" usually refers to a specific Blu-ray disc file format (often used in AV releases) rather than an academic paper, the content below is structured as a comprehensive .
Each ghost watches their own BD9. Then, the final reel: a shot of the manor, empty, years from now. Alison is gone. The house is rubble. And the ghosts are nowhere—not in frame, not in voiceover. Just silence.
The episode begins with Mike (Kiell Smith-Bynoe) attempting to fix a leak in the roof. His struggle inadvertently leads to the discovery of a hidden room behind a bookcase. Inside the room, the living couple and the ghosts discover a new spectral resident: a mysterious man dressed in rags.
: The episode also touches on the brewing chemistry between Hetty and Trevor, following their surprising hookup in the previous episode. The "BD9" Connection WhatToWatch Ghosts season 2 episode 12 recap: jealous ghosts
The discovery of the hidden room adds depth to the lore of Button House. It serves as a reminder that the house has been a refuge for the desperate and the deceptive for centuries. Gerald’s self-imposed isolation in the room mirrors the isolation the ghosts feel within the house’s grounds, creating a parallel between the living (hiding from debt) and the dead (hiding from the nothingness of death).
المشاركات 144 |
+التقييم 10 |
تاريخ التسجيل Aug 2018 |
الاقامة مصر |
نظام التشغيل windows 7 |
رقم العضوية 1757 |
The other ghosts crowd around in the drafty hallway. The elevator—installed in 1927 by a previous owner, a reclusive film collector—has always been temperamental. But tonight, the full moon through the warped window of the landing casts a silver line directly onto the BD9 button.
Pat, the ghost of a scoutmaster with an arrow through his neck, squints at it. "We’ve pressed every other floor in this house for decades. Basement, ground, first, second, attic. Never seen that one before."
: The two eventually bond after Sam admits she misses having a mother figure to give her advice. Hetty confesses she felt she was a failure as a mother in life and appreciates the "second chance" to guide Sam.
Since "BD9" usually refers to a specific Blu-ray disc file format (often used in AV releases) rather than an academic paper, the content below is structured as a comprehensive .
Each ghost watches their own BD9. Then, the final reel: a shot of the manor, empty, years from now. Alison is gone. The house is rubble. And the ghosts are nowhere—not in frame, not in voiceover. Just silence.
The episode begins with Mike (Kiell Smith-Bynoe) attempting to fix a leak in the roof. His struggle inadvertently leads to the discovery of a hidden room behind a bookcase. Inside the room, the living couple and the ghosts discover a new spectral resident: a mysterious man dressed in rags.
: The episode also touches on the brewing chemistry between Hetty and Trevor, following their surprising hookup in the previous episode. The "BD9" Connection WhatToWatch Ghosts season 2 episode 12 recap: jealous ghosts
The discovery of the hidden room adds depth to the lore of Button House. It serves as a reminder that the house has been a refuge for the desperate and the deceptive for centuries. Gerald’s self-imposed isolation in the room mirrors the isolation the ghosts feel within the house’s grounds, creating a parallel between the living (hiding from debt) and the dead (hiding from the nothingness of death).