If you haven’t read Diana Gabaldon’s Dragonfly in Amber from the Outlander series—the book that inspired the Starz drama’s second season—then you were in for plenty of surprises during Saturday’s season-two finale, also titled “Dragonfly in Amber.”
Here is a new interview with Maril Davis from ET Online
From ET Online:
“Lord, ye gave me a rare woman — and, God! I loved her well.”
Be honest: who else is hysterically sobbing right now after watching Outlander’s heartbreakingly wonderful season two finale? We experienced 90 minutes of timeline shocks and surprises, but watching Claire (Caitriona Balfe) and Jamie (Sam Heughan) parting ways at Craigh na Dun was, by far, the episode’s most impactful moment.
The 13th episode of Outlander, “Dragonfly in Amber,” marked the second season finale the Starz series. (Tear!) We asked Executive Producer Ronald D. Moore to look back at the challenges of adapting Diana Gabaldon’s second book, Dragonfly in Amber, to the small screen — and what we can expect in season 3.
Here is a new interview with Ron D. Moore from The Wall Street Journal
From The Wall Street Journal:
For most of the second season of “Outlander,” the narrative followed a relatively linear trajectory: 18th-century power couple Claire (Caitriona Balfe) and Jamie Fraser (Sam Heughan) fought against tremendous odds – ineffectual royals, vengeful French aristocrats – to change the future and thwart the Scottish-culture-destroying Battle of Culloden. However, from the moment tonight’s finale, titled “Dragonfly in Amber” after the novel upon which season 2 was based, opened on a black-and-white clip from the British TV show “The Avengers,” we knew that we were no longer in the 1700s, and that something truly drastic had gone down between the impassioned lovers.
Spoiler warning: Do not read on unless you’ve seen the “Outlander” Season 2 finale, Episode 13, titled “Dragonfly in Amber.” Refresh your memory of where we left off with our previous “Outlander” recap.
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