‘Homeland’ 1×05 Blind Spot HD screencaps

HD screen captures from Sunday’s Homeland episode “Blind Spot’ have been added to the gallery.
Gallery Link:
Television > Homeland (2011) > Screencaps > 1×05 Blind Spot


HD screen captures from Sunday’s Homeland episode “Blind Spot’ have been added to the gallery.
Gallery Link:
Television > Homeland (2011) > Screencaps > 1×05 Blind Spot


A round up of recaps and reviews of Homeland episode 5 “Semper I”:
TV.com – Homeland: When in Doubt, Speedmetal Works
IGN – Homeland: “Blind Spot” Review, Carrie loses her s#!t and Brody visits an old friend.
Daemon’s TV – HOMELAND “Blind Spot” Review
AOL TV – ‘Homeland’ Recap, Now With Brody-o-Meter! Episode 5, ‘Blind Spot’ (VIDEO)
TV Fanatic – Homeland Review: The Razor’s Edge
Cinema Blend – Homeland Watch: Season 1, Episode 5 – Blind Spot
WSJ.com – ‘Homeland’ Season 1, Episode 5, ‘Blind Spot’: TV Recap
Washingtonian – WashingTelevision: Homeland Recap, Episode Five, “Blind Spot”
New York Magazine – Homeland Recap: Out of Sight
The A.V. Club – “Blind Spot”, A
HitFix.com – Review: ‘Homeland’ – ‘Blind Spot’: Razor’s edge
The video clip is a bit on the spoilerish side. The scene being filmed is probably from the finale. From News14.com:
The Showtime series Homeland took over the Mecklenburg County Courthouse Sunday. Damian Lewis, the show’s star, filmed a scene at one of the building’s entrances.
Wednesday, it was reported the show got the green light for a second season. Crew members say they expect to continue filming around the Charlotte-area.
This is Showtime’s highest rated first-year drama, drawing 4.5 million viewers in its debut.
Download the clip here.

I never anticipated living in Camden Town. As an 18-year-old, I’d gone to the Crush nights at the Electric Ballroom, so I thought that this part of London was a place for students and people wearing tie-dye T-shirts. But I found a fantastic little house with a roof terrace in a gorgeous, very urban row of workmen’s cottages on Prowse Place, a cobbled mews tucked away between Camden and Kentish Town. I bought No 7 in 2001 and lived there for five years. I had Baz Bamigboye on one corner and Amy Winehouse on another.
The house suffused with glorious morning light on one side and evening sun on the othet. It was close to the railway line; the arches were just down the street. It felt quite Dickensian, and I loved it.
Someone before me cleverly had inverted the house – you walked upstairs to the kitchen and the sitting room, which was open-plan, so it had a Manhattan-loft feel. It had a warm reddish wooden finish, with a fixed ladder through a hole in the roof to the terrace. I used to have friends round for barbecues and parties up there.
The kitchen felt a bit like a ship’s galley, with exposed beams and a burnished orange colour. Downstairs, it had one bedroom and a bathroom. I gave the place a lick of paint, but left it pretty untouched. My biggest purchase was a sofa from Heal’s, but my best was a dark-wood table and chairs for £60 from a local junk shop. I still have them.
I was filming a lot. I was up in Manchester making The Forsyte Saga, which was great, as I was able to get across to watch Liverpool play at weekends. I grew up in north London, so I should really be a Gooner [Arsenal fan], but my dad was more of a rugby man, so I was left to my own devices. I started supporting Liverpool because, in the late 1970s, they were the kings of Europe and had all the glam players.
Filming Dreamcatcher in 2002 was a slightly lonely experience. It took four months to make in Canada, and tanked terribly, so I didn’t get much joy out of that. Then I lived in New York for six months in 2004 when I was making Keane, a film I’m proud of.
I stayed on Christopher Street, in the West Village, in a classic old New York building with an iron fire escape, and lived the life of a single man in a bedsit, which was a lot of fun. Manhattan has an intensity because of its density – it never really closes down, and you can walk everywhere.
Camden, too, has its own particular bustle. Sometimes I would walk home and find litter all over the street where someone had been through the rubbish, and at other times I’d be popping round the corner to Whole Foods. There was also a little club at the beginning of my time there, which Coldplay used to go to.
I was having a sports-car moment when I lived there. I had a a racing-green TVR, which I loved, even though it never started when I wanted it to.
And I rode my bicycle a lot. It was fun to bomb along the Regent’s Canal to see friends in Hackney. I love the canal as a feature of the London landscape. People don’t realise how far you can travel along it.
I have a fabulous tie living there. I’d made Band of Brothers and had a career in America, so I was enjoying the fruits of that. And I met my wife, Helen [McCrory], towards the end of y time there, which is why I moved out. The house was just too small.
Damian Lewis stars in the film Will, which will be released on Friday
Source: The Sunday Times
(Thanks to Kaz!)

The Band Of Brothers Cast Round Table Show has been scheduled for Wednesday, December 7th! Damian Lewis and other Band of Brothers cast members will be taking part in a special 4 hour round table interview live on Black Sky Radio to complete a series of interviews that have been airing live almost every week since June of last year. For a donation to the Richard Winters Leadership Project, you can have your question read to Damian live on air. Visit Ross Owen’s Band of Brothers Cast Interviews for more details and a list of all the actors participating.
Start Times:
9:30 pm GMT
4:30 pm EDT
3:30 pm CDT
2:30 pm MDT
1:30 pm PDT
10.30 pm CET
4:30 am WST Perth AU (Thursday)
5.30 am JST (Thursday)
To listen to Black Sky Radio’s March interview with Damian Lewis and other cast interviews, visit Ross Owen’s Band of Brothers Cast Interviews blog here.