![]() ![]() The man follows Leo for a time and then points a gun at him. In the closing moments of the episode Leo, whose Parkinson's disease has gotten worse, is seen walking with a cane through a park when he is followed by a man in a colorful T-shirt. What fans of the show may be wondering is what exactly happens to Leo at the end of "Pink," the episode that reveals where the characters end up six months after the heist. Charlie Cox talks spy drama "Treason" and creating a morally gray hero.Is 'Emily in Paris' Season 4 happening? What we know so far.'Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery': Every major character to watch out for.I hope they are super entertained and really enjoy it, and get something out of it." ![]() Garcia explained that while he was looking forward to seeing how viewers react to the hidden details and Easter Eggs in the show "the goal is people just have fun" and he said "some people are just gonna sit and just want to watch a heist show and that's great. "It's pretty silly but it's all part of the fun of the game, it means we're doing a show that in a way is half super fun heist show and then there's the people such as myself who want to get into it and figure it out, and find out the little details, and are really super nerdy with it which is my favorite thing." He went on: "There's little things, I mean there are things that are ridiculous like you have to freeze frame and there's a hexadecimal code in the show somewhere where if you freeze frame on it, stuff like that. "Most of the things that are named are usually references, have references to either themselves or to something else in the show." Garcia explained that the show has a lot of subtle Easter Eggs, ones that viewers may not necessarily focus on to begin with: "There's a lot of names, like in 'Yellow' look at the names of the stores they're breaking into, look at the name of Leo's boat. It's crazy how good that movie still is, and 'White' (the show's finale) is sort of a giant nod to Rififi, and they each have their own things that they do." "To me, the grandfather of all heist films is Rififi, which I think holds up so well 60-something years later. "Each episode, I would say, has its own homage connection," the creator explained. Garcia is a huge fan of heist films, he said, and so each episode of Kaleidoscope pays homage to classics of the genre including his favorite, 1955 French film Rififi. In this composite image is Giancarlo Esposito and Tati Gabrielle as Leo Pap and Hannah Kim in "Kaleidoscope." Show creator Eric Garcia spoke to Newsweek about Leo's fate in episode "Pink" and his thoughts on there being a second season. ![]()
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