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Clark Johnson directed the episode. William Bromell wrote the teleplay, which he based on a detailed outline left by his late father Henry Bromell. [1] Although the story is set in Caracas, the episode was actually shot in Puerto Rico, with an abandoned apartment building in San Juan having stood in for the Tower of David's interiors. [2]
Saul arrives at his destination, the Tower of David in Caracas. He presents El Niño ( Manny Pérez ) with $10 million in cash and is escorted to the cell where Brody ( Damian Lewis ) is being kept. Saul finds Brody in a catatonic state, surrounded by used needles.
Homeland: The Complete Third Season was released as a widescreen region 1 four-disc DVD and three-disc Blu-ray box set in the United States and Canada on September 9, 2014. [50] In addition to the 12 episodes, it includes deleted scenes, audio commentary for "The Star" and two featurettes—"The Tower of David: Filming in Puerto Rico 3" and ...
“Homeland” went out on a high note Sunday with a 66-minute final episode that was full of the elements that defined the series. The episode, entitled “Prisoners of War,” (a nod to the ...
"Tin Man Is Down" is the first episode of the third season of the American television drama series Homeland, and the 25th episode overall. It aired on Showtime on September 29, 2013. Plot
The episode received very positive reviews from critics. Alyssa Rosenberg of The Washington Post said "Homeland just aired its best episode in years" and that the episode "explored the benefits and dreadful potential costs of Carrie’s approach to her job with a clarity that is both terrible and terribly exciting". [1]
The episode received an approval rating of 91% with an average score of 7.3 out of 10 on the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, with the site's consensus stating "'R Is for Romeo' ties together the various narrative arcs of Homeland's sixth season -- and then pulls the rug out with an impressive flurry of violence, explosions, twists, turns, and cliffhanging revelations".
UPDATE: After “Homeland’s” David Harewood told The Guardian that actors should be able to “Black up” for roles, but warned “it’d better be fucking good,” the actor clarified in a ...