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SYFY Announces “Todd McFarlane: Like Hell I Won’t” Documentary

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Todd McFarlane: Like Hell I Won't
NEW YORK COMIC CON -- "SYFY Wire Photo Wall" -- Pictured: (l-r) -- (Photo by: Ricardo Beas/SYFY)

The legendary career of Todd MacFarlane will be the focus of the first original documentary from SYFY Wire.

Making its world premiere on Saturday, July 25 from 11 PM- Midnight as part of SYFY’s Fan Fest, Todd McFarlane: Like Hell I Won’t will spotlight McFarlane’s career as a record-breaking artist to his adult collectible empire. The documentary will provide viewers with an in-depth view behind the creative mastermind of Spawn and some of Marvel Comic’s most well-known artwork — and illustrate McFarlane’s struggles to navigate and upend the status quo in the comic and toy industries. The documentary will be made available on SYFY’s YouTube page, SYFY.com, set-top-box on demand and NBCU’s OneApp.

Like Hell I Won’t and McFarlane will also be the center of a special panel at Comic-Con@Home — SYFY Presents: The Untold Tales of Todd McFarlane. The panel will also feature comic industry greats, Marc Silvestri and J. Scott Campbell.  The panel will be held on Thursday, July 23 at 5PM ET / 2PM PT on Comic-Con’s YouTube channel. The panel will also be available across SYFY’s platforms later that evening for on-demand viewing.

Todd McFarlane: Like Hell I Won't

In conjunction with the documentary premiere, SYFY has partnered with GoFundMe to host a charitable sweepstakes from July 20 to August 17, where fans can win limited edition merchandise exclusively autographed by McFarlane. Fans can enter by visiting https://charity.gofundme.com/syfytoddmcfarlane and either making a charitable donation, or submitting a sweepstakes entry form. Donation proceeds will benefit the Book Industry Charitable Foundation (BINC). BINC is an organization that aids bookstores, comic bookstores and their employees who have a demonstrated financial need arising from severe hardship and/or emergency circumstances.

Todd McFarlane: Like Hell I Won’t is produced by SYFY WIRE through the network’s partnership with online content creation studio Tongal.

Stargirl Episode 9 and 10 Review: “Brainwave” & “Brainwave Jr.”

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The JSA in Stargirl
Credit: DC Universe

In Stargirl’s “Brainwave” and “Brainwave Jr.” we learn a lot about the meaning of family… Full Review.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_tG3HHUltks

If I were to sum up Stargirl as a series, I would describe it as a campy teen melodrama about a family of superheroes and villains. A classic tale of good versus evil, Stargirl is surprisingly, about families. People living in Blue Valley who had lost loved ones on both sides of the JSA vs. ISA war.

I missed last week’s review due to my own personal familial responsibilities. Thankfully, I got back in time to review these very family-centric episodes, about the supervillain Brainwave and his son Henry (aka brainwave Junior). And just like the legacy passed down from Dr. Ito to Shiv and their twisted daughter/daddy relationship, this episode focuses on much of the same concept: the legacy — and gifts — bequeathed from Brainwave senior to junior.

And like a small hangover, this arc is rather exhaustive, naughty, indulgent, and brought along by its own sense of daddy issues. Which is to say: it’s pretty entertaining.

 

Brainwave and Brainwave Jr.

Episode 9 “Brainwave”

This episode saw Courtney seeks out to try and recruit Henry, even though he’s somewhat of a bully and much-hated antagonist of the new members in the Justice Society. He’s slut-shamed Yolanda (who confronts him about it later in a half-hearted attempt at contextualizing her story arc), dated Cindy/Shiv, and is himself, the son of a supervillain, all red flags as to why this is a bad idea.

Still, the episode follows Henry’s story as he gets to know the deep secrets and abilities of his father, Brainwave. This episode sees Henry fast-track his training, as he watches hundreds of tapes of his father and how he learned how to utilize his powers and cope with his abilities over the years (an odd convenience to have that many tapes recorded and lying around?). He also learns, much like his father before him, that humanity is awful. As the Brainwaves are tormented with their telepathy. Reading the vile thoughts that litter everyone’s minds. Deducing that at their core, all people are monsters.

Meanwhile, Pat shares more bits of history including his and Starman’s time with the Seven Soldiers, a superhero group they were a part of before the JSA (and a likely plot-point later. We’re looking at you Mr. Janitor) At this point, it’s obvious that Pat’s history reveals are more plot conveniences than any real sort of build-up, though Pat does struggle in this episode in wanting to share his secrets with Barbara, much to Courtney’s dissuasion. Ironically, the issue becomes forced upon them, as we get a ‘Guess who’s coming to diner’ plot (like in Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man) where icicle arrives for dinner with his family.

Also, they may be Norwegian Ice Trolls…

It’s a reveal which would be surprising, except for the fact that Stargirl does this all the time, and at this point, we’ve sort of accepted all forms of superhero conventions, ridiculous coincidence, and supernatural abilities.

And while we’re at unsurprising conventions, I’ll also throw it out that we finally learn the ISA’s big plot… which is the same plot almost every villain has in every story ever: world domination. I won’t go over the full method, but I will say: it’s pretty stupid. No, to be honest, it is really stupid. But I don’t think the audience cares why the villains are plotting this, so long as the characters have payoffs and motivations. A solid episode for its tension though lacking in terms of originality.

 

Yolanda confronts Henry and Courtney

Episode 10 “Brainwave Jr.”

So this episode was so good that it makes me give Stargirl a full endorsement. To begin with, we finally get to see Pat and Barbara interact in extended scenes together and finally build-on a relationship that we’ve thus far have been ‘told’ is one but haven’t fully ‘seen’.

Well, that changes over a banana split here and it’s cute. I personally loved it and am glad we finally see Pat and Barbara not just together, but working together. It sells them as a couple really well in this episode, especially, towards the backend where we see both he and Barbara grow as characters.

Meanwhile, we get more Henry Jr. as he becomes a better psychic especially now that his father is awake. We learn some motivations and some tragedy, especially regarding his mother and the blood ties of his family to another superhero, which coincidentally, ties into the larger story again (I say again because this happens A LOT in this series. Everyone is related. Everyone wants to avenge or prove to each other’s parents).

As a result of all these avenging the family type of quests (seriously, with the exception of Beth, it’s oddly almost everyone in the series), we finally see the JSA take on the ISA and proactively hunt down and stop them in person, with stellar action scenes where we see everyone do a little bit of everything in terms of both fighting and sleuthing.

However, things did not go the direction I expected. Minus the spoilers, this episode had what was easily the most shocking conclusion in the series to date. It’s something Stargirl does incredibly well: gives us the tropes and campiness and setups so we think we know what’ll happen, then blindsides us with some crazy arcing narrative twists.

Suffice to say, this was my favorite episode of the series.

 

The JSA members in Stargirl debate

Final Thoughts

This show hits its stride when it can assemble the team in an organic way that gets everyone going. What I loved about these two together, was how it built up to that conclusion which hit super hard. I did not see that coming, nor do I think the audience will either.

In particular, the Brainwave family is pretty messed up. I’d always liked them as distant villains, though I always thought they’d be a throwaway arc. Maybe a minor role to be brought back towards the backend of this season (Which seems to be Hourman’s role now). I was wrong. Not just about them but about everything. This episode was superb, a stellar message of hope, redemption, and the nature of evil.

I think the Brainwave episodes let me honestly endorse this series without shame. Whereas before this was a guilty pleasure watch for me, and at best: campy fun, now I’ll honestly say: Stargirl is a pretty interesting show worth the watch.

Though I’m sad it’s exclusively moving to CW.

‘Doom Patrol’ Season 2 Episode 6 Review: “Space Patrol”

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Matt Boom (voice)/Matthew Zuk (On-Set Performer) as Larry Trainor, who is faced with three astronauts from the past.
2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

“Space Patrol” The final frontier . . . Patrol. A new episode of Doom Patrol means things are only ramping up from here. Prepare for launch.

Previously on Doom Patrol 

Season 2

Episodes 1, 2, and 3 – Fun Size Patrol, Tyme Patrol, and Pain Patrol

Episode 4 – Sex Patrol

Episode 5 – Finger Patrol

S2E6 Review (Spoiler-Free)

Play time between Baby Doll (Diane Guerrero) and Dorothy (Abigail Shapiro) has ended, and Dorothy is stricken with grief. Her next move is to run away, in order to protect everyone. This sets Niles (Timothy Dalton) and Cliff (Brendan Fraser/Riley Shanahan) on a mission to go find the most dangerous girl in the world. 

Meanwhile, a spaceship lands on the earth containing Niles’ old research team of ageless astronauts, and Larry (Matt Bomer) is forced to play host. 

Back in the Underground, Jane and her fellow personalities are forced to deal with the losses of Baby Doll and Flaming Katy, leading to organizing a funeral in The Underground. 

Returning to the non-Jane head world, Vic (Joivan Wade) tries to help Roni (Karen Obilom) and discovers a connection between her and S.T.A.R. Labs, while Rita’s (April Bowlby) first rehearsal hits too close to home.

Where did Dorothy go?

Will Niles and Cliff find her?

How will Jane recover from all of this?

Is Larry a good host to their new visitors?

All these and more answered!

 

Left to Right: Diane Guerrero as Jane and Stephanie Czajkowski
2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

The Cast

The Doom Patrol continues to up the ante every week, by delivering knock-out performances consistently. 

You should be able to predict this section by now, but Abigail Sharpio is killing it. Shapiro, just by herself, can be used as analysis for any acting class. She is commanding, captivating, and masterful. Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant. She nails making Dorothy so lovable and innocent that I would move the world and do the horrible things Niles did to protect her. Well, not everything. I’ll talk more about Niles in the reflection, but I will say this: Timothy Dalton is putting in the work. 

Diane Guerrero is another constant juggernaut. This show doesn’t get enough credit; it houses two actors putting in the work of their careers. This episode delves deeply into the Underground, and Guerrero is accessing her emotions and technique, just like Jane calls upon her personalities. 

Brendan Fraser puts in a very solid performance as Cliff and reaches deep to fulfill the role his character’s been built for. Matt Bomer continues to construct Larry from the ground up, and I look forward to seeing him on a weekly basis. 

 

Abigail Shapiro as Dorothy Spinner in an astronaut suit.
2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

The Vision

This episode is in the same vein as the classic Doom Patrol entry I always talk about, except where this differs is there is barely any comedy. Thanks to scribe Neil Reynolds , we get the first episode of the season with only one writer, and this one is heavy. Nearly every storyline is wrapped into a narrative with serious implications or deep, introspective analysis. I needed a drink after this one, to be honest.

The one thing this show has constantly done through its run is heavily invest in Larry Trainor’s story, and it continues to get better and better. Give me all the Trainor.

Aesthetically, “Space Patrol” is so much fun. The introduction of the astronauts brings space travel to this world, which is a lot of fun to see. Doom Patrol does a great job blending the modern world with the colorful feel of the past. 

 

The three Astronauts. Left to Right: Moscow, Zipp, and Specs.
2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

Takeaway

Dude. This episode is so good, and its ending hits hard. Now firmly in the second half of the season, it’s time to jump on the Doom Patrol bus and take this journey.

 

Diane Guerrero as Jane looking into the distance.
2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

Reflection (SPOILERS)

I’m keeping it short this week because, out of all the things that happened, the ending is all I can think about.

Holy shit, holy shit, holy shit, holy shit, holy shit.

Noooo, poor Cliff. He really didn’t deserve that. He was finally coming to his own and finding a purpose. This is the first episode in a long time that we heard a sentence from Brendan Fraser that wasn’t a curse every other word. His time with Dorothy was sincere, and he truly showcased the lessons from his parenthood. The scene on the Moon was simple yet so effective.

Niles has gone too far. All the remorse he expressed during the beginning of the season has seemed to go out the air lock with Cliff. It puts everything in perspective. He gave up his immortality not to save the Doom Patrol but to save himself and Dorothy. He only ever makes a decision or helps a Patrol member nowadays if he can see a means to the end to help Dorothy. He forces Cliff to come with him because he knows Cliff can survive in space. Maybe that’s why he didn’t feel remorse about shooting him into space.

No one knows except for Niles, and he is an asshole. His intention or reasoning could be debated to an extent, but there is one thing I know for sure: he has become the villain of Season 2.

 

‘Dear White People’ Season 1: Review and Recap

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Dear White People cast
The cast of Dear White People c/o netflix.com

Dear White People was created three years ago, but it has never stopped being relevant and you might want to check it out. Here’s a rundown of each episode. Stick around at the end for my overall season review.

Sam White from Dear White People Season One

Sam White considering her actions. Credit: IMDB.

Chapter 1:

The series starts off simply enough with an introduction to Winchester University (I miss you Supernatural!). It’s an Ivy League college with a majority white student body, a prestigious humor publication, and well, after Halloween, a bit of a PR crisis.

See, the members of that prestigious humor publication – Pastiche – decided it would be a good idea to throw a “Dear Black People” blackface party. Why? Because social justice warrior Samantha White (Logan Browning), got tired of dealing with minor racist microaggressions and started a radio program which gives us the series’ title: “Dear White People”.

Sam, the biracial leader of the Black Student Union (BSU) with a skeleton in her closet, is the focal character for this episode. While she comes off as your typical borderline militant black power character. Her secret shame is soon exposed: she’s banging a white guy!

This leads to an uncomfortable confrontation with the other members of the Black Student Caucus (who she insulted just prior to the revelation). The harshest critic being her best friend Joelle Brooks (Ashley Blaine Featherson). Luckily, Joelle values her friend’s happiness and they are OK.

Later though, in an attempt to merge her two worlds, Sam’s “white bae” Gabe Mitchell (John Patrick Amedori), gets into an argument with Reggie Green (Marque Richardson), another member of the BSU and a friend of Sam’s, after trying to engage with him on the subject of a student protest following the blackface party. On top of this Sam learns from Lionel Higgins (DeRon Horton), reporter for the Winchester Independent student newspaper, that him and his editor know Sam sent the invite to the blackface party (after hacking Pastiche’s Facebook account).

All good pilot episodes are designed to do two things: introduce us to the major players of the series and give us a good idea of what the show is about.

“Chapter 1” does a pretty good job of doing both. It lays the foundation down for what the first major storyline will be in the series, creates a moment wherein all – if not most – of the major characters appear (the Black Caucus), and sets the overall tone of the show (satire).

Sam’s speech at the end of the episode sums up the theme of the show. While many people might balk at a title like “Dear White People” and cry racism, the truth is the show’s purpose is to inform. Sam’s tone might be harsh, but her message isn’t. Her message is simple: listen to us, don’t presume to know us, and don’t pat yourselves on the back for a job well done when there’s a fuckton more work to do.

Lionel and Silvio
Lionel and his editor Silvio

Chapter 2:

This episode starts off recounting the history of racially insensitive parties at Ivy League institutions, then shifts focus to Lionel Higgins. Lionel is a blerd – a black nerd – who was the whistle blower of the “Dear Black People” party. His roommate is Troy Fairbanks (Brandon P Bell), son of the Dean and all-around man about campus.

Lionel’s problems are his hair and his sex drive. The latter gets assistance from his very out newspaper editor Silvio (D.J. Blickenstaff). After going to a party on Silvio’s advice, Lionel is ready to face his truth.

Back at the office with Silvio, after discovering it was Sam who sent out the Pastiche party invite, Lionel betrays his editor to warn Sam that the story will be printed. This leads to her confession on air at the end of the previous episode.

His editor is pissed, but Lionel takes the Shaggy Defense (“it wasn’t me”). He can’t be bothered with the consequences of his actions because his first problem has a solution: Troy is cutting his hair. It’s a big moment for him, and he takes full advantage by coming out to Troy.

This episode gives us insight into how the series plans to play itself out. There is a singular event – the blackface party – that is observed or influenced by different characters. Each character will then get his or her own “character-study” episode that explores not only their Rashomon perspective of the event, but them as individuals.

I liked getting to know Lionel better (could have done without the masturbation scenes), even if the troupe of new-hair = new-me gets used.

Troy Fairbanks
Troy Fairbanks looking presidential
image c/o spotern.com

Chapter 3:

Meet Troy Fairbanks, he’s running for office. If he wins, he’ll be the first black student president (Obama stand-in? See the nickname Troy-bama). It sounds great but there’s a hint he doesn’t want it. Afterall, when given the chance he doesn’t vote for himself. Though that self-doubt could be due to his overbearing tiger-dad.

Daddy Dearest (Obba Babatundé) is a perfection obsessed dictator who rules over Troy’s life to the point of breaking up a relationship he deems inappropriate (bye Samantha), and selecting the college he will attend (bye Southwest). This oppressive regime easily explains Troy’s rebellious drug usage (secret weed smoking), and inappropriate affair (with the lovely Nia Long playing Prof. Neika Hobbs).

Troy’s episode is good for two reasons. One, we get a sense of how human even pillars are. Two, we get some more information from our Rashomon set up.

I would like to take a moment to point out how a comment from the previous episode applies here. In Silvio’s criticism of Lionel’s blackface party piece, he notes the depiction of Pastiche is too simplistic – “it just reads as Pastiche bad, black kids good”, further espousing how Pastiche’s staff isn’t a frat, they are smart people.

Their actions, however seemingly racist on the surface, could have deeper meanings if explored. This links back to the black lawn jockey cover because Pastiche head Kurt Fletcher (Wyatt Nash) defends it claiming the ornaments were signals of safe houses during the Underground Railroad. Troy calls bullshit, and Kurt cites Wikipedia (please note Wikipedia is NOT a reputable cite for sourcing). Now, whether this is true (which some internet digging leans towards maybe???), you do get to see the Pastiche writers are not outright racist. Lazy? Fuck yes. Racist? I would argue not intentionally, which I think is part of the message of this series. Conversation is important, and Sam and the Pastiche writers are two sides of the same coin in that respect – they are both trying to spark conversation by using extreme confrontation.

Oh, yes, and the last thing to note about this episode: Thane Lockwood (Brant Daugherty) dies on the very day Troy is elected president.

Coco confronts Sam
Colandrea Conners confronts Sam
image c/o vulture.com

Chapter 4:

This chapter begins with the eulogy of Thane Lockwood – a jock who dies jumping to his death after a night of binge drinking.

This is one of my favorite episodes because it features arguably the most complex and layered character of the whole series: Thane Lockwood….ha ha ha ha, joking! It’s Colandrea “Coco” Conners (Antoinette Robertson), duh.

Coco’s episode begins with her at the blackface party, invited there by her white friends. She catches sight of Sam holding a camera and unloads her pent-up rage, pointing out that there’s a lot more to racism than an ill-themed Halloween party. And, Coco would know.

See, Coco has been getting shit her whole life for being dark skinned – a famous experiment with little girls and dolls is eluded to here and it’s just as heartbreaking to see in fiction as I imagine it was to witness in reality – as a defense Coco has learned the art of being “white”. She works hard to fit into white culture, because as a dark-skinned black woman she is considered less pretty than her peers.

This is a fascinating exploration of racism that occurs within the black community – it was also a subject explored in Black*ish (starring one Tracee Ellis Ross who Sam is compared to by Joelle).

But the best scenes are the flashbacks to Sam and Coco’s former friendship. The two meet when Coco is trying desperately to avoid being placed in Armstrong-Parker, the historically black housing (going so far as to redact AP from the housing options), Sam, conversely, is excited to be placed in AP.

Over the course of the episode we see Sam and Coco’s bond both strengthen and fray. They can relate over how their skin color has led to certain hardships. Sam being frequently thought of as “not down” because, as Coco puts it “Dear half-white person, you’re just not black enough”, while Coco gets the backhanded compliment of “you kinda pretty for a dark-skinned girl”. The wrench in their relationship is how they choose to overcome these issues.

Coco has learned to play the game. She endures what she must to get what she wants, but she aspires to power for similar reasons as Sam. Sam doesn’t want to be confused for white in any instance as exemplified when the “white” black girl sorority comes a knocking and she wants no part of it, while Coco jumps at the opportunity. It’s akin to a love triangle with acceptance by white culture as the keystone – always chasing after Sam because she’s the right color, meanwhile being chased by Coco who it can never picture itself with (yet secretly has a thing for).

This episode gives us the origin of “Dear White People” – a game played by the two in response to the racial microaggressions they experience on campus. The end of their relationship finds the pair using this game as a weapon with Coco coming out as the clear winner. But time heals all wounds and there is a tiny silver lining to be had – Sam offers an olive branch. Will Coco accept?

One more interesting note is how different Sam’s comments on interracial dating are here. When asked about her preference Sam’s answer is much more nuanced than it appears to be later. See, in the pilot we learn that Sam wrote a paper advising black girls not to date white guys. It’s a purely political stance that suggests any black girl who dates a white guy is a traitor to the race. Freshman-year-Sam gives a more rational reply. She states that there are aspects of her experience that a white guy just couldn’t get. It’s also worth mentioning that at this point in her history, Sam is not the black power firebrand we see in the pilot. She clearly adopts this persona as a defense mechanism for the racism she experiences as a “half-breed” or “zebra” – in other words: biracial.

This is an episode with so much food for thought! The conversations about black hair, the way different black people choose to react to racism, the tragedy of Sam and Coco’s friendship (just to name a few)! Yes, traction alopecia is a real thing – look it up and give your hair a break. It’s amazing.

Reggie Green parties down
Reggie Green parties down
image c/o imdb.com

Chapter 5:

Reggie Green is a smart revolutionary who has had similar experiences to Sam during his time at Winchester, which is why he’s so happy when he hears her rebelling in class.

We cut to the present where he’s hanging with Al (Jemar Michael), Joelle, and Sam until Sam gets a text from Gabe and is off. From that point on Reggie’s day is soured, though his friends do try to cheer him up with free food (care of three different campus events), and eventually settle on a party for the win.

Unfortunately, things go horribly awry when Addison (Nolan Gerard Funk), host of the party and a friend of Reggie’s, begins to sing along to a song featuring the N-word without self-censorship (an issue also explored in an episode of the Black*ish spin-off Grown*ish). This results in an argument that quickly pulls everyone else at the party in. Tensions rise and someone calls the cops. Reggie is pushed into Addison, which could escalate, but then everything goes sideways.

A campus officer breaks into the tussle, separating Addison and Reggie only to single out Reggie by demanding to see his student ID to prove he belongs there. Addison tries to intervene, but it fails, and Reggie – rightfully insulted – refuses to capitulate. The cop then pulls a gun demanding to see Reggie’s ID. EVERYONE is horrified.

Shaken, Reggie manages to get his ID without being shot and the cop holsters his weapon before shutting the party down and leaving.

This episode ends with him in his dorm room, crying on the floor as he processes what’s happened. Sam, on the other side of the door, tries to help by demanding they do something in response.

This chapter has a few other things to consider, besides the obvious. There’s Reggie’s feelings for Sam and how her relationship to Gabe is a sore spot not only for him but for black people in general. Then there’s introduction of Rashid Bakr (Jeremy Tardy), and Ikumi (Ally Maki).

The debate about whether a black woman choosing to date a white man is detrimental to the cause will never be settled. It’s interesting to note that in many of the instances where I have seen this question played out, black women choose to date white men, while white women are accused of stealing black men away. It’s never been presented conversely, with white guys stealing black girls, and black guys choosing to date white girls (at least from the perspective of outside parties). Because Sam is a black woman, the issue of why a black man would date a white woman (a relationship we never see in this season) isn’t brought up, but the reason for that circumstance is – jokingly being willing to engage in anal sex is the culprit.

Rashid points out that all his friends do is complain; he wants to know what they like. Funnily enough I believe most, if not all of their replies, revolve around food. It’s a cute moment, but it does present an important question: if you complain about everything around you when do you find time to enjoy anything? Being from Kenya, it is absolutely possible he’s experienced very real hardships in his life – not just the first world problems many of his friends have – and it could explain why he’s so eager to soak up the positive instead of dwelling on the negative. That’s not to say the larger issues of the world don’t matter or shouldn’t be discussed, but maybe don’t forget all the good things around you too.

Ikumi, the self-proclaimed “Asian friend”, seems to represent the idea that other minority groups are marginalized as well – using the example of movies. It is worth noting that exactly what kind of Asian Ikumi is, is never addressed, and throughout the rest of the season she is merely a background player. There are also no additional Asians throughout the series – there’s one scene when Troy is campaigning, but that’s it. Is this a commentary on the idea of the token black friend? I guess it could be, since the usual stand-in (the token white friend) is serving a significantly (pun intended) greater purpose than just filling out a roster spot. It is also worth noting that, as far as I can tell, there are no obvious Hispanic or Latinx representations – Silvio comes close being part Mexican – especially in the core group of friends itself.

Sam takes to the air
Sam takes to the air after Reggie’s tragedy
image: IMDB.

Chapter 6:

Juxtaposed with Reggie’s horrifying run-in with the campus police are images of the ideal Ivy League University, complete with a narration about what college should be like, the experience it should offer its students.

We don’t get a new perspective this episode, instead the cycle jumps back to Sam. She starts off outside of Reggie’s dorm room where we left her last chapter.

Sam spends most of the episode crusading on Reggie’s behalf. Confused at finding herself drawn to her friend in a way she hadn’t been before. She wants justice but the only way she knows how is to make noise and rally others her cause, and she can’t understand why Reggie isn’t in step with her.

Perhaps his reaction differs because this terrible act happened to him. He didn’t watch it on TV, or the internet, no, he was front and center for the whole thing, and that leaves an impact. It’s a shame that this episode treats Reggie’s emotional fallout as a C plot, especially since the A plot centers on Sam and Gabe’s relationship.

Our favorite firebrand has been putting off meeting her boyfriend’s people. The only bright side to this encounter is Gabe’s friend Vanessa (Francia Raisa playing a very opposite version of her character from Grown*ish). She offers some sage insight into Reggie’s mental state calling him a public victim – a psychology term meaning his pain is politized before he can process it. Sam appears to understand this, until she doesn’t. When she eventually reconnects with Reggie, learning he wrote a poem about his feelings, she wants to co-opt it for their protest.

Any resentment is buried when Sam’s conflicted feelings result in her spending the night with Reggie – a cliffhanger moment played out brilliantly in the next chapter. But why does she do it?

I speculate that Sam has confused her feelings of fear with those of desire. In fact, it’s a common TV trope that once two will-they-or-won’t-they individuals survive a near-death experience their unwillingness to complicate the situation with sex goes out the window. Sleeping with Reggie reaffirms he is alive to Sam, it comforts her subconsciously. Unfortunately, it also complicates their relationship because Reggie finally has what he wants.

The B plot of this chapter is everyone else’s reactions to Reggie’s trauma. There are some solid moments including a conversation Sam has with the Dean that portends to a later near-repeat of Reggie’s experience, a moment when Coco stands up and reminds her peers that fighting the power has real consequences (“Who cares if you’re woke or not if you’re dead!”), and a brief interaction where Kurt extends an olive branch (in the worst way possible) to Sam in hopes of collaborating with her.

Gabe Mitchell
Gabe Mitchell looking worried
image c/o spotern.com

Chapter 7:

Weirdly, this episode does not continue the circle back, instead we shift our attention to Gabe.

He gets the same background treatment as every other character study we’ve had so far, with the exception being that he must avoid being an oppressor versus showing us examples of him being oppressed. Frankly, it’s a necessary level of consideration but a bit of a fail.

Gabe’s existence in this universe amounts to nothing more than Sam’s white boyfriend. All the events that happen in this chapter serve the love triangles between Gabe, Reggie, and Sam, and Joelle, Reggie, and Sam.

It’s nice to see Gabe interact with another member of the black students besides Sam, even if it’s because he’s forced to, and all they talk about is his relationship with Sam. Joelle is a fantastic character and I really, really wish there was more of her. Spoiler – she doesn’t get a character study episode this season, and that simply shouldn’t be!

With respect to the second big incident of the season (the party gone bad) we learn that it was Gabe who called the cops. Joelle, who just finished saying how happy Sam is with him, immediately advises him not to tell her about this truth.

The advice seems to be working, and their relationship evolves, until the next morning rolls around and Sam listens to the 9-1-1 recording outing Gabe as the caller. They fight and though Gabe goes to AP house to continue to fight for Sam he sees Reggie put an arm around her and knows his worst fears are confirmed.

The best part of this chapter are the mini-film homages that represent Gabe’s worst case scenarios of Sam and Reggie’s affair. We are told the reason Gabe and Sam got together is because they bonded over their love of films and given how his imagination chooses to play out these hypotheticals, I’m certainly convinced he is a film buff.

Where are Sam’s fun fantastical hypotheticals? Is it on purpose that the only time we see any sort of surrealistic take on reality is during the white guy’s episode? I’m not sure what that says, if anything, but I want more of this. I want to see how other characters would paint the world if they let their imaginations run wild. Hell, Troy’s the one smoking pot, where’s his trip down the rabbit hole??? Maybe next season…fingers crossed!

Troy, Lionel, and Coco
Troy, Lionel, and Coco
image c/o imdb.com

Chapter 8:

Hello, repeat perspective number two. Lionel’s second time in the spotlight focuses in part on his perspective of the party gone bad (he also wanted to call the cops), but then veers off into his unrequited crush on Troy.

He pitches a feature on his roommate to Silvio but is tasked to write about the Griffin Day Parade instead. Taking a page from the classic rebel cop book he defies his boss’s orders and brings the idea up to Troy directly as the two play videogames; Troy is down for it.

The day of the parade, Lionel finds Brook (the writer Silvio assigned to the Troy story) on-site talking to Mr. President. He’s pissed and whisks his roommate/crush away for a day of conversation and off-campus bonding. They wind up at a bar where some truths about Troy are exposed, both sad and surprising. There’s also a truth Lionel needs to face – Troy is straight!

Unrequited love is always a tragedy to watch in motion but with the added difference in sexual orientation, denial has a whole lot more work to do. This series has at least three instances of one-sided affection but while one of those might see some progress, another had some progress, the last is unlikely to grow legs – for obvious reasons.

Troy’s character suffers a little here and not just due to his indifference towards cheating on Coco. I would argue that not only does Troy know Lionel has a crush on him, but he takes advantage of this knowledge. I say this because the class president isn’t stupid, he might be controlled by his father, and not the most academically accomplished, but he knows people. There’s no way he doesn’t pick up on his roommate’s feelings. Especially since it’s impossible to miss Lionel’s lean-in for a kiss right before Troy sticks the sample cup in his face.

The character of Brook is another sidelined minority we never get to see again – the hardworking, underappreciated, female co-worker in a male dominated industry. Though she is routinely made fun of, she still delivers every time, mostly because she can never take her eyes off the prize, unlike say Lionel, who arrives on the site of his assignment late.

Coco looking natural
Coco embracing her natural hair
image c/o recapguide.com

Chapter 9:

Coco occupies the penultimate episode of the season, and this time we focus on her flawed life philosophy. She goes by the quote “Behind every great man is a great woman.” Making it her personal goal to be that great woman. An interesting take on what is generally seen as a pro-feminist sentiment. Here it becomes a sinister trap for any poor girl who reads into it too literally.

Though her opportunity to reach these desired heights is facilitated by an old white man, Coco doesn’t waste the gift. Her initial attempts to garner a white boyfriend prove fruitless but when a second chance to lock down Troy comes along, she pounces.

Theirs isn’t a perfect relationship but it has some perks, like getting to meet the Handcocks – one of Winchester’s biggest donor families. Troy thinks his father is trying to get close to him, but Coco knows better. Unlike her paramour, Colandrea isn’t playing the part of put-together black person – she speaks WASP fluently, is highly ambitious, and pays close attention when people of power are talking. But because she is a woman, she’s been made to believe her worth will only be appreciated in service of a man.

The ending of this chapter finds Coco transformed in multiple ways. For one thing she sheds her wig and embraces a more natural hairstyle, for another she confronts Troy about his infidelity only to have him counter with her misunderstanding of their relationship status. While he makes a good point about her shallow motives for being with him, this revelation doesn’t get her down for long, instead Coco comes to terms with the fact that her current life goal model isn’t working for her anymore. She’s more than the man she’s dating and she’s going to make sure everyone else see it.

Sam and Gabe
A missed connection between Sam and Gabe
image c/o imdb.com

Chapter 10:

The final episode circles back to the beginning with Sam as our focus point. Fun fact: the telephone scene between Sam, Gabe, Reggie, and Lionel features all six of our focal point characters!

There’s not a lot to this episode in terms of action until the end. Sam and Gabe have relationship issues – which come to a head at the end. Lionel and Sam talk about her plans to protest the townhall – which gives Lionel information he’ll use later towards the end. Troy and Coco’s tensions build to a climax – resulting in trouble for each of them by the end. Even Kurt shows up to spread his usual brand of anarchy at the rally.

The fallout from the townhall/protest touches all our players. Reggie finally moves on from his crush on Sam, in part thanks to Joelle’s stellar advice. Lionel embraces his power as a reporter, defying Silvio’s orders to write an explosive expose about the real reason the Dean is against the protest. Coco learns while she is capable, she isn’t immune to mistakes and without someone to hide behind her failures are all her own now. Troy – well, more specifically – Troy’s father comes to realize that regardless of how his boy’s been raised he’s still just another black man to the police. And Sam finds her words from the previous episode slightly prophetic as Gabe tells her that being with her is far too hard and they will never work. Ouch.

But life goes on, and once all the excitement from the protest/townhall dies down the black student body of Winchester University gather in AP house for their weekly Defamation screening. It’s a comforting scene that promises no matter what happens, no matter what changes might be looming in the horizon, there’s always over-the-top prime time dramas to ground you. The other positive take away from this ending is that despite their failures and losses, Sam and Coco might just get another chance at friendship.

Sam with a camera
Sam’s checking to see what you learned
image c/o imdb.com

Season Review:

As an inaugural season this one isn’t too shabby. It ends by building up possible storyline channels for the next season, but wihout a huge cliffhanger that might leave the audience butt-hurt if no second season happens. And no, I’m not counting the abduction of Kelsey (Nia Jervier)’s dog.

Pros:

This show benefits from multiple views as many of the themes and underpinnings may be missed the first time around.

It is designed to make the audience think and in this regard it succeeds. Even with one run-through important conversations can be started in reaction to the various events over the season.

Finally, there’s the characters themselves. Their portraits are complex and individualized on first watch, but repeated viewings expose the brilliant subtext here. Each of focal character appears to represent a different aspect of the black experience in America, with some of them representing more than one.

Lionel shows us how black stories are often misrepresented and misinterpreted in the media. He is also an LGBTQ character and his journey of self-discovery is an important story worth telling.

Sam gives us two perspectives. She’s biracial, and an outspoken revolutionary – a fact made more poignant as she’s a woman since black women are at the center of many of today’s most successful social justice movements.

Colandrea is both the dark-skinned black woman – made to feel ashamed that her skin color isn’t lighter – and the “white” black person – often not seen as a “real” black person because of their manner of dress, speech, and/or success.

Troy, though he touches on this condition, better exemplifies the mythical role-model of what a black man should be – a pillar that speaks to the false assumption that in order for a black man to be viewed as “safe” or “good” he must be perfect in dress, speech, and appearance.

Reggie, by contrast, is every black man who refuses to fit this model while still demanding to be seen as a person. It results in him being labeled a troublemaker and ungrateful, and it puts his life in danger.

There’s a line where Coco points out that Sam’s “light-skinned privilege” allows her to rebel with little consequence, and during the party we see how true this is. Would the officer have pulled his gun on Sam? We know today that police will use deadly force on both black men and women, but at the time this show was created incidents with men were the most common.

Finally, there’s Gabe. Gabe’s purpose is to be one of the “good” white guys. Where Kurt and every other white male featured in this program comes off as an elitist outsider who speaks on race relations with the subtly and insight of a wrecking ball, Gabe is the humbled white male. The self-aware of his privilege, always forced to be on his best behavior, even dates a black woman, “woke” white male. It’s a good comment on how much pressure there is on white people to tread carefully – especially since every other white character in the show doesn’t bother and comes off badly for it.

Interesting note: both Reggie and Gabe get only one episode. This results in them being extremely shallow characters with just one central drive that they share: Sam.

Cons:

My biggest complaint with this show is that the messages it sends are often powerful but then immediately dropped for more palatable subjects. Though I suppose that’s in service of the comedy, after all it’s hard to laugh at a young man almost dying because of the color of his skin.

I also wish there were more nuanced depictions of white people. Maybe that’s an unfair ask, but if your argument is that black people are seen as one-dimensional stereotypes, I don’t think it helps to adopt a tit for tat approach on your show about race relations.

Verdict:

While it may be blunt and in your face at times, I recommend Dear White People to anyone who wants to understand the issues facing black Americans. Don’t get me wrong, it’s not a bible by any means, but it is a digestible introduction for those willing to have their interest peaked.

‘Dirty John: The Betty Broderick Story’ Episode 8: Review

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Amanda Peet as Betty Broderick next to her lawyer, awaiting a verdict.
Photo Credit: USA Network

Our final review of the Betty Broderick case.

Perception is Reality

Justice is a complicated issue. Sometimes, the courts fail us. Sometimes the only justice and truth we have is in the public eye.

Betty is now in jail. Her life is effectively ruined for murder. Yet, with this curse comes an odd blessing: she can finally get her side of the story out there. People see Betty in court and see the faults in the law’s reliability.

Without Dan there to dictate the narrative, we see the truths come to light. He set her up with a house full of rats. He paid voluntary support that dictated her livelihood, as she became financially constraint and dependent, even after their separation. More than anything, the public eye sympathizes with Betty Broderick, the victim of years of stress, gaslighting, and emotional abuse.

Yet, it cost Betty everything: her family, her friends, and her freedom. Worst is the fallout as, despite being a woman scorned, those close to her have to carry the weight of the events of what happened. The years of abuse and eventual murder stays with not just the friends, who stood by (some of whom sided or did nothing), but, most importantly, the kids. Their lives are ruined.

Still, Betty gets support. There’s a hung Jury with claims of self-defense many-times-over. Even an article was published with her new relationship with the press (which, as we know, is often a double-edged sword).  Betty finally sees the end in sight and believes that she’s winning.

Amanda Peet as Betty Broderick next to her lawyer, awaiting a verdict.
Photo Credit: USA Network

It’s not that easy, and we know this story has a tragic end. Even though Betty was used and abused, her children were often the victims of this years-long-struggle. Children, who’ve mostly had to forget her or are face to acknowledge that their mother’s a murderer… their father’s murderer.

This is hard because, despite the testimonies from those involved to witness, it’s the children that seal her fate. Sure, Dan was a bad dad, initially, but he tried, and above all: he loved his children. Betty has to own that responsibility of taking that love away.

It’s neither perfect or pretty, as this episode jumps inside the world of Betty’s head. Was this a mental breakdown or murder with intent? The results of this determine her jail sentence. To make matters worse, Dan’s defense has been using Betty’s statement’s to the press against her.

 

“I’ve chosen path of peace, and I finally have it.”

– Betty Broderick on the resolution of her case.

It’s sad, but Betty does need help. We don’t know if she’ll ever get well. Just old. And though debates go back and forth to who’s to blame, and to what extent was Betty’s double homocide malicious, people died. And it mattered to everyone involved.

Thus ending Betty’s story with a 32 to life sentence.

There’s a poetic end to this story, with Betty and the ghosts of her past quite literally with her. Though she’d finally gotten her side told, as well as the revenge she’d sought for: it came at a cost. And a loss… that will forever hurt the lives of her children.

I ask you: would you sacrifice everything in the name of truth? Of proving your self-worth? Is being proven right worth dying for?

I don’t have the answer. But I think this story had done a great job of showcasing just how far a person can go to share her story. So that now, everyday people, can see both sides of the story.

 

 

‘I May Destroy You’ Episode 2 Recap: “Someone Is Lying”

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Left to Right: Paapa Essiedu as Kwame, and Michaela Cole as Arabella
Photo Credit: BBC

Our coverage of I May Destroy You continues with “Someone is Lying,” as Arabella tries to remember the night before.

https://youtu.be/vrUGIQ2ItE8

I May Destroy You Season 1:

Episode 1 – “Eyes Eyes Eyes Eyes”

Episode 2 – “Someone is Lying”

Narratives are fascinating literary devices. The way something is or can be framed will lead the protagonist on a journey, and an interesting one at that. There is Reverse Chronological, which is telling the story backward in order to arrive at some resolution. There’s also the stream of consciousness method, whereby the main player puts you, the audience in the driver’s seat as the car may go as fast as their mind pleases. If you’re spiked though, with no recollection of who or what got you to the point where drawing a blank mixed with terrifying deja vu is a cocktail coursing through every fibrous sinew of your being, you might be co-morbid in all three plot-lines. Welcome to the second episode of I May Destroy You (HBO) titled “Someone Is Lying.”

Arabella (Michaela Cole) is sitting down to lunch with Terry (Weruche Opia) and relaying back the night’s events. To T’s surprise, Bella was a bit cheeky hanging out with Simon on a weeknight, to which Arabella claims that he was Terry’s friend first. This might be the classic retort we’ve all used to absolve ourselves from any direct association with what debauchery might go down. Terry’s concerned though. Her bestie’s listlessly poking around her full plate of grub as if somehow to wake it up. Dodging any awkwardness, Arabella boxes up her food and Terry’s worries with the excuse of “constipation.” You win this round, Bella.

Back on the street, Terry practices her lines for her Feminist Beauty Campaign audition as Bella follows along on her phone, which is smashed. Upon being inquired, a worried look flashes across Arabella’s visage. Though admitting to doing a bump off of Simon, Terry calls him on her friend’s behalf. Though interrupting him at his high profile banking job, through Bella’s questioning, Simon obliquely tells her A.) He walked her to her flat and B.) She fell, hence the cracked head and screen.

An uncomfortable exuberance meets Arabella, and she immediately hangs up… she’s just relieved because, well, she’s been seeing this vision of a man in a toilet stall ‘doing something a bit dodge.’ Giving T pause, they both continue into her place, and, with a curious but less anxious nature (now that she’s vindicated), she’s telling her how he’s somehow blocking the door, and she keeps hearing this thumping. “Hmm.”

She’s been keeping her mind busy with YouTube videos though, as she shows Terry clips of Ironic process theory, the act of seeing something even though it never was. The foible is that Bella’s not thought of this to go back to… but before she can go deeper, a new part of her brain flairs up- Biago video calls and Terry remedies the situation by helping her friend get back to sleep and fixing her fallen poster after a long night of writing. Did we tell them, we made our deadline?

Sleep mask on and hair tied up, we start to fall into a slight slumber, but we see something. Eyes closed with the force of a synthetic mask, another vision appears.

We’re hazy at an ATM tonight, and the numbers seem to miss us, we aren’t missing them. STOP!

Arabella takes her sleep mask off, and the poster falls off the wall once more.

Terry’s understandably nervous before her audition but is camera ready.  After stating her full name and IG handle with her follower base number, she’s asked by the people behind the cam what her most freeing moment was. Grappling with it but with a smile that can tell a thousand stories, she coyly puts off that query for the moment.

This campaign will be situational clips of women playing sports, doing yoga, applying makeup, but Terry’s is the hair segment. They run lines and she nails it. Not one to shy away from confrontation and proud of it, she admits that she’s wearing a wig made of human hair, that can be washed in the segment if need be, but it becomes a little too uncomfortable is when she’s asked to take her wig off on the spot. She refuses, as she would if she were prepared with that question, but she handles it like a fucking pro.

Upon them saying the industry “Fuck You” but actually saying “Thank You For Coming,” she walks off, but not before going back in and answering their last question. She had a threesome once. And that, ladies and gentlemen, is when the Queen become a Boss.

Back in their posh flat, Simon (Aml Aneem) and his girlfriend Kat (Lara Rossi) sit down to a comfortable meal of some weird concoction he’s made, as they sit down for a bit of telly. When Terry rings him, he flat out denies it.

Back in their humble flat, Bella and Ben (Stephen Wight) enjoy a toke and watch shit on consciousness until he notices her wound, still bloody like one of those religious icons they claim do. After a bit bandaging, she relays her night to him and they go over her debit card. She spent 40 in Camden, which is a way from her home in Soho.

Cozy in Simon’s domicile, Arabella tries to confirm all of his statement from before. First confirming he walked her back (despite a 45 minute to and from) and then floundering, he claims it was an Uber. Something is amiss, and this is all in the midst of his girlfriend of 8 years, as her face seems more aghast. Not leaving any stone unturned, she takes a photo of his Uber trail from his phone and wanders onto of all the places, Alissa’s doorstep in Camden.

Much to her surprise, Alissa (Ann Akin) answers, claiming that whatever happened the night before was a gas, though she woke up with no recollection. Plus, her calls to Simon have been ghosted. Arabella has finally a crux in her argument, and, still not wanting to know what it means, posits to Alissa a “What If” scenario and, seeing as though they are both mutual friends with Simon, hell breaks loose.

Not only does Alissa accuse Arabella of being a psycho for accusing Simon, not only who is stepping out, but also orchestrating a rape, Bella runs for the next clue because being shouted out from the estates to stay away from him and labeled a ‘psycho’ for all of Camden to hear, is clearly not her game. Denial isn’t exactly a river, but rather a dam-break to some.

In the Uber she’s called, T calls and nothing might be the same ever again. Arabella confirms she’s been spiked and is head to the Police Station as well, and, clearly, Terry is concerned.

At the station, with her friend Kwame (Paapa Essiedu) by her side, Arabella recounts the moments of that evening to the those assigned to her case, Officer Funmi (Sarah Niles) and Officer Beth (Mariah Gale).

Bella tells them she doesn’t believe that neither Simon nor Derae would spike her drinks to harm her, but two other individuals she had no further knowledge of were in attendance, but she couldn’t remember their names.

She also mentions Simon would have no reason to take her to Camden unless he just dropped her off in the middle of nowhere. That is upsetting to both her and Kwame. Personally, I think it’s part denial, but, if it’s true, she would be covering up for her friend Kat, for if this were to hit the paper, it would wreck the better friend.

She does mention to Kwame, though that she had made her deadline! A beacon of light in a dank place.. but Funmi knows. They liken him to David from her description, but she refuses to call it a memory but rather a vision. Something that can go away.

Distortions of the vision seem real when Funmi stands above her, and the final nail in the coffin is when she asks if Arabella can see his Eyes. That is when she breaks down and Kwame can only comfort her.

After sharing a smoke with someone that is so numb to it she can’t feel it anymore, Arabella is released into the arms of Kwame at her home with Terry.

Terry’s beauty campaign audition didn’t go so well, but she’s for her friend right now. With Bella on his lap and tears in Terry’s eyes, I think we have a story to tell… especially when Kat comes rapping on Alissa’s door.

Overall, I think this really tautly tied both episodes in and it was super hard to watch. That’s not bad. I want to be challenged. It was reported that Michaela Cole wrote 191 drafts of the entire series and I can clearly see why.

This is her story… and so many others’.

 

 

The 100: Season 7 Episode 8: “Anaconda” Review

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Brother and sister face off
Callie and her brother Reese face off image c/o imdb.com

In this week’s episode of the 100, “Anaconda,” we finally find out how the end of Earth all began. Are you ready for the truth?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kzGrZen7ApA

Tonight’s episode takes us back to the beginning of the end…er…well, the end of the end?

We don’t get a split story this time, just a story within a story.

We’re back in Bardo where Clarke and the others are less than thrilled about the news of Bellamy’s death (fake news! I won’t believe it till I see a body). Big cult leader Bill shows up and surprise! He speaks Grounder!? Kind of…turns out the language was created by his daughter when she was a little girl and learning Latin (because Latin is everyone’s favorite language that will never die).

Bill believes that Calliope, said daughter, is alive in Clarke’s mind. He thinks it’s why she recognizes him, knows what she knows, and can speak Grounder. Is it true? Let’s find out!

Now, considering the confirmation of a prequel series, it’s not too surprising this is a Backdoor pilot. The biggest departure is that the name of the episode isn’t a reference to the name of the series – which is usually the case (see Wayward Sisters or Bloodlines from Supernatural). Jason Rothenberg, the creator of The 100, came out and said the series will most likely be named The 100: Second Dawn which makes sense. OK, back to the review.

We cut to two girls in a bedroom hanging out. One, Lucy (Nicole Muñoz), has been injured in a recent protest by the police (sound familiar?). The girl fixing her up is Calliope (Iola Evans), “Callie” for short, her best friend and the star of our prequel. Callie’s something of a rebel, dropping out of MIT and rejecting her father’s doomsday cult to try and fight for the planet’s survival. Unfortunately, daddy dearest was right and soon Callie and her mother (Gemma played by Crystal Balint) are running for the bunker (care of our episode title “Anaconda” being the code word for the missiles are coming). Lucy? She got tranq’ed by Callie’s mom and left for dead because she isn’t a level 12.

In the bunker, we meet Callie’s brother Reese (Adain Bradley), we saw him briefly in a holographic phone call Callie and her dad were having before the snake hit the fan. Reese and Callie have a standard TV sibling rivalry – Dad loves Callie despite her rejection of him, while Reese works like a dog for any scraps of love he can get; never feeling he’s enough. Because of this, Reese is adamant about his support of their father’s cause, even when Callie points out that other people could be saved (like her bestie). Too bad, so sad…moving on!

Bill shows his family what he’s been up to: the Anomaly Stone. He found it under Machu Picchu – finder’s keepers, right? He thinks he’s figured it out, but not so much. Oh well, least everyone is underground and safe sure nothing will disturb that.

Cut to two years later, when Dr. Becca Franco arrives – conveniently at the same time there’s a ground crew topside looking for supplies. Reese wants to ignore it, but Callie insists they go say Hi. Turns out Becca is a hero to Callie (she dressed up as her for Halloween), and she can also convert all the people in the bunker into Nightbloods (a side effect of the radiation immunity serum she invented), but Bill isn’t having it. He’s convinced that the stone is the key to humanity’s salvation – which is furthered when Becca shows him she can figure out the stone.

Callie allies herself with Becca, and they work in secret to convert the bunk folk into Nightbloods. In the meantime, Becca and Callie bond, with Callie eventually helping Becca to make a breakthrough with the Stone. It turns into a glowing ball of light that absorbs Becca when she touches it. Bill and Reese come a running, and, when Bill touches the light, there’s a blackout and Becca suddenly reappears. She’s warning Bill against the stone, telling him it’s dangerous, and she needs to shut it down. Bill has her imprisoned instead.

Callie tries to help Becca break out – Reese discovered her secret notebook and Bill knows about the stone and the Flame (a reference to Prometheus) – but, the scientist has other pans. She makes Callie the first Flame keeper, charged with finding the “right” mind to control the power. Callie then watches as her mentor is dragged outside to be burned at the stake. This is the last straw for her.

Our heroine gathers the bunker folks she’s given the serum to and stages a revolt – they want the Flame and they want out. Gemma tries to intervene with absolutely no effectiveness, and her children settle on a one-on-one battle to decide (oooo the Conclave origin?). Callie pulls an Indiana and shoots her brother in the arm, taking the Flame, but giving him the radiation cure. With Mom’s help, Callie and her fellow Nightbloods escape the Second Dawn bunker and head out top side.

Bill sends his son and Tristan (Craig Arnold) – who was one of the first people given the radiation cure when Becca arrived – out to retrieve the AI. He also exiles his wife, who is forced to wear a radiation suit since she refused Callie’s injection. Meanwhile, cult leader Bill goes through the portal assumedly to Bardo.

The last surprise of the episode is more for Clarke than us. She and her crew finally get to learn the fate of their friends (aside from Bellamy). Clarke takes Bill hostage so that Anders won’t attack when the door opens, but Bill isn’t worried because as we know Echo, Hope, and Diyoza have joined the Disciples.

This is a great episode! Not only is it a backdoor pilot but it ties in nicely with the current storyline, which isn’t always how backdoor pilot episodes go. Generally, they are painfully obvious in execution and deviate glaringly from the main plot the show has currently been following. But, this one is pretty good.

Learning about the history of some of our favorite The 100 terms felt fantastic. The language was especially satisfying since it touched so often on existing words I wondered if it wasn’t created by a child. I feel validated. Even the origin of the clan names is fun – Trikru was the name of an environmentalist protest group (curious if it wasn’t spelled Tree Crew and just evolved). Was there a protest group fighting for the melting polar icecaps called Ice Nation??? I wouldn’t be surprised. And of course, one of the most important terms: The Flame. Very cool shit.

Next episode appears to show us Echo, Hope, and Diyoza’s training while giving us a peek at Sanctum’s growing dumpster-fire of a situation. Staying tuned!

 

 

‘Doom Patrol’ Season 2 Episode 5 Review: “Finger Patrol”

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Diane Guerrero as Jane's personality, Babydoll
Photo Credit: 2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Ooh Child, things aren’t gonna get easier because play time is over! Doom Patrol is back with a brand new episode, “Finger Patrol.”

Previously on Doom Patrol 

Season 2

Episodes 1, 2, and 3 – Fun Size Patrol, Tyme Patrol, and Pain Patrol

Episode 4 – Sex Patrol

S2E5 Review (Spoiler-Free)

Feeling isolated and alone, Dorothy (Abigail Shapiro) finally finds a friend in Baby Doll, one of Jane‘s personalities (Diane Guerrero), and the two have a play date. Cliff (Brendan Fraser/Riley Shanahan) uncovers a plan Niles (Timothy Dalton) is working on to give him human-like upgrades. Vic (Joivan Wade) decides he wants to win Roni (Karen Obilom) back and needs to think of a plan. Rita (April Bowlby), seeing an ad for a community theater production, goes to audition but blows the opportunity. To shake it off, she accompanies Larry (Matt Bomer/Matthew Zuk), who goes to spend more time with his family and learn about the life he left behind.

What does Cliff think about the potential of an upgrade?

Will Vic be able to win back Roni and put her past aside?

What does the life of the Trainor family look like?

What could possibly go wrong with play time?

All these and more answered!

 

Left to Right: Joivan Wade as Vic Stone/Cyborg and Karen Obilom as Roni Evers having lunch at a sub shop.
2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

The Cast

Another week, another solid entry into the Doom Patrol master class of acting. Even though I may not mention each member by name, they all put in the work and elevate the show.

Before diving into the key players, some praise needs to be given to Obilom and Jon Getz (Paul Trainor). As Roni, Obilom has done a great job over the last few episode setting the foundation for her character and the personal barriers she’s put up. In this episode, we get to see more of that and how she controls who are let in and how it is done, if possible. Getz has been knocking it out of the park as Larry’s second child, now an old man and patriarchy of his own family. There is a intricate range of emotions he works through, and it shows how much of a veteran he is in his craft.

Now, back to the Doom Patrol.

The breakout star of this season, Shapiro, continues to steal the show as Dorothy. Watching a character grow in front of you is always intriguing, and Shapiro is delivering the nuances of growing pains and fear of adulthood. It is fun seeing her play off of the more childish Baby Doll.

Speaking of Baby Doll, to say Guerrero is putting in a solid performance is an understatement and borderline insult at this point. She is the series MVP. Every week, she gives us an Orphan Black turned up to 11. Even if you want to ignore the other 63 personalities, watching Guerrero’s approach to Jane showcases an intricate characterization and strategic choices.

A personal favorite of the show, which is very well-documented at this point, is Matt Bomer and Matthew Zuk. Seeing these two in sync is such a delight and makes you really appreciate the small details. In one scene, Larry is looking at an artifact of his past, and the moment speaks volumes. The pauses in the speech as Larry puts together the information he’s received compliments the slow movements of his fingers as he examines the item. The results are tremendous.

 

Brendan Fraser (voice)/Riley Shanahan (on-set performer) fighting two criminals behind a car.
2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

The Vision

This episode really made me appreciate the use of lighting in this show. This helps bring a well-deserved attention to detail. In particular, the strong use of natural lighting and shadows in Doom Manor. I love scenes in the Manor because most things going on are operating in a darker room surrounded by light creeping through the windows. Most of the time throughout this episode, either the characters operate in shadows or the occasional light piercing from the outside, or they work in a scene that is bright and completely lit, making the characters stand out. It also really highlights the distinct color palette of the show. The combination of Jane/Baby Doll and Dorothy also give us some fun visuals to watch, but I won’t spoil that for you!

After four episodes of ramping up, this episode evens out and goes on a nice Doom Patrol Cruise Control. When to comes to the writing, Chris Dingess and Shoshana Sachi teamed up to pen this episode, and the duo did a tremendous job of giving us a “breather.” Don’t get me wrong, there are crazy things that happen in the third act, but, in this episode, we are given time to settle in with these characters. Intimate, personal moments lead to rewarding conclusions or painful outcomes. Which happens to who? If only, you knew . . .

 

Karen Obilom as Roni Evers, walking with a cane to open a door.
2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

Takeaway

To be completely honest, I can’t see Doom Patrol having a bad episode. The way I see this episode is that part of a roller coaster, after a bunch of loops and spirals, where you go back up a hill only to fall down again. This is that moment of unnerving calm before things ramp up again.

 

Abigail Shapiro as Dorothy Spinner, hiding.
2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

Reflection (SPOILERS)

I want to start this off by saying that “Steele & Stone” is something I never knew I wanted in my life, and now it’s ALL I want in my life. The bad 70s montages and old school cop show aesthetic was phenomenal. Honestly, I would watch a whole show.

Now, with the rest of the episode, we get some scenarios where the relationship of a parent and a child are examined and resolved, whether positively or negatively.

Rita, who has confronted her mental block, is desperately trying to deal with it. Uncovering the factoid of her mother sleeping to get Rita a role, Rita is determined to prove mother wrong. We get this very surreal moment of Rita having to perform a monologue in front of a community theater director at a gardening store. It’s a strange situation, and you can tell Rita is thrown off, but it’s also a very real moment. She works her way through a monologue that (of course) centers around a character address their mother. As she goes through the speech, she gets flashes of the memory repeating. It causes her to mess up the impromptu audition, and, having failed, Rita recoils. After tagging along with Larry on his exploits, we see her drinking, constantly, and bits of the old Rita begin to ooze out. She tells Larry’s great-grandkid not to let his dad destroy his dreams and complains about her situation. It isn’t until she gets a phone call from the director that, due to illness, a role opened up for Rita. There you have it! Rita has booked a gig without her mother’s help (the most important aspect of it). It’s the small victories.

Speaking of Larry, his exploration of the Trainor family comes to an end (as we know it) in this episode. In helping the family clear out old boxes of things, he meets his grandson and great-grandson. Larry continues to get a glimpse of the life he left behind and see the legacy that he created. We also see more bonding between him and his son, Paul, and it’s heartwarming. The great thing about this series in regards to Larry is that we continually get opportunities to see the man vulnerable and unraveled. In season one, it was the closure of his love, John, and, in this season, it’s the closure of his family. In helping his family clean out the house, Larry is face-to-face with artifacts of his past. He finds out that his wife had moved in with her sons, and he learns that she was the driving force behind the “Larry is alive” theory. Later, Larry gets a box from his son that has his old stuff and finds a token from John. Larry finally tells his family, (mainly Paul) that he is gay. Paul then admits that he was happy with the idea of Larry being dead, and we find out that Paul called the Department of Defense on him, hoping to subdue and neutralize Larry. Larry is able to escape, but not before an impending crossfire accidentally wounds his grandchild. The Trainor parent-children relationship was resolved but in a negative way.

But one relationship that we must wait for a resolution is the relationship between Niles and Dorothy. The whole season, one thing that has been repeatedly drilled into Dorothy’s head is that she can NEVER EVER make a wish. This time, understandly, Dorothy is pushed to the end. In her play time with Baby Doll, some bad things happened to her. The Wendigo she is able to conjure, I want to say its name is Manny? I honestly couldn’t make out the name. Anyway, Manny is the last thing Dorothy has of her mother, and she shares this friend with Baby Doll, who proceeds to hit it. Dorothy is furious because she asked Baby Doll to be polite and doesn’t want to play with her anymore. Later that night, Baby Doll sees how attached Niles is to Dorothy and gets jealous so she tells Dorothy that Niles is a bad man. This is another instance of Dorothy’s innocence being stripped away from her. The two get into a fight, play “tag,” and end up in the basement of the Manor. Dorothy is hiding in a furnace grate, it looks like, and the two get into another fight. Baby Doll closes the door with telekinesis and turns on the furnace, which is behind Dorothy at a distance. Dorothy is scared, rightfully so, and summons Manny to fight off Baby Doll and escape. Baby Doll summons the “human torch” personality of Kate, who burns up Manny. Candlemaker tells Dorothy that Manny is dead, and Dorothy breaks the one rule from her father: making a wish. By the way, this scene is amazing, Candlemaker gets into the Underground and wrecks shit. He kills Baby Doll, and it’s tough to watch but builds so much tension. Dorothy has finally grown up and made her own decision. I, for one, cannot wait to see how this all plays out.

‘Space Force’ Episode 3 Review: “Mark and Mallory Go To Washington”

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Catch up on the Netflix Original series, Space Force, with this recap of episode 3, “Mark and Mallory Go to Washington.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4mY2asIjWk

 

Space Force Season 1 Episodes:

Episode 1 – “The Launch”

Episode 2 – “Save Epsilon 6!”

Episode 3 – “Mark and Mallory Go to Washington”

Budget cuts. Tell that to General Mark Naird (Steve Carell) because Dr. Adrian Mallory (John Malkovich) has to traverse the Guggenheim-like architectural base of the Space Force building to dispense an earful… but soo many steps. I mean, is this a research facility, or is it a compound? It’s as if fucking Jean Ralphio from Parks and Rec (Ben Schwartz) and the ACTUAL series character, Fuck Tony (Ben Schwartz) had a child, fed it MDMA, and told it to create an M.C. Escher painting. But in Mark’s words as I would imagine them, “It takes a lot to get to the top.” or some stupid bromide like that. Welcome to the third episode of Space Force (Netflix) titled “Mark and Mallory Go To Washington”.

Back in the pit, as Adrian’s trying to get in, Fuck Tony is roasting Mark to prep him when the shitstorm comes at their testifying before the House Arms Services Committee. To every mudslinging thing F. Tony can sling at him, Mark is his own PR prowess pretties up his response. Sound familiar in the slightest?

Once Fuck Tony and Mark are on the same page, they notify Adrian that they need their A-game to be crisp for the billion dollars they are requesting for lunar exploration and not funding to “give rats stomach aches.”

Speaking of dyspepsia, as Mark approaches Captain Angela Ali (Tawny Newsome), Erin (Diana Silvers) catches her dad for a ride to D.C., just in the nick of time. Newly suspended from school for flipping her teacher the bird, Mark assigns Captain Ali, instead to babysit his daughter about the base, as a reward for insubordination aren’t exactly in her dad’s wheelhouse.

Up above, Fuck Tony nearly turns his grey Armani trousers to khaki Old Navy’s with Mark piloting. Down below, a bored Erin and even less enthusiastic Angela attempt to find common ground.

At the Pentagon, Mark faces off with colleagues, but not before engaging Adrian in a “Patton-off” to psyche himself up.

In the quarters, General Rongley (Diedrich Bader), Chief of Naval Operations (Jane Lynch), General Kick Grabaston (Noah Emmerich) and Commandant of the Marine Corps (Patrick Warburton) have a laugh at Naird’s expense, before shooing away the poor Commandant of the Coast Guard (Larry Joe Campbell).

Back in the gym on base, Obie (Owen Daniels) and Julio (Hector Duran) seem to win a bit of a long run, compliments of Angela for ragging on her guest. This gesture allows Erin to let her guard down and confide in someone that isn’t her dad.

In D.C., Grabaston plays the angles, eeking out a moment to ingratiate himself to Mallory with ecological palaver, promising a whole new (and possibly safer) world under his command, should Mark lose the branch.

As Angela introduces Erin to Meal Armstrong’s, the only Acai stand in the area, providence introduces Erin to Duncan Tabner (Spencer House), a member of Space Force. Duncan is an unassuming but hunky Alabamian displacement that seems to have a slight fancy for Erin, but, ohh right, she’s seeing Yuri (Alex Sparrow). You know, the hot Russian expatriate that may still be on the sketchy side, and after seeing their interaction, so does Angela.

In the Assembly, Rep. Bob White (Tommy Cook) is more than willing to hand over the 150% increase in the budget for Space Force so long as the old coot can see hellfire rained down on America’s enemies from the stars. This won’t be a cakewalk, however, as Rep. Pitosi (Concetta Tomei) takes a few of White’s yielded minutes to put the space-boots to Mark, medium-style. Floundering from few specifics and a report so redacted that it looks like modern art, Mark “taps” out for help to a pissed off Adrian. The panel’s youngest member, Anabela Ysidro-Campos (Ginger Gonzaga) takes a few of Pitosi’s yielded time to bring out a salient point that Adrian agrees with: ask for money to militarize space and everybody turn their head. He’s now in a space where everyone can hear him scream… from the inside.

Meanwhile, Angela suggests Erin get a job to pass the time slinging soft-serve… unlike in the hearing, where the serves are coming harder than Andy Roddick. It cost Space Force $10k to send a fresh, $1.50 orange into space for the crew member and information like that during a budget hearing leaves a pit in everyone’s gut that cannot be digested at the moment.

Mark tries to explain this with his experience in the military. It turns out that money doesn’t matter. People matter. Minds and bodies working tirelessly to put one person into space that can benefit the whole of humanity, and, if that one is risking their life by consuming dehydrated food with filtered urine, he argues a simple taste of the earth is the least we can do, because earth is important and we need to protect it.

Just when the moment is at its zenith and Mark’s speech lands successfully, a team of “Handmaids” interrupts, thinking it’s the Supreme Court Nomination Hearing. It’s no matter though. Specifics aren’t heard until Dr. Mallory chimes in to have General Naird’s back with the facts, Jack.

Overall, the episode picked up more steam as it plugged through. Though light on laughs (not jokes), the addition of a Pelosi and Ocasio-Cortez proxy was kind of cute, though not cleverly disguised. However, maybe that’s the point of this all. These moving parts were designed to impugn the president, and I think the next episode will start the first season module that may start steadying for touch-down.

Oh, I don’t mean like a touchdown in American football, as we are still a ways away from that with this series now. Let’s just call it Third in Ten.

‘Dirty John: The Betty Broderick Story’ Episode 7: Review

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Amanda Peet as Betty Broderick
Photo Credit: USA Network

We learn in this episode of Betty Broderick that successful trial lawyers don’t seek truth. They’re the ones who define truth itself. Review Inside.

The Shillelagh

One of the most fascinating things I find about court cases is that it’s not about the events as they occurred but, rather, the perception of the law in itself. This is very much highlighted by Dan Broderick as he teaches some incoming law students in the show’s opening scenes.

It’s stressed that the differences in how people see things matter less than how the game of logic is played. The evidence that arrives and when and how to present it must have the appropriate language and intention. It’s a logic game, and Dan’s good at it.

He’s been good at it since the beginning of the series. We see it not only with how he treats Betty but even in their initial courtship: how everything is a game to him he wants to win. In both cases, the victim and the loser is Betty.

We’re in the future of this reality Dan’s created now. He pays Betty off, and she sees the kids, in accordance with his rules of the settlement. Unhinged, Betty shows the boys her gun, claiming that her life, living alone and scared, is why she bought yet.

Yet, deep down, the audience knows that these same children, meant to weaponize the parental arguments on both sides, would inevitably share this with Dan. We get more fighting, more secrets, and a who-said-what and who-stole-what in the courts, as we’ve seen this dance play out throughout the series. We even see Betty, still in spite and hostile towards Dan, manipulate his relationships by sharing info on those not invited to Dan’s wedding to Linda.

Rachel Keller as Linda Kolkena, now Linda Broderick
Photo Credit: The USA Network

Betty can’t help but do the threatening phone calls and harassment speeches. This leads to more legal feuds, this time between herself and Linda. And, though things eventually settle and everything returns back to court, we are metaphorically seeing a defeated woman lie down and die. Betty celebrates her small victories, continuing the harassing phone calls and angry feuds with Dan because her life has become this: ruined.

This episode lets us dwell in the sadness. It makes the audience see how pathetic Betty’s life has become, defined by her antagonistic relationship with her ex-husband, who doesn’t help the situation by letting her be and letting the cycle continue. Defeated, Betty realizes she has nothing left…

So she goes off to visit Dan, one final time. The phones ring. The echoes of sins spill abound. Children cry. Sadness overwhelms us. Betty Broderick, in tears, with her family, spends the latter evening sleeping in jail.

After having just murdered Dan and Linda.

Tune in for the conclusion next week.

‘The Twilight Zone’ Season 2 Episode 10 Review: “You Might Also Like”

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Gretchen Mol (left) and Greta Lee (right, in background) in "The Twilight Zone" on CBS All-Access.

In a world of spoilers coming to an end, the season 2 finale of The Twilight Zone is here. Do we get what we want or is it what we need? Find out in our review.

THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 2 Episodes:

Episode 1 – “Meet Me in the Middle”

Episode 2 – “Downtime”

Episode 3 – “The Who of You”

Episode 4 – “Ovation”

Episode 5 – Among the Untrodden

Episode 6 – “8”

Episode 7 – “A Human Face”

Episode 8 – “A Small Town”

Episode 9 – “Try, Try”

Episode 10 – “You Might Also Like”
Available on CBS All Access
GRADE: A-

Housewife Jane Warren is stuck in a tree. She’s unable to move because one of her legs is tied to a medicine ball, which is also tied to a large chair from her bedroom. Jane knew she’d be abducted. She saw the video footage of it from a baby monitor she put on her dresser. The tractor beam that sucked her into the large flying saucer above her house is unable to complete the abduction because it can’t pull Jane, the ball, and the couch through the window.

Jane looks down at the aliens who have attempted to abduct her. They’re pointing at each other as if to blame one another. They’re at a loss at what to do next, but they do know that they’re awfully hungry right now. So, there’s that. When Jane yells for help, they tell Jane that they “only work here,” so they’re pretty useless, it seems. “Take me to your supervisor!” she exclaims with full Fury of Karen.

The Twilight Zone goes full Black Mirror for its finale, “You Might Also Like,” an incredibly off-beat satire on American consumer culture.

Jane Warren (Gretchen Mol of TV’s Boardwalk Empire) is being offered to pick up her brand-new “Egg”, a mysterious…thing that everyone must have for some reason — even though nobody knows what it is or what it does, something that gnaws at Jane. Her neighbor, Mrs. Jones (Greta Lee of TV’s Chance)…well, she thinks Jane’s kitchen is well-lit — just not as well-lit as her kitchen. Mrs. Jones is due to pick up her “Egg” in about a couple hours. Jane’s “Egg” isn’t due to be picked up until 4 PM. Mrs. Jones looks at Jane with sympathy. How can she wait so long? Jane’s also been blacking out and waking up in her bed every few hours. While asleep, we get “commercials” that advertise various products she should have if she wants her life to be complete — including the “Egg,” which will “make everything OK again — this time, forever.”

When Jane attempts to appeal to Mrs. Jones for emotional support, Jones just cannot get over how cute her bedroom is, before stating she should leave because she’s gotta go pick up that Egg! Jane grabs her and begs her to stay, which just plain amuses Mrs. Jones who simply asks, “Are you touching me?” Jane just wants to know what’s going on. She’s so alone. The “Egg” is making her nervous. The blackouts are getting more frequent, and Jane’s really lost her mind.

The “Kanamits” on “The Twilight Zone” on CBS All Access.

When she attempts to go against the grain and cancel her Egg, she has to wander through a labyrinthine phone maze just to tell a computer what she wants — and that computer transfers her to a “supervisor” that’s very surprised that Jane doesn’t want her Egg anymore. The supervisor, on the other end, would like to know why. Jane just explains that she’s “changed her mind,” that she doesn’t want one. The supervisor simply asks if there’s anything more that Jane needs. Jane would like to know if the order’s been cancelled. The voice, in a slow, robotic, eerie tone, replies that they are “processing her request” — then hangs up on her.

This brings us to the aforementioned moment when Jane requests to speak with a supervisor, and now she’s up in the alien saucer — where everything will finally be revealed.

Last year, Jordan Peele‘s The Twilight Zone finished its season strong with the incredible “Blurryman,” a wonderful ode to the show’s past. The second season finale doesn’t really get as meta as that episode did, but it’s a weird, wonderfully weird, ode to the show’s past and an entry that has much to say about who we are and where we’re going as a species. The off-beat satirical edge and straight-faced deadpan delivery of it all recalls the brilliance of Darin Morgan‘s X-Files efforts, “Jose Chung From Outer Space,” “Clyde Bruckman’s Final Repose,” and recently, “The Lost Art of Forehead Sweat.”

Like “Blurryman,” the episode is going to be divisive. The more cynical viewer might see this as writer/director Osgood Perkins (Gretel & Hansel, I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives Inside This House) being self-indulgent and giving us “odd for the sake of odd,” but to do so is really missing the point. When it comes right down to it, the episode is more than just a homage. It’s a study of how disconnected we are, how robotic we’ve become, how alone we really are (especially when dealing with crippling depression as Jane does) — and how all those emotions are toyed with and used against us for financial gain by cynical corporations which run our lives whether we like it or not.

“You Might Also Like” is science-fiction brilliance and a fitting finale for a consistent second season of The Twilight Zone.

LOST IN THE ZONE

  • THE TWIST (HIGHLIGHT IF YOU WILL): The “Egg” is an alien invention made by the Kanamits (more on them in a minute) that is designed to hatch and end the human race (presumably by killing and eating the purchasers). It was invented after the Kanamits read Jane’s mind, following the birth of her still-born daughter a while back. Jane just wanted everything to be OK again forever. The Kanamits, who are all of one mind, projected this “need” into every living human being on the planet to make them think they all needed the same thing that Jane wanted. The human race, gullible as ever, didn’t even question it and now they all want the hottest new thing ever — “The Egg.” After a talk with the Kanamit Supervisor, Jane realizes that she wants to feel “normal”. She wants an “Egg” because it’s “hers,” and she just wants to “hold it, even if it’s for a little while.” She’s dropped back at her home. At 4 PM, she goes to pick up her egg while Kanamit saucers hover over the UServe Fulfillment Center. The city around the area is on fire in various spots due to the beginning of mankind’s end.
  • Such a great episode. I cannot stress this enough. There’s a sense of dread and unease the entire episode as if something will jump at Jane from inside her house and drag her away, but it never happens and that just escalates that dread. The creepy “commercials” throughout the episode just add to that mood — especially the ones that take place in the forest. It isn’t until Jane explains her life to the Kanamits that you realize that the “commercials” were just snippets of Jane’s life, manufactured in such a way as to sell her various items throughout her existence. When you go back and watch the “commercials,” you begin to piece together Jane’s past, and it is is wholly haunting and depressing — especially when the Kanamits are using Jane’s inner thoughts as catchphrases and slogans to sell items. All Jane wanted was another egg, another chance to be happy following the death of her daughter — and the Kanamits completely misread that need…or did they?
  • The entire attitude of the episode seems to be “Hey, Black Mirror…let me show you how this is done.” Ballsy, to say the least — but Black Mirror DOES owe its very existence to The Twilight Zone, so…
  • One of the best exchanges ever as the Kanamits show that they’re not that intelligent:
      • KANAMIT SUPERVISOR: Nineteen-hundred-and-forty-five, the United States defeats Japan. Nineteen-hundred-and-sixty-five, The Beatles defeat the son of your “god”…and so on…
      • JANE: Well, no…that’s not exactly right…
      • And later…
      • JANE: You have all this unbelievable technology…and all you’ve been doing is watching television?!
  • One of the things I am laughing about is that CBS is actually running some sort of contest to see how many “Easter Eggs” viewers can find. I’m not interested in the contest, but it’s been fun spotting each egg. Is it a coincidence that the episode is about “eggs” and how much we need to get them? Do you think this is Peele and CBS having some fun at our expense?
  • Still, the “egg” metaphor is not lost on the viewer and plays on different levels. The opening conversation between Jane and Ellen in Jane’s living room is very much that of a nervous mother who doesn’t sound completely thrilled that she’s become a baby machine in a 1950’s-style household. Ellen sounds thrilled at the prospect of “having an egg” because it’s what she really wants for herself. Jane’s just “woke” and simply doesn’t seem to want another…”egg” in her life, so to speak. This is driven home by the commercial where her husband is interacting with her two spoiled teen boys, who seem to hate one another and Jane is at the breakfast table, miserable, disheveled and sobbing, having lost her baby. Her husband has two strapping boys to bond with while Jane has nothing, despite all she’s given.
  • EASTER EGGS (a slew of them)
    • There are two great Stanley Kubrick film references here: the first is the product, “IWideShut”, which is, presumably, a device used to arouse a man to get him ready to have sex with his spouse. “The password is Fidelio,” the commercial remarks. This is a reference to the Kubrick film, Eyes Wide Shut, which was about a doctor attempting to have his own sexual awakening after his wife admits to nearly cheating on him. The password to get into the orgy he attends is “Fidelio.” The second is the baby monitor which looks exactly like the HAL 9000 computer from the Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey.
    • The episode pays homage to the classic Zone episode, “To Serve Man,” which was about a race of alien beings that come to Earth to help “serve man”. The book they give to the humans to decode…turns out to be a cookbook. It’s just one of the best.  So here are the eggs (see what I did there) for that:

      • The alien race, the Kanamits, are behind the invasion of Earth and the “Eggs.” They are back, looking like nothing has ever changed.
      • The cookbook on Jane’s counter is “To Serve Man.” Heh.
      • The alien language on the “Egg Fulfillment Card” is in Kanamitese.
    • The card’s address is listed as being on “Maple Street,” which is a nod to the classic Zone episode, “The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street.”
    • Also, that’s Osgood (“Oz”) Perkins (the writer/director of the episode) as the second Kanamit Alien, when the trio of Kanamits all meet to discuss how to get Jane out of the tree and into the saucer. The other Kanamits are played by the great George Takei and longtime voice actor Kirk Thornton.
    • Finally, the Kanamit Supervisor explains that she laid all the eggs — but we also find out that the front company selling these “Eggs” is Whipple which, if you’ve read every single review, is a nod to the classic Zone episode, “The Brain Center at Whipple’s.”

Thank you so much for sticking with me through my reviews for The Twilight Zone. I will be back to cover a third season, should it get greenlit. I will definitely be covering the third season of Cobra Kai, so stay tuned for that.

Thank you for getting “lost in the Zone” with me each day and stay safe and healthy in these uncertain times!

I May Destroy You Pilot Recap – “Eyes Eyes Eyes Eyes”

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A look into a brave, new series, I May Destroy You takes us on a journey to examine and educate, and it all starts with the pilot. This article starts with…

https://youtu.be/vrUGIQ2ItE8

Rape. It’s a four-lettered word that doesn’t look away from you, so don’t look away from it. It is vile (another four-lettered word). As a cis-gendered male, I can’t in any way comprehend the aftermath of such a despicable act… but, I want to understand what goes through one’s head after the fact. I want to empathize with something so insolvent to one’s soul, they can still have the bravery and gumption to proceed on. This story isn’t so simple, however. None of them are. It isn’t simply about the crime perpetrated, but who it was perpetrated to. This is the story of not just the wound, but rather, more importantly, the wounded. She’s a bad-assed drinking, smoking, drug-taking writer, who lives in the moment, not for it, who can search her purse for fucks to give and always happens to be out of them. Did I mention she’s a proper self-saboteur? Welcome to the pilot of I May Destroy You (HBO) titled “Eyes Eyes Eyes Eyes.”

Ostia, Italy. 3 p.m. A queen kisses her serf goodbye and wishes to see him again. This is not normal, but if your name is Arabella (Michaela Cole) and you’re the number one trending Gen-Z vox on a writing vacation, literary agents may give you a little bit of room to Rome.  It turns out on this particular trip on the proviso, it’s for work and not pleasure, she’s met someone — Biago (Marouane Zotti) and she just isn’t sure what he is in her world. He abhors her smoking cancer cudgels, is thoroughly convinced that all guys want to be with her, and lastly refuses to send her off with a proper fair thee well, IRL.

I suppose for the moment, it matters none, as a welcome is in place for Arabella, compliments of her boy, Simon (Aml Ameen) once she touches down in her native London.

Before any of that can transpire, she needs to touch base with her friends, Ben (Stephen Wight), Terry (Weruche Opia), and most importantly her literary agents, Julian (Adam James) and Francine (Natalie Walter). It turns out her writing vacation was more for pleasure and experience, which was the purpose, but these things don’t come for free. Her fee is a finished second book, and it turns out, she’s only two-thirds done and with a writing summit nipping at her heels, she needs to produce something substantive by 6.00 a.m. the next day.

Jet lagged and brain-fried, Arabella needs to focus and get on her grind. This is where I can completely relate as a writer. Procrasturbation is a thing, and no amount of weed, music, or staring at the scariest thing ever (a blinking cursor) can save you from a deadline. Her friend Kwame (Paapa Essiedu) passes through, and, though he can provide an audience of one for her to workshop her shit, inspiration isn’t there, only perspiration.

With Terry gone for the night, getting beauty rest for an audition promoting a feminist beauty campaign, and with Kwame already on the hunt to smash whatever hot guy is nearby, the night is calling. Shirking work supersedes responsibility, and that is a part of adulthood, right? Putting herself on a one-hour restriction, ‘Bella heads out to the Whisky Love Bar for some comfort and companionship.

It turns out Simon’s girlfriend of eight years, Kat (Lara Rossi) tried to orchestrate this entire meetup in the hopes of a threesome. What, with Simon’s cousin from America, Derae (Ansu Kabia), having his last night in London, this would seem like a hat trick, no?

As it turns out, no. The couple tries to rope in Alissa (Ann Akin) from a dating app, but, though the music’s hot at the bar, the atmosphere betwixt them all isn’t. There’s something not quite so right about this scenario and Alissa makes it known. Forthright with her issues, she magnetizes drama and is co-morbidly anxious and depressed.

Receiving a call from her mother’s caretaker, Alissa splits. The vibe is killed when she entered the room clutching her purse. It’s not her fault, as you will soon find out. Either way, Kat’s libido has gone down and chalks the night up to a loss. She leaves the two to their own devices. Though the vibe left the room, mischief is just around the corner in the form of Arabella.

She happens to catch both Simon and Derae exiting the club and is down for whatever. Remember, she’s now like a 45-minute window. Simon sees her as one of the guys… or does he? After being accosted by a fan of her book, “Chronicles of a Fed Up Millennial,” Arabella gives into the night at the Ego Death Bar.

It turns out it’s Thursday, which means hip-hop karaoke, and the writer smashes that shit like a Queen. Her writing comes from experience and much like beat poets before her, her wit is her life.

After spitting a proper rendition of “Truffle Butter,” ‘Bella sits down to shots of silver tequila, compliments of David (Lewes Reeves). They play the simple game of Eyes Eyes Eyes Eyes, and she’ll be on her own imposed clock in a matter of minutes. Simon insists she stay… and that is when shit goes down.

It helps to mention that the selector chooses “Flowers” (Sunshine Edit) by Sweet Female Attitude flares up because we all have our jams. This happens to be a siren song to Arabella because nothing can help her at this moment. Not interference, not a logical voice and certainly not a Lorrie.

The problem with this is she’s compromised. To wit, she’s only had one shot and soon stumbling out of the club as if she downed an entire bottle. Something’s not keen.

CUT TO: Next Morning – Day

It’s 5.56 in the a.m. and ‘Bella is finishing the last of her lived lines for her deadline. All she needs is a shower and a meeting.

The problem with that whole scenario is the glossy-eyed and Chesire-grinned ‘Bella is now coming off as a weirdo to her agents. They don’t understand the last third of her manuscript and they seem legitimately worried about her.

Oh, not to mention, she seems to have a rivulet of blood coming from her skull. Yeah, that’s normal AF.

Deciding to table the writing for another summit, Arabella’s agents send her home, only she has a buzz in her head. The everyday cacophony of the Londonian streets is both muted and piercing as she’s trying to piece together her steps from the night before. Something is amiss, but she just isn’t understanding it at the moment.

It doesn’t help that she’s also stopped by another fan wanting to faun and take a selfie. Something doesn’t add up.

As in her head, she is grinning and trying to figure shit out, her fan orders her a livery to her home. Ahh, home. The one place you can feel safe. The only thing is once she turns the knob to her bedroom door, the flash of possibly David is thrusting above her. It’s shown but unknown.

Arabella simply looks back on the memory and simply says, “Hmm.”

There you have it. The first episode of Michaela’s show, and I, for one, think it’s harrowing. This is a writer clearly in touch with what’s around her, and she isn’t afraid to call out her demons or the demons surrounding her. She’s Dorothy Parker and Toni Morrison in the same take.

Dramaturgy is the study of how one presents themselves in the theatre of people, be it friends, strangers, or enemies. Arabella has the proscenium covered, acting very professional while having backstage as well, relaxing with friends, but guarding herself which is the border.

I wish we could all be like that.

This series will be trying on me but it well it should be. There is no excuse for sexual abuse. There is a light, and it isn’t going out anytime soon, which could only mean one thing — this is war.

‘Stargirl’ Episode 8 Review: “Shiv Part Two”

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Anjelika Washington at Beth Chapel. Lesa Wilson as Bobbie Burman. Luke Wilson Pat Dugan Stargirl Episode 8
Credit: DC Universe

Courtney gets into some trouble after her epic battle against Shiv, as Cindy gets heat from her father, Dr. Ito. Meanwhile, Yolanda, Beth, and Rick investigate a classmate.

Happy belated 4th Stargirl fans! In this second half of Stargirl, we see “Shiv Part Two,” as Stargirl is on the mend, and the JSA gets proactive in avenging their down-at the-moment team leader. Meanwhile, Pat begins to have doubts about his and Courtney’s secret lives and wants to confess to Barbara.

Brec Bassinger as Courtney Whitmore
Photo Credit: The CW

On The Mend 

On this episode, we see Stargirl take a backseat for a little. As we begin with Pat putting in much effort not only to protect Courtney, but also, maintain her secret identity. He fakes an accident of sorts: totaling his beloved Buick to pretend the two were in an accident.

Thanking him for saving her and keeping their cover, Pat reveals that he wants to investigate Cindy Burman and her family (in part, to protect his daughter). He wants to tell Beth the truth as well, but Courtney begs him not to tell her because she’ll take being Stargirl away from her.

Courtney, meanwhile, wants to spend time resting, after being headstrong going after the ISA last episode. On the positives, the team gets proactive as the other JSA members are mad Stargirl nearly died. Rick, Hourman, says that he wants to avenge her. He wants to figure out who’re Cindy’s parents before they act. Beth has a plan to pin down the Burman family, after Cindy severely beat Stargirl last episode. In the process of their escapade, a photo of Dr. Ito is found and opens the door for more revelations for the new JSA.

Pat also wants a heart-to-heart with Starman’s staff. Though they didn’t get along, we learn that the original Starman, Sylvester, was Star-Spangled kid for years. He begs the staff to protect her.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fAJG9wBQ93E

The Evil

Cindy tells Dr. Ito she found Stargirl, and he’s mad with her headstrong approach; Daughter and father duke it out.

Doctor Ito proves to be incredibly creepy. He’s menacing, evil. and doesn’t stand for half-measures nor Cindy’s headstrong approach, reprimanding her with a passive aggressive threats. Despite this, she’s proved herself. never know if she’ll be accepted.

Jordan Mahkent likewise has a nefarious plot, as Henry, much like his father, has telekinetic powers too. We also meet Bobbie Burman, Cindy’s mom, whose identity is unknown by Doctor Mid-Nite.

Courtney is bored, and Cindy visits her. She’s actually apologetic and then rather chill, realizing they’re similar with their dads and such. There’s a small glimmer of bonding, shortly before realizing that the two know who each other are! As Cindy reveals: she knows Courtney is Stargirl.

It’s a tense moment that builds most of the tension in this episode.

There’s this very intriguing bout, in almost the back end of the second-half of Stargirl vs. Shiv. We see the girls duke it out yet again in a surprising fight I wasn’t expecting. This time, we also get Henry King Jr. thrown into the mix, whose own abilities as Brainwave begin to slightly manifest, in a three-way struggle I can only describe… as the scene between Emperor Palpatine, Mace Windu, and Anakin.

 

The Take

A fun resolution that sets up the stakes for more, this episode of Stargirl was a fun sequel that sets up for the future.

 

 

 

 

‘The Twilight Zone’ Season 2 Episode 9 Review: “Try, Try”

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"Try, Try" -- Pictured (l-r): Topher Grace as Mark; Kylie Bunbury as Claudia of the CBS All Access series THE TWILIGHT ZONE. Photo Cr: Dean Buscher/CBS 2020 CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

In a world of spoilers, days come and go, sometimes blending into each other. In episode 9 of the second season of The Twilight Zone, “Try, Try,”what if you actually repeated the same day?

THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 2 Episodes:

Episode 1 – “Meet Me in the Middle”

Episode 2 – “Downtime”

Episode 3 – “The Who of You”

Episode 4 – “Ovation”

Episode 5 – Among the Untrodden

Episode 6 – “8”

Episode 7 – “A Human Face”

Episode 8 – “A Small Town”

Episode 9 – “Try, Try”
Available on CBS All Access
GRADE: B-

Let’s just get this out of the way, it’s like watching Groundhog Day…if it were hosted like a CNN interview and limited to one location. “Try, Try” is the penultimate episode of the second season of Jordan Peele‘s The Twilight Zone, and, if you ever wanted to watch two people debate on the human psyche and the philosophy behind why human beings do what they do on a daily basis, then, this episode is for you.

Kylie Bunbury (TV’s Pitch and Under the Dome) stars here as Claudia, a woman that is at a local museum to study the new exhibit on masks. As she’s talking into her smartphone’s voice recorder app, she is seemingly almost hit by a passing truck but saved, in the nick of time, by Marc (Topher Grace of TV’s That 70’s Show), a kind passerby also at the museum to see the exhibit. Marc pays for Claudia’s admission, and the two bump into one another one more time.

From here, Marc practically finishes the things Claudia is about to tell him and, in an almost psychic manner, tells Claudia about his likes and dislikes as it pertains to art, history, and philosophy — all which accurately align with Claudia’s viewpoints and opinions. However, by the time Marc catches a water bottle thrown their direction like a shortshop catching a line drive, Claudia begins to suspect something is a bit off about Marc.

After Marc’s behavior begins to resemble that of an out-of-control child (he begins lifting up artifacts and screwing around with them, using a boat oar to “play guitar” and whipping a thorned weapon around while wearing a tribal mask), Marc begins telling Claudia the truth: he’s relived this day over and over again for at least a few years, maybe more. He can do pretty much anything he wants and still wake up with the slate wiped clean. In all that time he’s spent repeating the same day, there’s been one thing Marc has wanted: Claudia. He’s in love with her. And today is the closest he’s ever come to actually finally getting her.

“Try, Try” — Pictured Jordan Peele as The Narrator of the CBS All Access series THE TWILIGHT ZONE. Photo Cr: CBS 2020 CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

The issue is that Claudia feels taken advantage of. Finally buying Marc’s story, she turns the tables on him: even though he’s obviously put in the work, “she” hasn’t actually been there. It’s been Marc attempting to “cheat” to get what he wants by using trial-and-error to clear the path to her. Claudia isn’t comfortable with any of what Marc has done in the past — especially when he becomes malevolent and menacing to her when she shuns his advances.

When I first saw this episode, I wasn’t sold by it. After the second viewing and re-examination of it, I find it to be more clever than I initially thought. Yes, we’ve already explored the whole “time loop” concept but, thankfully, the episode doesn’t give us the same day over and over. It relies heavily on the performances of Topher Grace and Kylie Bunbury, as they hash things out and have a fairly deep conversation over the the concept of time and what Marc has been through and experienced that Claudia has not up until this point.

Grace is great at playing a rational human being while being appropriately chilling and transforming into a believable monster when the time calls for it. Marc is a man that’s lost his mind — but there’s a case to be made here that Marc is already a misogynist and that running through the same day just magnified that side of himself. Bunbury does a fantastic job at selling Kylie’s fear of Marc’s psychosis and plays a strong woman, who reminds Marc that he isn’t “owed” anything no matter how much of a gentleman he perceives himself to be or how much he’s tried to work his way into Claudia’s good graces. The episode’s pacing is perfect here and gives us a fairly satisfactory ending for both characters — though one might have an issue with how talky it gets as Marc and Claudia pontificate and debate endlessly, until we get an intense but off-beat climax.

“Try, Try” is very much like Groundhog Day, if you took away the 90’s rom-com setting, showcased just one day in the time loop, and made the male lead into a total creeper. It’s certainly one of the more intelligent outings of the second season.

LOST IN THE ZONE

  • THE TWIST (HIGHLIGHT IF YOU WILL): Not much to report. Marc loses his mind and decides that, today, he’s going to be an asshole. Tomorrow, he’ll be a lot nicer. He attempts to hurt Claudia (or possibly murder her) out of anger that she won’t love him in return. After spending the entire time playfully telling Marc that she’ll kick his ass, if he’s not honest with her about his “magic,” Claudia finally DOES beat the shit out of Marc in self-defense after he lunges at her with a sword, something Marc didn’t see coming because he had never actually gotten to know Claudia the way he thought. The cops take Marc away and we skip to the next day. This time, Marc watches Claudia from a distance. The truck that has apparently hit her in the street…misses her, begging the question, “Did the truck ever really hit her before? Or is it something Marc made up so he could get close to Claudia?”
  • It’s hard for me to believe that Marc was able to get away with nearly everything he did in the museum. When you go to historical exhibits, the artifacts that are out in the open are usually alarmed so if anyone attempts to pick them up, you’d have cops running in that direction to stop the robbery.
  • When Claudia tells Marc that she’ll simply move on to the next day without Marc and never see him again, Marc’s reply is chilling: she may move on, but in his reality, he gets the honor of chasing her day after day and she can’t do a single thing about it. It’s as frightening a concept as it is mind-blowing.
  • EASTER EGGS:

‘The 100’ Season 7 Episode 7 Review: “The Queen’s Gambit”

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Echo and Octavia making nice
Echo and Octavia make nice while in captivity image c/o imdb.com

In episode 7, “The Queen’s Gambit,” Emori has plans for peace, Sheidheda has plans for destruction, and Echo and the gang have a change of plans.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ApbH8VACb2E

We start off with Gabriel waking up in a cell on Bardo. He’s dragged out to see Anders, who offers him a job as a cypher. He takes it, almost immediately.

This episode continues the season’s pattern of split storylines – though, with a cast this big, it’s not a surprising strategy. Our focuses are Bardo and Sanctum.

The Bardo storyline involves Gabriel joining the Disciples, as well as Echo, Octavia, Hope, and Diyoza dealing with captivity.

Echo and Octavia bury the hatchet and hug it out. Echo seems to finally make peace with things until she figures out why they haven’t been killed or properly imprisoned. She doubles down on her murderous streak, cuts up her face, and informs their captures she’s ready to join their army. Octavia, shocked, follows suit.

Hope and Diyoza finally get some much-needed mother/daughter bonding time. Given that both are badass warriors, of course, it comes down to fisticuffs. See, this is the part of time-traveling motherhood that no one tells you about – one day you’ll run into your kid, who is much older now, and they will want you to treat them as an adult when you left them as a child. It’s a fun dynamic, and, because Hope is 25, it gives Diyoza the chance to be more of a physical disciplinarian than when Hope was a little girl. Once these two learn what Echo knows, they also agree to fight for the cause.

Looks like all that Disciple training won’t be going to waste, and they’ll be getting more to boot!

Back on Sanctum Emori wants to do for the Nulls what was never done for her (a freakdrena), bring them back into the fold. She’s planning a reunification ceremony, using DNA to reunite the Nulls with the families that abandoned them (hmm…that sounds like it’ll go well). Apparently, it takes all day to plan this because Murphy went in the morning to bring Sheidheda his breakfast and winds up suckered into a day-long chess game. Emori is obviously disappointed, but she perseveres.

Sheid’s playing games, more than just what we’re watching, he purposefully keeps Murphy occupied because he knows the believers won’t follow Kaylee Prime without Daniel Prime’s presence. He’s not wrong, and the ceremony goes to shit when Nelson’s father loudly objects. Maybe Emori could have gotten things back under control, but then Nikki shows up guns a blazing and the Children of Gabriel align with the prison miners – uh oh!

Things aren’t looking good for Emori, Nelson points a gun in her face but weirdly Nikki stops him. She says they need to make demands first, then kill her. It’s very Sheidheda…

Meanwhile, Bardo has one last surprise for us: Clarke and the gang have arrived. They get told the same lie we all have been – Bellamy’s dead. Clarke’s reaction of stunned silence lingers before we switch over to Anders, who goes to visit a very high security area of the Disciple HQ. Here we get to meet William Cadogan (John Pyper-Ferguson), who, as it turns out, was the leader of the doomsday cult that built the bunker back on Earth! Oooo…it’s all starting to come to a head now!

This is a good episode overall. Gives us some backstory on how Echo and Bellamy got together (I mean…they spent 5 years in space…two of the women were in relationships and the other was a lifelong platonic friend, is it really that surprising he’d shack up with Echo???). In any event, it was nice to see Bellamy again!

I feel bad for Emori; she really did want this event to go well, and, though she understood John’s importance as Daniel, I think she believed even without him she could make it work. It’s a shame that, no matter how we envision the future, no matter how many badass ladies we populate it with, a man’s word is still favored over a lady’s. Le sigh.

It’s especially frustrating given how well the ceremony seems to be going until Nelson’s dad ruins things – none of the other people are making a fuss or having a tantrum, but all of the sudden one asshole decries it and everything goes to shit? That’s not really how things work. Even the horrified look on Nelson’s mom’s face, come on…she did see her husband was about to choke their son to death, right? Ug. This would have worked better if other people at the party were having issues.

Also, why does Nikki stop Nelson from killing Emori? My guess is Sheidheda has something to do with it because Nikki – at least from what Hatch said – has a bit of a hair trigger for killing so this is very out of character for her. Granted, killing a Prime before exposing the truth about the new “primes” would cause a revolt of the believers, but I’m pretty sure Nikki’s gang plus the Children of Gabriel have enough weapons to easily kill those idiots. Only the Grounders would be a real obstacle, and, once Sheidheda reveals himself to them…well, that’s game over.

Finally, I’m glad we’re gonna get a glimpse at what the fuck happened on Earth. I figured, since the show is about the future, it would kind of be like the new Spider-Man series, where his origin story is left out just because it’s been done so many times. But, how the Earth goes into nuclear Armageddon can happen in multiple ways, so seeing what this version is like should be enlightening.

I do love that the final season is doing justice to the series as a whole, bringing our story back to the beginning – actually, before the beginning really. That’s what a good final season does. Can’t wait to see the next episode!

‘The Twilight Zone’ Season 2 Episode 8 Review: “A Small Town”

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"A Small Town" -- Pictured: Damon Wayans, Jr. as Jason of the CBS All Access series THE TWILIGHT ZONE. Photo Cr: Dean Buscher/CBS 2020 CBS Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

In a world of spoilers, there is “A Small Town” in episode 8 of the second season of The Twilight Zone. Would you go there and visit? Let’s find out together.

THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 2 Episodes:

Episode 1 – “Meet Me in the Middle”

Episode 2 – “Downtime”

Episode 3 – “The Who of You”

Episode 4 – “Ovation”

Episode 5 – Among the Untrodden

Episode 6 – “8”

Episode 7 – “A Human Face”

Episode 8 – “A Small Town”
Available on CBS All Access
GRADE: B

After invasions of our planet by octopi and aliens and examinations of trust, the price of fame, and what it means to be a friend, the second season lightens up a bit with “A Small Town,” a moral tale about power and how it can corrupt even the best of people. The episode sounds heavy but comes across as a fairly easy-going, gentle parable.

Jason Grant (Damon Wayans Jr. of TV’s Happy Endings and New Girl) is a handyman living in Littleton, a small town that’s slowly falling apart ever since the tragic death of Jason’s wife who used to be the mayor. Her associate, Mayor Conway (David Krumholtz of TV’s Numb3rs and The Plot Against America), has taken over the role and has driven Littleton into the ground. Potholes are everywhere. Trees grow out of control. Buildings are falling apart or need new paint jobs, and businesses are under foreclosure because they can’t afford to stay open.

All while Conway drives around in a beautiful red Corvette with his hot blonde wife and grins like an idiot to the townsfolk.

Worse yet, still stinging from his wife’s death and watching his town crumble around him, Jason has lost hope that Littleton will ever return to its former glory. Still, some of the townsfolk put on a happy face. One of them, Emilio (Andrew Alvarez in his television debut), is a frequent visitor to Jason, makes the best of things by creating exaggerated caricatures, drawings, and murals of Mayor Conway’s many embarrassments. Another is the town’s pastor, Michelle (Paula Newsome of TV’s Barry and Chicago Med), who encourages Jason to move on with his life after he offers to clean out the church’s attic, where he lives. It’s at that point that Jason discovers a scale model replica of the entire town hidden under a blanket.

At first, Jason’s in awe of the detail and is even more impressed when he finds that the town is built on top of some sort of mechanism with wheels and gears, which powers the lights of the town. But it isn’t until he goes to clean the model’s church steeple window that he’s really taken by surprise: when he sprays the glass, it rains outside. To test the theory that what he does to the model affects the town, Jason repaints the model’s town diner — which also repaints the real thing. “Let there be light,” Jason remarks before he fixes the town’s lighting system. But, even as he helps his fellow citizens, they all think that Mayor Conway is the one behind all the improvements. This drives Jason nuts…so, he “pranks” Conway by dropping a rock on his prized Corvette (which is the size of a meteor in the real world) and chases him through town using his pet tarantula. But is it really a “prank” or is it the act of a spiteful, vengeful, corrupt “god”, drunk on his own power?

“A Small Town” on “The Twilight Zone” – CBS All-Access

Yeah, “A Small Town” is the fluff-side of The Twilight Zone. The show has seen plenty of it through the years. That isn’t to say that it’s bad. The episode is actually very good. It doesn’t hammer you over the head with its lesson, favoring a more gentle approach not unlike a parable or a light-hearted sermon. The only issue with the episode is that, like Emilio’s drawings, the characters can be considered caricatures. You can tell who the good guys are just by looking at them. The good guys are casual, relaxed, rational. The bad guys have cartoon billboards, smarm, or long yokel-esque beards. That aside, the performances in this episode are good. The great thing about characters being reduced to caricatures is that everyone’s either giving perfectly understated performances or over-the-top showcases. The episode also has some great visuals, especially when Jason’s altering the town.

The heart of the episode, however, lies with the emotional foundation of Jason being a widower to a wife who cared about her town. It fuels everything going forward. It’s a cheap tactic, but it works even if the episode struggles to tie up all the loose ends it happens to create. The Twilight Zone is about where it was at last year with about half of its episodes finishing well across the finish line. Luckily, “A Small Town” is buoyed by a re-worked gimmick, decent writing, and a lighthearted atmosphere.

LOST IN THE ZONE

  • THE TWIST (HIGHLIGHT IF YOU WANT TO SEE IT): Jason admits to the town that he’s responsible for all the positive changes that have happened within the town. Later, Mayor Conley (with a police escort) arrive at the attic in the church to see what Jason’s doing. They discover the model of the town and attempt to take it from Jason, who gets into a struggle over it. In the struggle, the model is jarred and shaken, causing a massive earthquake, which causes damage to Littleton. After the quake, Jason takes off his gold wedding band and places it on the model, in the street. He goes out to the street to meet with the Pastor Michelle, and the two talk things over. She asks how Littleton will get back on its feet financially. Jason says that he thinks that’s taken care of…and nudges toward a huge gold ring in the road the size of a truck.
  • The model table ends up at a slant after the struggle with Conley. It’s weird that they didn’t do something with that. I know people wouldn’t be able to stand up if the earth was slanted but, as Jason explains, “I don’t think it works anymore,” so perhaps the “God” effect was broken once the table was broken.
  • That tarantula sequence is absolutely as horrifying as it is effective. Once again, it reminds me of the ’85 incarnation of The Twilight Zone. Very cool.
  • Jason sits in the diner, reading a book called “Surviving the Void”. Not really an easter egg, per se, but doing some research, “Surviving the Void” is a phrase often used among people who believe in metaphysics. The “void” is often a “blank slate” from which a dreamer is supposed to work, so that’s quite the appropriate metaphor for this episode.
  • EASTER EGGS:
    • The “Busy Bee Diner” makes another appearance here. That’s been featured throughtout Jordan Peele’s Twilight Zone.
    • Inside the “Busy Bee” is the devil fortune teller machine featured in the classic Zone episode, “Nick of Time.” You’ll recall that it was also at the “Busy Bee” in the 2019 episode, “Replay.”
    • One of the items that Jason clears from the church attic is a suitcase which is the exact same suitcase featured in the classic Zone episode, “Mirror Image.”
    • Jason’s pet tarantula has a sign inside his tank that reads “Mr. Wylie.” This is a reference to the show’s production designer, Michael Wylie.

‘Doom Patrol’ Season 2 Episode 4 Review: “Sex Patrol”

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Left to Right: Matthew Zuk (on-set performer) and Matt Bomer (voice) of Larry Trainor, Riley Shanahan (on-set performer) and Brendan Fraser (voice) as Cliff Steele, and Alan Mingo Jr. as Maura Lee Karupt
Credit: 2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Episode 4 of Doom Patrol Season 2,”Sex Patrol,” is finally here, and it’s party time for Danny! Check out our review and reflection on the episode.

 

Previously on Doom Patrol

 

Doom Patrol Season 2 Episodes 1, 2, and 3

 

S2E4 Review (Spoiler-Free)

Danny the Street, who is now a brick, is now a broken brick. What will the Patrol do to help them be whole again? Well, the Doom Manor gets a welcome visit from the colorful cast of characters that used to live on Danny the Street, called the Dannyzens. The mission: throw a massive party to resuscitate Danny the Brick. Dorothy Spinner (Abigail Shapiro) is tired of being treated as a child and wants to play with the grownups. While festivities commence, Rita Farr (April Bowlby) is still having trouble controlling her powers so she seeks help from Flex Mentallo (Devan Chandler Long) to help unleash her full potential, in an interesting way with some wild results.

Will the Danny party help make Danny whole again?

Is Dorothy ready to “grow up”?

Just how does Rita’s help from Flex turn out?

All these and more answered!

 

Left to Right: Devan Chandler Long as Flex Mentallo, Abigail Shapiro as Dorothy Spinner, Alan Mingo Jr. as Maura Lee Karupt, and Matthew Zuk (on-set performer) and Matt Bomer (voice) as Larry Trainor
2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

The Cast

Doom Patrol continues to showcase one of the best ensemble casts on TV right now. Everyone consistently delivers solid performances and makes every scene compelling and entertaining to watch.

Abigail Shapiro is solidifying her place as the star of the season, shining with her acting ability and range. In this episode, she is given the opportunity to sing, and we get to see more of her theatrical and musical talent. Whether she is surrounded by a crowd of people or isolated alone in her bedroom, Shapiro is an absolute treat to watch.

Due to the return of the Dannyzens, we get to enjoy the return of Devan Chandler Long as Flex Mentallo and Alan Mingo Jr. as Maura Lee Karupt. Long is the focus of the B plot, along with April Bowlby, and the two play off each other so well: Bowlby taking charge and Mentallo, innocent and sincere, doing his best. Mingo Jr. puts in another inspiring performance, with a rallying heartfelt speech to kick off the episode and providing his usual guidance throughout. So happy we get another episode to enjoy the Dannyzens again

As always, Diane Guerrero keeps putting in the work when it comes to Jane and her multiple personalities. Watching the show, it could seem easy for viewers to take for granted how much skill it takes for Guerrero to nail down the different personalities with such seamless transitions. She probably shows the most acting range on a consistent basis and is required to shift gears the most. Major props to her.

Finally, I want to shout out Brendan Fraser and Riley Shanahan for this episode. As I’ve said many times, this show has revived Brendan Fraser, and Shanahan helps round out the character of Cliff Steele. In this episode, their combined efforts are so much fun to watch. We get to deal with the aftermath of his trip to Florida while watching Cliff cut loose. So much fun.

 

Diane Guerrero as Scarlet Harlot singing to a party guest.
2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

The Vision

This episode is bonkers. Aside from some well-placed flashbacks, the episode plays out in Doom Manor, which provides an comfortable, insulated feeling for Danny’s (and everyone else’s) growth. The different rooms of the Manor give us different atmospheres and tones that work for what the scene is driving towards.

The main area for the party is fun, lively, and all-encompassing. This keeps in spirit of what Danny represents, which is inclusion and loving oneself. While the energy is high and positivity is all around to celebrate Danny, we’re taken to other parts of the manor, as the Doom Patrol members don’t always seem to fit on the dance floor. Other moments for character growth, especially Rita, take place in rooms away from the party. Rita brings Flex into her bedroom, and that’s where the exploration into her mental block occurs. This is a recurring theme to the episode, in order for the Doom Patrol characters to be truly vulnerable, they have to leave the party and isolate. It’s a stark comparison to the Dannyzens and Dorothy, really adding weight to those moments.

The story then doubles down. Man, I can’t go into detail without spoiling the third act of the episode. I will just say again, it is insane. This is another example about how this show can give you emotional highs and lows, which are accompanied by insane moments, where you find yourself saying what the fuck is going on. Of course, it’s amazing. Eric Dietel and Tanya Steele really do a fantastic job finding that classic Doom Patrol balance. I can confidently say that this writer’s room is one of the most talented collection of artists working now in TV.

One thing I really want to bring to attention is the power of this show’s writing, which shines the most in Danny themselves. Usually, bringing characters to life on screen is a partnership of excellent writing executed by excellent acting. When it comes to Danny, whether street or brick, the writers of Doom Patrol do a phenomenal job of presenting a strong, unique voice. This was true in Season 1 and continues to be true in this episode. Writing Danny’s dialogue prompts the right tone and expression, and it really needs to praised.

 

 

Left to Right: April Bowlby as Rita Farr and Devan Chander Long as Flex Mentallo
2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

Takeaway

Love, love, love, love, love, love, love. Is that a solid enough takeway? Seriously though, this show continues to produce quality. Where episodes 1, 2, and 3 played like a movie, episode 4 stands out and can be recorded in the books as another iconic Doom Patrol episode. It also gives us another heartwarming piece of positivity and love, which we all desperately need in times like these.

 

Left to Right: Kiss, Matthew Zuk (on-set performer) and Matt Bomer (voice) as Larry Trainor, Timothy Dalton as Dr. Niles Caulder, Torture, Alan Mingo Jr. as Maura Lee Karupt, Joivan Wade as Cyborg, and Riley Shanahan (on-set perfomer) and Brendan Fraser as Cliff Steele.
2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

 

Reflection (SPOILERS)

Episode 4, “Sex Patrol,” cannot be placed into one box, one category, or one genre. A celebration of Danny and what they represent, “Sex Patrol” accomplishes a lot and balances a lot of emotions. There are times when we’re having fun, partying, indulging in all the love of others and ourselves, and then there are times when we’re taking a deep look at ourselves, trying to understand what is driving us or stopping us from moving forward.

The celebration of Danny, the party meant to bring them back to life, acts as a positive, supportive environment. This is, initially, meant for Danny themselves, but it really benefits Dorothy the most. The episode opens up to a flashback of Dorothy’s time, living on Danny. She is sharing a pleasant moment with her father, one of the precious times they have together when he comes to visit. Eventually, like always, he has to leave. This devastates her because Dorothy is all alone. Not only does she live on Danny, but she lives in the underground of Danny. While the other Dannyzens are enjoying life and partying, Dorothy is alone in her quarters, hidden from the world. She isn’t allowed to socialize with the Dannyzens or anyone, which Niles confirms over and over again is for her benefit, but, in being the overprotective parent, he is making Dorothy a prisoner. Even Danny realizes this and calls out Niles for his lack of involvement.

Dorothy, having lived on Danny for nearly a century, has a close connection to Danny. In fact, her song at the party and love for Danny (also her guilt for breaking the brick) is actually one of the driving factors that leads to restoring Danny’s heart and pushing the party in the right direction. As the Danny revival party goes into the night, Niles tells Dorothy she has to go to sleep because it’s her bedtime. Dorothy complies, at first, but, at the behest of one of her imaginary friends, Candlemaker, she goes down to enjoy the party. Sure, there are things she probably shouldn’t be seeing, but she is able to confront her situation. She is always been obedient to her father, but now she is challenging his opinions and judgment. In taking these necessary steps, Dorothy is challenging her experience and perspective. This push to leave her comfort zone (listening to her father) is an essential step to her growth and becoming the adult she needs to be eventually be.

This growth, of course, comes with heartache and pain. Growing isn’t always an easy and fun process. In a heart-wrenching moment, she asks Danny if they were a friends to her or just a prison for her to stay in. Danny answers the best way they possibly can “Oh Dorothy, I wish I could say I was only your friend.”

(In my best Cliff voice) Chief, you fucking bastard.

This really highlights what I believe is the theme of the episode: losing your childhood innocence to move forward. The positive loss of this childlike innocence is realizing that you need to progress and continue. Growth cannot be achieved by being stagnant. Dorothy can’t grow, sleeping in her room or stuck on Danny; she had to go back into the party and make the mistakes or the discoveries herself. Sure, what she finds out destroys her, but she would be stuck if she didn’t find out the truth, which is the second time she’s had to discover it on her own this season. We see this also represented in her imaginary friends. Herschel the spider is one of the friends that wants to protect her as if she is a vulnerable child, to keep her happy and guarded. Candlemaker refers to him and other friends as her child friends, kid friends. Candlemaker, the most sinister and evil one, is her “adult” friend, and he is the one that pushes Dorothy to go to the party. This season, Candlemaker has told her terrible things about what’s going on, forcing her to have to confront uncomfortable truths.

We see this loss of innocence throughout the episode. The B plot involving Rita touches upon it. With the help of Flex, Rita wants to achieve orgasm because, to her, it’s the only time she’s felt like she had a clear mind. Because Flex is able to clear his mind and use his mystery muscle powers, Rita wants the same thing to better control her powers. As she is able to live in her climax, she comes across a mental block. It’s revealed that, when she was younger, she was up for a movie role that she was excited to get. Rita’s mom told her the role was hers and that the producer was coming over tonight. Rita wants to put a performance to secure the job, but Rita’s mom tells her that she has other talents and not to worry. She’s told to go to bed, just like Dorothy, and, just like Dorothy, a young Rita sneaks down to see what happens. What young Rita finds is her mother having sex with the producer, bring the revelation that her fame started with a sexual favor. Young Rita is in tears, as her mom makes eye contact while riding this producer on their living room couch. In that moment, Rita lost her innocence, and now she has to lose it again in order to move forward in her life.

The loss that Larry and Cliff experience is an innocence that doesn’t come from their childhood, but their actual children. Larry’s son, Gary, has died, and Larry is not able to reconcile the fact that he was a terrible parent and didn’t care about his family. Cliff is devastated that his attempt to reconnect with his daughter failed immensely. Their perspective of how they were in their past lives, that they were better before Chief interfered, is tainted by their failures. Cliff, having visited his daughter, now doesn’t know what to do with himself. Jane was a kind of surrogate daughter for him, but she is on her own path. He doesn’t know how to struggle with this loss of not being able to connect with his daughter and opens up to the Niles about it, with barely any cursing too. He admits that he can’t get out of his own head. The Chief, as a kind of peace offering of sorts, gives him the robotic version of ecstasy. Cliff is flying, enjoying the distraction. Putting aside his anger towards Niles will be his only chance at getting better. Larry doesn’t have this benefit of a still living child or drugs. Larry doesn’t have the benefit of getting out of his own head, even when he tries to enjoy the Danny party. He has to live with the fact that he wasn’t there for his family, and he can never make it up to Gary. The end of the episode leaves us with the feeling that he may have to sacrifice staying in the Doom Manor, which has been his place of comfort, to move pass this.

Finally, the last bit of loss of innocence is the strangest and most upfront: the Sexmen fighting the Sex Demon and Sex Ghosts. Dude, what a fucking ride. The last time I remember being so joyfully baffled while watching this show was the episode from Season 1 with the man-eating butts. The Sexman were hysterical: a weird hybrid of the X-Men and Ghostbusters. Responding to an extremely high level of sexual energy (Rita’s self-discovery orgasm caught the attention of a terrible Sex Demon), the Sexmen say that they have to keep the situation in check or it could be life-threatening. If the Sex Demon has too much sex(ual energy), it will give birth to a baby. If this baby cries, it will erase every single child from existence. The overexposure to sex will essentially kill the innocence of the world, which is a look at how the aspects of adulthood comes from losing blissful ignorance and destroying the confronts of a child. In this situation, it would destroy the whole world, but, for a lot of the characters, losing their own innocence has destroy their worlds as they know it. This threat to all children causes Jane to focus on task at hand, as she and the other personalities don’t want Kay to be erased. This gives us a scene where Jane literally takes the Sex Demon’s baby and shoves it right back up the Sex Demon. What the hell is this show? (I love it). Because of all this, Jane is able to re-secure her place as the primary.

Doom Patrol is a show of depth, exploration, and all the weird parts in between. Catch next week’s episode, and the whole series thus far, on HBO Max and DC Universe.

‘The Twilight Zone’ Season 2 Episode 7 Review: “A Human Face”

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Tavi Gevinson in "The Twilight Zone" on CBS All-Access.

In a world of spoilers, we come across episode 7 of the second season of The Twilight Zone. The episode is “A Human Face.” How did it do and what grade did it get? Let’s find out together.

THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 2 Episodes:

Episode 1 – “Meet Me in the Middle”

Episode 2 – “Downtime”

Episode 3 – “The Who of You”

Episode 4 – “Ovation”

Episode 5 – Among the Untrodden

Episode 6 – “8”

Episode 7 – “A Human Face”
Available on CBS All Access
GRADE: D-

Last year, an alien by the name of “A. Traveler,” a YouTube/social media sensation, invaded Earth and sent his buddies down to conquer it all while getting the people of a small Alaskan town to trust him. This year, it’s a gelatinous blob thing that does the honors — this time, imitating the long-dead family members we held dear to our hearts and memories. So goes the concept of “A Human Face,” the seventh episode of the second season of Jordan Peele‘s “The Twilight Zone” — an episode that continues to show us that the showrunners still have no real logical idea how aliens might do us in.

Robert (Christopher Meloni of TV’s Law & Order: SVU and Harley Quinn) and Barbara (Jenna Elfman of TV’s Dharma & Greg and Fear the Walking Dead) are a married couple whose daughter has passed away. They have sold their home and are moving somewhere else — the day a solar flare is headed to Earth. Of course, we know that the majority of solar flares are safe (their radio news people tell us this) — but this is The Twilight Zone, so we know that some freaky stuff is about to happen. Robert’s all business. taking apart his late daughter’s bed while Barbara waxes emotional about how “scattered” she was. Robert immediately objects to this, telling his wife that she’s wrong with the same dismissive, obnoxious, condescending tone he used when he explained to her that their “phone runs off the Internet” — and that was just disconnect, so forget using the phone.

As Robert takes his daughter’s old bed apart, a sort of phenomena hits the room, causing the walls and ceiling to temporarily warp slightly and there’s a high-pitched sound. Something has landed in their home. Robert and Barbara hurry downstairs to the their basement where they slowly turn the corner to find an undulating slug-like creature eating part of a wooden table. The creature screams at them, so the couple get the hell out of dodge and head back upstairs to argue and fight over what they’ve just seen, leading them to head back downstairs to check things out. The alien is still in the basement, huddling in a corner like a wounded animal. It lashes out and them — before taking the form of Maggie, their late daughter (Tavi Gevinson of TV’s Neo Yokio and the upcoming reboot of Gossip Girl).

At first, “Maggie” is much like an alien Turing Test. It simply says arbitrary things that Maggie used to say to her friends and parents. Barbara becomes misty-eyed. To her, this is her daughter. However, Robert, (despite his somewhat abusive behavior) rationally attempts to explain to his wife that this thing isn’t Maggie. It’s just saying things Maggie says. That is until “Maggie” and her thoughts begin to evolve past “I want pizza,” and, soon, she’s tugging at her mother’s heart, begging for help.

Christopher Meloni (left) and Jenna Elfman (right) in “The Twilight Zone” on CBS All Access.

“A Human Face” hearkens back to the 1985 incarnation of The Twilight Zone when the producers of that version got cancelled mid-second season and went into syndication for the third season. What you see here is almost an imitation of that show, cheap special effects and all. That isn’t to say that, when the slimy, globby alien jumps at Robert and Barbara, you aren’t frightened (it’s fairly convincing), but the bit where Maggie suddenly stops being human and transforms into a humanoid lifeform made of pure light and energy looks like it’s right out of the 1985 Twilight Zone handbook.

Additionally, what is this supposed to be, exactly? Even if you excuse the fact that Barbara’s character is passive and gullible, it’s really odd that Robert eventually seems to cave to the idea that the alien is his daughter. He spends the entire episode berating his wife for going along with Alien Maggie’s antics, then calls it a con — but then, hey, it’s an alien who looks like my daughter so I better hold her hand? It feels even cheaper knowing that it’s practically blackmail: the alien force “Maggie” represents is gonna conquer the Earth, so we might as well show some love…or else.

I love every incarnation of The Twilight Zone because each of them had standout episodes. I’ve been a fan of this series since my grandmother got me hooked on the show when my local California Bay Area station ran marathons in the summer. It’s hard to get behind “A Human Face”. Robert and Barbara’s foibles aside, the “alien race” here is just dumb as a bag of rocks. Their alien lands and, in front of the people it’s trying to trick, turns into their daughter. Then, it spends the rest of the first half of the episode attempting to convince the two that it is their daughter — before doing a complete 180 and reciting a lengthy monologue along the lines of “Ok, we all know I’m not really her — in fact, I have zero idea why I spent the better part of this episode attempting to trick you — but I know all the things she did and I promise I won’t invade your little planet with the destroyer/invader thing we brought with us if you just promise to be all lovey-dovey and treat me like your dead daughter, m-kay?”

I just can’t back an episode, which makes you do Olympic-level mental gymnastics to try to explain suddenly shifting character motivations. It’s the equivalent to being saddled with a bunch of kids who are all assigned the same project but who have you do all the work because you’re the only one concerned with getting into a good school later in your life.

LOST IN THE ZONE

  • IN CASE YOU DIDN’T CATCH THE TWIST (SWIPE…SIGH): The alien is obviously an alien. So that’s not really a twist. It convinces the parents to be…”better,” I guess. And then they walk hand-in-hand out the door with the new, er, dead daughter alien friend. Also, the entire neighborhood of parents and families are all with aliens pretending to be dead people, so…I guess they’re gonna be living together in harmony? I have no idea…
  • I haven’t seen Jenna Elfman in AGES. It was nice to see her here with the always-great Christopher Meloni, who I first saw in the film, Bound, as the idiot meathead son of a mob boss. He’s been great ever since.
  • Also, Tavi Gevinson is excellent here as the alien. In addition to being a good actress, she’s naturally stunning with eyes that are almost otherworldly, beautifully hypnotic, and serves the character well.
  • EASTER EGGS (lots of them this time):
    • The real estate company selling Robert and Barbara’s home is “Davis Morton Real Estate,” which is a nod to the company that character Arthur Curtis works at in the classic Zone episode, “A World of Difference.”
    • Maggie’s private box of stuff has a doll of the “Clown” from the classic Zone episode, “Five Characters in Search of an Exit.”
    • The moving boxes come from “Dingle Moving,” which is yet another nod to the classic Zone episode, “Mr. Dingle, the Strong.”
    • Among Maggie’s dresser items is one of the little “Invaders” from the classic Zone episode, “The Invaders.”

‘Dirty John: The Betty Broderick Story’ Episode 6: Review

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Dan and Betty duke it out
Credit: USA

This week’s episode showcases the infamous, bitter divorce battle between Betty and Dan. See how this all goes down for Betty in the fight for her livelihood.

The last time we looked at this crazy drama, we saw Betty Broderick being gaslighted and master manipulated. As she goes off into to jail, her ex-husband Dan Broderick reaps the benefits of being a skilled lawyer.

But this episode sees Betty take a new angle with the press, and with this finally: her ability to tell her side of the story.

Thus far, Dan Broderick held secrecy sacred with both his practice and his personal life. Dan’s someone, who never showcases vulnerability. Who never lets people know what he’s up to, thus always seeming impervious to harm in court. This is where Betty has the advantage: she has nothing to hide and nothing to lose so doesn’t mind being an open book, thus beginning a dialogue to a reporter for the San Diego Montgomery.

Yet, all is not well with this new ploy, as the more time that passes, the harder it is for Betty to have a role with her children’s lives. In her daughter’s graduation, she’s reminded of this harsh reality: of being replaced by Linda — whom she reviles — who’s very much there for events in her stead. Betty even goes so far as to take pictures of Linda at the event. Mostly, out of crazy stalker jealousy, yet again, can we blame her?

Because of the incessant gaslighting, cease of communications, and destructive court fees, Betty’s life is a never-ending struggle that was setup by Daniel Broderick.

Left to Right: Amanda Peet as Betty Broderick and Christian Slater as Dan Broderick
Photo Credit: USA Network

To relax and maybe feel appreciated or understood, Betty starts attending HALT, an organization like AA for people who are oppressed. It’s there she meets new friends and finally: a support system. The kinds of allies Betty’s been short of since the horrendous court battles began.

Yet, even these small victories become despoiled by the mastermind that is Dan Broderick, as he elects to have a private court hearing that’s away from friends, press, and allies Betty has gathered. Betty, who’s chosen to forgo a lawyer (they’ve never been much help anyway), is now completely alone in his battleground: the courtroom.

What happens is a kangaroo court where we see Dan dismantle everything Betty’s tried to build up as a defense this time around. Yet, we see her assemble a surprisingly good case on her own. Without a lawyer, Betty is able to hit Dan where it counts: his money, by rightfully calling out some shady dealings of closing out his accounts prior to their divorce (thus, valuating his law firm at a higher value than was initially presented).

And, though things don’t go according to plan, Betty proves to be pretty good at the law, and with the help of the judge, is able to poke holes to Dan’s side of the story. Showcasing that though this isn’t about fault over the divorce (as that court battle is already over), Dan’s not innocent either and definitely manipulated things to his favor. Yet, pride is a bitch, especially for a woman scorned: as Betty’s demands remain increasingly high.

Worse is that, as rumors come to light, even harsher gossip comes around: people thought Betty was a child molester, thanks to Dan’s ability to spin the truth.

After all this fighting, a small settlement is made. Unfortunately, despite Betty’s valiant efforts and ability to poke holes at Dan’s story, the court still grants him to keep custody, though, at least guarantees, he pays spousal support.

For all the right ways of going about it on her own, Betty still loses. The system fails. And Linda, unsurprisingly to the fans, proves to be a huge bitch. A ‘Karen’ as the kids call it these days.

So, what does Betty do?

She buys a gun.

Tune into what happens next week on the USA Network.

 

‘The Twilight Zone’ Season 2 Episode 6 Review: “8″

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Joel McHale in "The Twilight Zone" on CBS All-Access.

In a world of spoilers, episode six of The Twilight Zone on CBS All Access is said and done. How did it go? What grade did it get? Find out.

THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 2 Episodes:

Episode 1 – “Meet Me in the Middle”

Episode 2 – “Downtime”

Episode 3 – “The Who of You”

Episode 4 – “Ovation”

Episode 5 – Among the Untrodden

Episode 6

“8”
Available on CBS All Access
GRADE: D

What if our activities on Earth caused a formerly Beta species to rise up and evolve beyond what humans are capable of? That’s the question the sixth installment of the second season of The Twilight Zone asks its audience — but the episode, inspired and ambitious though it may be, is a failure of execution.

In the middle of the Antarctic, Dr. Orson Rudd (Joel McHale of TV’s Community) and his crew of scientists are studying the reduction of the great ice shelf and what it means for the rest of the world. Even though things look bleak for Rudd, he believes he’s fighting the good fight and he’ll be able to help save lives. His right hand, Channing (Nadia Hilker of TV’s The Walking Dead), is getting cabin fever. His crew mirrors Channing, as they sit around, attempting to pass the time, watching television or getting high to dull an even duller existence.

It isn’t until something living under the ice takes out two of the outpost’s scientists that the monotony is broken.

Then comes the debate: Frisch (Brandon Jay McLaren of TV’s Graceland and Ransom) is baked enough to want to go down into the water to see what they’re dealing with and make a token attempt to retrieve who they’ve lost in whatever shape they might be in. Rudd’s obviously against it. That doesn’t stop it from happening and, soon, the station has a body, which has marks all over their face. The only evidence of their murderer is a slimy trail leading to an occasionally shaking ice cooler. When the crew looks inside, they find what appears to be your standard octopus.

But octopi aren’t hostile, are they? They don’t really attack humans, and they certainly don’t kill them…right? That sparks another debate: what should the crew do with their new sea friend? Frisch and Larry (Tim Armstrong of the band, Rancid) both want to end its life right yesterday — but Chinese scientist Ling (Michelle Ang of TV’s Neighbours, The Tribe) wants to study the thing since this might just be a new species they’ve never seen which, if you’ve seen any film pertaining to corporate scientists studying alien species, is never a good idea.

Lo and behold, our aquatic suspect breaks free of his tank and manages to pick off Larry and Frisch…and I wish I could say that was the end.

“The Twilight Zone”, CBS All Access.

“8” is downright frustrating. On the one hand, the lesson to be learned in this episode is that the species of animal we know to exist (and don’t know exists) are capable of taking us all out. The entire premise is helped along by recalling the claustrophobic dread of films like John Carpenter‘s The Thing and Ridley Scott‘s Alien. The murder scenes are top-notch, given the right amount of care so as to provide pitch-perfect build-up. But, ultimately, you’re just watching the story of a pissed-off, vengeful, murderous octopus that chokes the shit out of people and, sometimes, plucks an eye out. It comes off less like Alien and more like a goofball creature feature The Asylum would pump out and put up on The SyFy Channel.

It especially gets silly when we’re led to believe that the octopus has copied and altered its own DNA to become more intelligent. By using a handheld computer device. Like, it stole one and then worked on copying DNA. I expected so much more from a script, written by former X-Files alumni Glen Morgan.

The funny thing is that I have friends and family, who read these reviews and most of them think the new Twilight Zone is a bunch of crap. “8” is certainly an episode which would prove that theory.

LOST IN THE ZONE

  • OK…TWIST TIME… (HIGHLIGHT IF YOU’RE GONNA): You know that octopus who alters his DNA? He escapes back to the ocean and presumably copies his new DNA to all his friends who rise up and get ready to walk on land so that they can kill all the humans. That’s pretty much it here.
  • There isn’t much else I can say here. It’s a neat episode, but it’s just SO HOKEY I can’t even begin to take it seriously. It’s a damn octopus…it’s a goddamn octopus…
  • EASTER EGGS:

‘Stargirl’ Episode 7 Review: “Shiv Part One”

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Stargirl Episode 7
Credit: DC Universe

Pat trains the new JSA just as the ISA assemble. Meanwhile, homecoming starts as Cindy’s actual history comes to light.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HR8_QJpyMos

This episode is mostly a filler episode of a two-parter that should lead us to the midseason conflict. As homecoming begins, the biggest takeaway is that the villainous ISA seems to be coming closer to the truth behind the JSA, just as the show also reveals the origins of Shiv.

Left to right: Cindy Burman and Courtney Whitmore
Photo Credit: the CW

Who’s The Queen?

The episode begins with Pat dedicating his time to train Courtney and the crew the ins-and-outs of battling the ISA. The other JSA members are excited to finally get some real training in, though it seems Courtney, being naturally gifted, headstrong and ahead of the curb, doesn’t really care. She breezes through and emphasizes Pat’s little contribution isn’t helping and that it’s all things the group already knows… Unfortunately, Courtney is wrong. And it’s evident to us that she’s incredibly headstrong and arrogant, not unlike the original Starman.

Though this episode focuses on introducing yet another character as we see Cindy, who’s thus far been Queen Bee and the mean-spirited bully, in full-action. Cindy quickly showcases she’s not a mean girls parody but, also, a criminal mastermind, who’s been supervising the events of the high school on the student level. It’s a play on tropes as thus far the stereotype, like many cases of this in the series, has proven to be a narrative device where a character leads on less than they actual know. Although, given that the principal Bowen is influenced too, there must be something special about Blue Valley High.

We get to know Cindy quite intimately in this one, seeing her rapport with her father Dr. Ito, the Dragon King. It’s a slightly tragic relationship as Cindy seemingly lost her mother in an experiment early in life, likely because of her nefarious father’s own diabolic science and manipulations. It’s also interesting to see how Dr. Ito’s seemingly chemically conditioned a small army of grunts who’ll likely serve as battle fodder down the line of the series.

Cindy is revealed to also be headstrong yet fully capable. She seeks to take on a leading role not unlike Stargirl. The two women eventually coming to a head in this episode. Cindy is also revealed to be a brilliant chemist, much like her father, and amongst the younger generation of supervillains (as I’m starting to think the reason the older ISA is here simply to be defeated as each conveniently has a villainous child heir), can be their potential leader.

Meanwhile, Barbara takes an opportunity with Jordan for a new role at her job. And Justin the janitor also comes to light in this episode, showcasing a past affiliation with superheroic abilities.

The Dragon King
Photo Credit: the CW

The Take

It’s obvious this episode was mostly filler, leading up to the big finale. It’s interesting to see Cindy become a villain in her own right, as she’s been the primary Queen Bee and bully in the series, who seems to be a tying thread between the high school and superheroic conflicts in the series (aka she’s the series’ main bad girl). I have a feeling that she’s not going to be Courtney’s rival, but rather, Yolanda’s, given their history for competing as class president and the fact she used to date Cindy’s boyfriend, Henry. It’s a competitive rivalry that delivers Stargirl a much earned defeat, as she was getting a tad cocky.

‘The Twilight Zone’ Season 2 Episode 5 Review: “Among the Untrodden”

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Sophia Macy (left) and Abbie Hern (right) in "The Twilight Zone" on CBS All-Access.

Another day, another Season 2 review of The Twilight Zone on CBS All Access. Here is Episode 5, “Among The Untrodden.” How did it do and what did we grade it?

 

THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 2 Episodes:

Episode 1 – “Meet Me in the Middle”

Episode 2 – “Downtime”

Episode 3 – “The Who of You”

Episode 4 – “Ovation”

Episode 5

“Among the Untrodden”
Available on CBS All Access
GRADE: A-

Irene, the new girl at St. Mary’s, moves a bunch of candles, a stack of Zener cards, and texts pertaining to various psychic phenomena into the old girl’s bathroom in the basement. Her intentions are to study and examine her new friend, Madison, who is one of the more popular girls in the school. Irene has an obsession with the unknown — and Madison scored a “0” on all of Irene’s “Are You Psychic?” tests. Madison (who, at first, treats Irene like dirt) reasons that it simply means she’s not psychic…but Irene tells her that, even if she didn’t have psychic powers, you’d still get 4 or 5 right, on average, by way of pure luck. Irene suspects that Madison does have psychic powers. She’s just suppressing them. So goes the set-up for one of the best episodes the new incarnation of The Twilight Zone has given us.

Madison (debuting actress Abbie Hern) is the “leader” of your stereotypical school clique, the type that eats together, studies together, plays together and, of course, picks on the new girl together. “The new girl”, in this case, is Irene (Sophia Macy of The Layover), an unkept, ratty-looking blonde, that defies her appearance by kindly saying hello to her new classmates and tries her best to fit in, which immediately makes her fodder for Madison and her friends. They try to get into her head with a quiz that asks her why she’s here. The only options available for Irene to circle are “Because I’m a slut” and “Because I’m a loser”. Madison throws a pencil at her head when she refuses to answer — and, immediately, that pencil turns to dust…of course, nobody saw it happen…or did they?

Irene attempts to get to Madison, using her failed psychic tests (for the school’s science fair project), and the two inexplicably bond and become friends after Irene not only proves that Madison is gifted (she can, indeed, read minds), but helps her to improve her powers. All Irene wants in return is to be part of Madison’s clique. She just wants to be a “normal high school girl” and drink beer and get high on the school balcony “where nobody ever goes.” So, while Madison begins using her mind-reading powers to pick on other kids and learn the dirty little secrets of the hall monitors, teachers and other school staff, Irene straightens her hair, learns how to properly apply make-up, and, eventually, gets her wish, drinking beers on the roof and getting high with Madison’s friends. Soon, weird things begin happening. Madison is able to conjure items she’s otherwise unable to obtain (which turn to dust when they’re used for their purpose) — and, when Irene seemingly falls off the school roof to her death, Madison is able to revive her just by thinking about it — only to see Irene become more popular than she is.

To say any more would be plain criminal.

Jordan Peele in “The Twilight Zone” on CBS All-Access.

One of the stories The Twilight Zone has been missing from its repertoire is a good coming-of-age story. We’ve been privy to down-on-their-luck actors and comedians, we’ve seen the end of the world about a half dozen times, we’ve seen Rod Serling, himself, return to help a fellow writer out. “Among the Untrodden” teases like it’s the story of a master and pupil reaching the same level and eventually butting heads — but it doesn’t give us that. Even with the beautifully Gothic production design, David Lynchian ambient Trip-Hop, and alternative indie rock, the episode (written by former SNL scribe Heather Anne Campbell, who penned last year’s episode, “Not All Men”) ends up being an incredibly clever tale of two girls who simply want acceptance and happiness.

The two actresses, newcomer Abbie Hern and the relatively new Sophia Macy, are absolutely perfect with a ton of chemistry. Hern portrays Madison as the Alpha Dog, and you find yourself wishing that Irene won’t make it worse by teaching her to bring out her abilities. At one point, Madison warns Irene that she will destroy Irene’s life if all this goes south — and you believe her. Madison derives a perverse pleasure by squashing people she doesn’t like as if they’re insects. But, then…is Madison really the one with powers? Or does Irene know something she doesn’t? Why would she freely teach Madison to be worse than she already is if she wouldn’t be able to control her later? This question grows louder in your head after we witness Madison’s clique turn on Irene, and humiliate her in front of the entire school by posting video of her drunken rantings — causing Irene to scream, shattering all the video screens displaying the videos of her and telepathically dropping all three girls in the clique to the floor like 3rd period Spanish.

The outstanding set design is smoky, haunted noir as the girls wander dark hallways and light candles in the old, run down girl’s bathroom. The music is like a character in and of itself: as Irene readies her study with Madison, “Roads” by Rose of the West plays, signifying the road the two will begin to travel together. When Irene pimp-walks into the lunch room, having mastered reading minds, Kimbra’s “Top of the World” pulses across your speakers. Mrch’s “Impulse” plays as Irene begins acting more and more…well, impulsive, by drinking to the point of excess on school nights.

And all of it culminates in an beautiful ending, which is darkly poetic and moving as the Wordsworth poem it takes its name from.

With its intensity, emotion, slow-burning creepiness, and great acting, “Among the Untrodden” stands as one of the best, if not the best episodes of the brand-new Twilight Zone.

LOST IN THE ZONE

  • THE TWIST (HIGHLIGHT, IF YOU WILL…): I mentioned that the pencil Madison threw turned to dust and vanished after she tossed it at Irene’s head. She seemingly pulled that pencil out of her desk when she had already looked there. She conjured up a key to the balcony — which ALSO turned to dust after being used. Irene speculates that Madison’s “conjuring” powers will give her what she wants — but it won’t ever last and the item will turn to dust after it’s served its purpose. After Irene screams and shatters the video screens and sends all of Madison’s clique to the hospital, Madison accuses Irene of using her as a puppet to humiliate her. Irene, it seems, is the psychic…or is she? Madison lays out her case, but Irene simply says that Madison DOES have powers, and she used them to protect Irene because she cares about people, something that Madison is unable to admit to anyone, including herself. Madison retorts, saying that, when Irene walked in for her first day of school, Madison had wished that Irene was just a normal, everyday girl because even though she had her little clique and did whatever she wanted, Madison simply wanted a friend. Irene grabs her and says that Madison DID get her wish. Irene says she IS there for Madison, that she wants the same thing. Irene says that she is Madison’s friend. Madison tearfully accepts Irene as her new friend. The two embrace…and then Irene freezes in place…and begins to turn to dust. Madison DID get her wish. She had wished for a friend and conjured up Irene, who was able to get inside of Madison’s heart and show her who she truly was. At the end of the episode, Madison is sitting in class with nobody around her. The door opens, and a new girl, a pale, platinum blonde with unkempt hair and a pale complexion walks into the classroom. Madison looks at her and smiles, just slightly…a new friend has arrived.
  • The episode takes its name from the 1798 William Wordsworth poem, “She dwelt among the untrodden ways.” The poem is described as a meditation on love, loss, and the loneliness that follows that loss.
  • We’re halfway through the new season here, and, unless I’m missing some metaphors or the rest of the season will make up for things, not one of these episodes seems to be “preachy” or inspired by current events. Either way, I’m ok with it. This season has been pretty consistent stuff. I’d easily revisit episodes 1, 3, and 5 any day of the week. They’re that good.
  • EASTER EGGS:
    • I just mentioned the Wordsworth poem. It’s written on the chalkboard to the right of Jordan Peele as he’s doing his outro narration for the episode.
    • Irene is getting drunk with Madison’s clique in one of the dorm rooms. The same celebrity magazine with MYNX on the cover that Jasmine was reading in the last episode, “Ovation,” is sitting on the bed.
    • The shattered TV’s piled up on top of one another recalls last year’s “Blurryman” when the writer in that episode wanders by the shop with the shattered TV’s.

‘The Twilight Zone’ Season 2 Episode 4 Review: “Ovation”

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Jurnee Smollett in "The Twilight Zone" on CBS All-Access.

Our daily series of Season 2 reviews of The Twilight Zone on CBS All Access continues with Episode 4, “Ovation.” How did it do and what did we grade it?

 

THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 2 Episodes:

Episode 1 – “Meet Me in the Middle”

Episode 2 – “Downtime”

Episode 3 – “The Who of You”

Episode 4

“Ovation”
Available on CBS All Access
GRADE: D+

I’ve often thought about what would happen if myself or my wife became famous and everyone suddenly knew our names. It’s not because I have a giant ego. It’s because I’ve seen what happens to people who have it all. Would it be a bigger house and a better life for me and my family? Would it be non-stop parties and autograph signings? Would we become sick and tired of the fame? Where would it all end? “Ovation,” the fourth episode of the second season of The Twilight Zone (now on CBS All-Access) serves to look at fame with a modicum of cynicism.

When we’re introduced to singer “Fiji” (the fittingly enigmatic musician Sky Ferreira), we only hear ambient noise, something along the lines of a David Lynch fever dream, raging ever so quietly. Even when she opens her mouth to sing, her voice is muffled. Her director tells her to envision herself “devouring her audience” and tells her to think of who she should “devour” next. When he yells “cut”, it’s nothing but applause from the time she walks off-stage to the time she sits down to relax. She tells her handler that she’s taking a walk, where she meets street busker Jasmine (Jurnee Smollett of True Blood, Friday Night Lights, Birds of Prey: and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn) who sits in the city square, singing her heart out and playing guitar. Jasmine recognizes her — but doesn’t applaud like everyone else does. “What do you want?” Fiji asks Jasmine to which Jasmine says, “I guess I want what you have.” Fiji tosses a strange coin into Jasmine’s guitar case, then walks away while fans crowd her. Fiji looks back, salutes Jasmine, then steps in front of a moving bus, killing herself.

Yes, her fans are devastated — but, there’s nothing to fear! Soon, Jasmine becomes a sensation, having sung at Fiji’s makeshift memorial spot at the city square and everyone heard her. The attendees applauded. And continue to applaud. At first, Jasmine’s blown away by the new-found attention, and she’s approached by “J.J.” (Thomas Lennon of Reno 911) the host and producer of a famous talent show, “Ovation!” It all happens so fast. The suits watching applaud, J.J. applauds, fans applaud, everyone applauds. And all Jasmine can do is smile while her sister (Tawny Newsome) looks on with a mix of surprise and admiration — but never applause. It isn’t until fans begin camping out outside her house to cheer for her that Jasmine senses something is awry — even though her sister tells her that it’s only because she won “Ovation.” But, then, Jasmine botches an appearance on the show…and still gets applause. She runs to visit her sister, who’s operating on a patient, and — wouldn’t you know it — the doctors in the OR applaud her madly. Even the patient on the operating table applauds her!

Jurnee Smollett in “The Twilight Zone” on CBS All-Access.

The best thing I can say is that the performances in this episode are good. Smollett plays the street hustler role well, and you believe she’s a kid from nowhere, making it big. You also believe her when she gets a bit snobby about her newfound fame. It’s also nice to see Thomas Lennon here as J.J., though he doesn’t last long. However, there isn’t much to it, besides the gimmick where Jasmine now possesses a weird, secret coin that makes everyone go nuts over her. Because of that, the episode wears halfway through and feels bloody long. It’s handled in an insanely heavy-handed fashion, and the ending is something you can see from miles out — and even the ending doesn’t make any sense from a logical standpoint or a character standpoint.

At one point, Jasmine decides to throw her Lucky Coin into a nearby lake in order to end all the success she’s been having. Her sister does it for her because she’s almost attached to it. Following this, Jasmine…goes into total seclusion (a cabin in the woods) and loses her ever-loving mind? Why? Over people clapping for her? Was she that traumatized that her world is that bleak and hopeless after…what, a month? She got rid of the coin, so what’s the problem? Why can’t she just go back to playing on the street?

At best, “Ovation” is a somewhat mundane cautionary tale about the price of fame, until it becomes so convoluted, that it almost becomes a bad parody of the show it belongs to. You never quite believe what you’re seeing (even from a satirical standpoint) or the directions any of the characters take. The script (written by Misery Loves Company scribes Emily Chang and Sara Amini — who also gave us the outstanding lead-off episode, “Meet in the Middle”) feels half-baked with a silly, tacked-on twist that comes off like something a emo middle-schooler would write for a short story assignment in order to come across as edgy. “Ovation” is the first dud of the second season.

LOST IN THE ZONE

  • Let’s get the twist out of the way. (HIGHLIGHT TO SEE IT): While in seclusion, Jasmine gets mail. I have no idea how the hell you’d forward your email that fast. Maybe she bought a cabin while being somewhat famous? I have no idea. Anyhow, she gets the mail, which includes a magazine subscription to her favorite music magazine. The first magazine outlines Jasmine’s rise and fall, which irks her a bit. The very next month, a new magazine arrives — only this one features a rising singer named “MYNX.” You can see where this is going. This somehow drives Jasmine insane and leads her to track down and eventually murder MYNX at an event. MYNX turns out to be Jasmine’s sister, who has somehow retrieved the coin she threw into the lake. Jasmine is devastated by what’s happened — and the audience claps and claps and claps to end the show.
  • Jordan Peele doesn’t have Outro Narration for this. He simply picks up the coin, puts it into his coat pocket…then joins the audience in clapping as he walks off-screen. It’s not an unheard of thing for the narrator to do. Serling interacted with his characters once or twice. Honestly, that moment is clever and better than the episode.
  • EASTER EGGS:
    • The director, guiding Fiji through her music video, tells Fiji to “picture an octopus devouring its prey” and to think about “who it wants to devour next”. This is a reference to an episode later this season called “8”.
    • “Ovation” (the show J.J. hosts) is brought to us by “Mr. Dingle’s Ice Cream: ice cream so good, you’ll die for it.” The slogan isn’t really elaborated upon but Mr. Dingle’s Ice Cream truck did appear last season in “Point of Origin” and Mr. Dingle is a reference to the classic Zone episode, “Mr. Dingle, the Strong.”
    • The radio in the OR is by Whipple Technologies which, again, is a nod to the classic Zone episode, “The Brain Center at Whipple’s.”

‘The Twilight Zone’ Season 2 Episode 3 Review: “The Who of You”

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Ethan Embry in "The Twilight Zone" on CBS All-Access

In our daily series of Season 2 reviews of The Twilight Zone on CBS All Access, Episode 3, “The Who of You,” is next. Find out how it did and what grade it got.

 

THE TWILIGHT ZONE Season 2 Episodes:

Episode 1 – “Meet Me in the Middle”

Episode 2 – “Downtime”

Episode 3
“The Who of You”
Available on CBS All Access
GRADE: B

“You know what I think? I think that we’re all in our private traps, clamped in them, and none of us can ever get out. We scratch and we claw, but only at the air, only at each other, and for all of it, we never budge an inch.”

Anthony Perkins, Psycho

And, in this iteration of the second season of The Twilight Zone (now airing on CBS All Access), nobody feels more trapped than Harry Pine, an out-of-work actor struggling for a break so he can escape. Then, he finally does — just not in the way he expects. The third episode of the sophomore season of The Twilight Zone gives a glimpse of a desperate man, pushed to the brink by life, running away from a small squad of cops and a bag full of stolen money, so unable to change the scenery around him, he might as well be on a treadmill — and it’s the second solid offering we’ve seen from the new season.

It isn’t like Harry (Ethan Embry of the 90’s teen comedy Can’t Hardly Wait and TV’s Grace and Frankie) wanted to go this route. He’s not an objectionable guy. He’s kind, taking the time to tell his casting director that they’ve been acquainted before the director denies knowing him and impatiently orders him to start reading lines. He’s just down on his luck. His more successful wife waits for him at home, but he’s jealous of her, afraid to open himself up to her for that very reason and because the resulting fight will just be a repeat of all the other times Harry’s come home without work.

Of course, the power going out serves to light that match anyhow, and the revelation that Harry didn’t pay the power bill turns flare-up into an inferno in seconds. Finally, pushed to the brink, Harry decides to rob a bank, which, predictably, turns into a shit-show before Harry looks the bank teller handling his stolen money-to-be…and somehow trades bodies with her. Both Harry and the teller look confused, but Harry isn’t going to question it — at least not right now. As Jill, he grabs the money and runs.

And the chase begins. Soon, the police are hot on the money’s trail — but how do you catch a man that can inhabit the body of one of the cops chasing him? Of a child? Of anyone at all?

I first saw Ethan Embry in 1998’s Can’t Hardly Wait. In the film, he was a geeky teen type, but he had appeal. He was every guy. He was just…that guy. Admittedly, that was the last time I saw him. Yeah, I’d see him pop up every now and then (ABC’s Dragnet was where I last saw him), but I was pleasantly surprised to see him in this episode. The irony here is mind-bending: he’s an actor playing an actor, who the cops suspect is acting, when the various people he inhabits show up inside his head, one after the next. Embry not only plays Harry Pine, he plays everyone Harry comes in contact with. A concept like this could come off as hokey, depending on the actor, but, with Embry, it’s another brilliant performance this show slices and serves to you on a platter.

Daniel Sunjata (Rescue Me, Graceland) is on the lawful side of things here as Detective Reece, the cop assigned to find Harry. Sunjata plays Reece as the “cop who’s seen it all” but whose mind is opened up to more supernatural possibilities when Harry’s victims file into Harry’s body and speak to Reece through him. The issue, however, is that there isn’t so much for Sunjata to do here but “be a cop” so it’s a series of interrogation scenes he’s relegated to — but he does it well, and that’s what counts.

Billy Porter in “The Twilight Zone” on CBS All Access

Rounding out the cast are Mel Rodriguez (Briarpatch, The Last Man on Earth) as one of the cops who initially chases Harry (and who knows Reece) and the great Billy Porter (the host of so many red carpet shows as well as TV’s Pose) as Keith, a sleazy Tarot Card reader that knows he’s not a psychic and knows that he’s scamming his customers but serves a more philosophical purpose: explaining that Harry’s purpose in life isn’t comprised of inhabiting people and acting like them. I wish there was more of Porter in this episode. He was brilliant.

The one thing I can’t totally get behind is the ending. Don’t get me wrong, it’s a hell of a twist but is it as brutal as the one in “Meet in the Middle?” That’s up for debate. Harry’s the type that wants to skip the hard work and go right to the type of success he doesn’t honestly deserve — so why did the writers feel the need to give a somewhat happy ending to Harry after all the sins he committed?

Still, I really liked “The Who of You.”.The encounter between Harry and Keith in the Tarot shop alone is worth the entire episode as is the climax involving a child whose body Harry has inhabited while the child (in Harry’s body) looks at himself, scared out of his mind while a cop points a gun and demands that Harry jump back into his own body. It sounds silly but it isn’t. “The Who of You” is melodrama but it’s melodrama with talent.

LOST IN THE ZONE

  • All right…let’s talk about the twist (HIGHLIGHT TO REVEAL): So, basically, Harry’s bag of stolen money is inside the Tarot Card shop, and Harry’s been locked out. Harry ends up inside the body of a child because the apartment the kid lives in is above the Tarot Card shop, which has a skylight. After his mom puts him to bed, Harry (as the kid) breaks into the shop, through the skylight, and tries to find his money — only to run into Detective Reece and the kid (who is inside of Harry’s body). There’s some intense verbal fencing. Harry decides to jump into the body of Reece instead. The kid, back in his own body, freaks out. Reece and Harry (in opposite bodies) argue about things before Reece (in Harry’s body) gets his gun back. The cops break into the Tarot Card shop and yell at “Harry” to put the gun down. “Harry” tries to tell them that he’s Reece — but the cops don’t know that and gun down the body of Harry anyhow. Reece is dead — leaving Harry trapped in Reece’s body. Harry goes back to his apartment (in Reece’s body) with the intention of telling his own wife that “Harry is dead” — but it turns out that Harry’s wife recognizes Reece before he even steps into the apartment…because the two have been seeing each other behind Harry’s back this whole time, which is revealed when Harry’s wife tells “Reece” that “Harry is gone” and how they should “be together now”. After this, “Reece” becomes an actor and is more successful.
  • This is Ethan Embry’s second trip through The Twilight Zone. His first trip was in the 2002 UPN incarnation when he starred in the episode, “Time Lapse.”
  • Several Easter Eggs here:
    • As “Harry” is escaping the bank as “Officer Luntz,” he passes by two girls. They’re wearing patches on their shirts for “St. Mary’s Boarding School”…which will become more relevant to this universe in the episode “Among the Untrodden”.
    • Next to the two girls, somebody has left a cardboard sign with a drawing of a clock on it and the slogan “TIME ENOUGH AT LAST” — which is a nod to the classic Zone episode “Time Enough At Last.”
    • Something I have been noticing in nearly every episode is that nearly every single living area in some of these characters’ “houses” and “apartments” have the same twin windows. In fact, the living room layout of Harry and Morena’s apartment is the exact same as Samir and Rena’s apartment in the first season episode, “The Comedian.”
    • Also, inside the apartment, sitting on a shelf, is a rotary phone which bears a keen resemblance to the toy phone from the classic Zone episode, “Long Distance Call.”
    • The coffee the barista kid is working on has a swirl pattern which resembles the twisting swirl pattern we’ve seen in the classic Zone intros.
    • The bus stop “Harry” sits in (while inside the body of Officer Luntz) is on Franklin Street. It’s been slightly remodeled. It was last seen in the first season episode, “The Comedian,” when it was taped up by the police after it had been plowed through by a drunk driver.

‘The Twilight Zone’ Season 2 Episode 2 Review: “Downtime”

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Morena Baccarin as "Michelle Weaver" in "The Twilight Zone", now airing on CBS All-Access.

Season 2 of The Twilight Zone continues with episode 2, “Downtime,” on CBS All Access. Find out how it did and what grade it got.


THE TWILIGHT ZONE
Season 2, Episode 2
“Downtime”
Available on CBS All Access
GRADE: C

What if the world around you wasn’t real? What if everything you knew — your spouse, your kids, your relatives, your job, everything you owned, knew, and loved — was a complete lie? Stop me if you’ve heard this one. Science-fiction classics such as (Lilly and Lana) The Wachowskis’ The Matrix, Alex ProyasDark City, Alejandro Amenábar‘s Abre Los Ojos (Open Your Eyes), and David Cronenberg‘s Existenz have all covered this concept. Frustratingly, “Downtime” (the 2nd episode of the new season of The Twilight Zone currently airing on CBS All Access) has the potential to join that list but botches the execution.

Morena Baccarin (Firefly, The Flash) plays Michelle Weaver, a ruthless, yet driven go-getter that works for the Farringham Hotel in an undisclosed city. She’s vying for the position of hotel manager — and gets it after telling a fairly objectionable joke to her boss before he promotes her. Some of the staff waits outside to applaud her, and she wanders the halls, looking sharp and confident, like a shark. Everything is perfect. She deals with the most angry hotel customer with patient precision, smooth as the blade of a chef’s knife.

But, then, a curious thing happens while she takes a break at a local coffee shop: her ears ring, her heart pounds, and, when she comes to, she walks outside to see the population of the city, staring up an impossibly large red orb with a yellow “eye” floating in the sky. This is “downtime,” she’s told by various citizens of the city — before those citizens also freeze and look up at orb with wonder, mouth agape. Even her husband tells her it’s “downtime” before wandering outside and freezing up while looking at the sky, leaving Michelle in a waking nightmare and wondering if anything will ever return to normal.

We learn (fairly early) that Michelle and her entire world aren’t real. It’s part of an alternate world created by a sleep-aid system called “Sleepaway,” which allows the sleeper to have lucid dreams where they’re successful and happy. Unfortunately for Michelle, her human counterpart (the one dreaming her up in the real world) has just had a major health issue that has incapacitated them to the point where Michelle is stuck while the customer service avatars attempt to console and help Michelle through the problem. Ultimately, Michelle is given the choice between “logging out” or staying in her fake “world” for good without the aid of her human counterpart — provided she never “breaks character”.

Jordan Peele in “The Twilight Zone” on CBS All Access.

Imagine being told that your options are to continue to live a life you know is synthetic or stepping out of it and choosing to no longer exist. What would you do in a situation like that? It’s interesting, to say the least.

Jordan Peele, the producer/narrator of this series and the writer/director behind such modern classics as Get Out and Us, finally contributes an episode of the series he holds dear (he wrote it but did not direct it), and that’s something to celebrate being that Get Out and Us feel like extended Twilight Zone episodes.

First and foremost, Morena Baccarin’s is excellent as Michelle. To see someone with all their wits about them suddenly and completely break down in the face of extraordinary circumstances is something to behold and she pulls it off nicely.

The issue is with Peele’s script which, while giving us something to think about, also gives us a story that feels as though it needs more time to “cook”. The overall concept is unbeatable but, at 30 minutes (I cannot believe I’m about to say this), this is one episode which needed to be longer, especially as it pertains to Michelle as a “character”, The whole story is ultimately damaged, first, by the decision to divulge the secret of Michelle and her world ten minutes in and, second, by skipping all the suspense necessary for a story like this to thrive, while wrapping everything up quickly with a nice happy bow.

Yes, Michelle runs and hides from the people that are ultimately attempting to come to her aid, but it doesn’t feel like she’s in any danger. All of this results in Peele explaining to us that Michelle is now a different — and more content — person than when she started — except her “change” is so sudden. It seemingly runs contrary to what Peele’s telling us.

And, so, “Downtime” is what it is: a decent sci-fi offering with an underdone script — though, knowing what he’s capable of, I would love to see Peele expand upon what he gave us here in the future.

LOST IN THE ZONE

  • SPOILERS HERE (whatever spoilers may be left — but higlight anyhow) One of the plot points I wanted to mention involved Michelle’s human counterpart (who we never see but who is mentioned by Sleepaway’s “tech support” people) and his wife, Ellen (played by Serinda Swan of TV’s Graceland and Coroner). There’s a great scene where Ellen attempts to speak to Michelle like she’s her husband, “Phineas.” Michelle, of course, doesn’t know who Phineas is (she’s a damn avatar!) but agrees to go on a walk with Ellen where they end up sharing a quick kiss. Ellen swears that her husband is somewhere inside of Michelle, to which Michelle objects. They split but we see Ellen again at the end inside of the hotel that Michelle runs. I’m assuming that Ellen is now a “Sleepaway” customer and she’s entered the world Michelle lives in. She doesn’t seem to recognize Michelle at all, but Michelle obviously knows her and she smiles in the most creepy manner. Since Michelle doesn’t have a human counterpart in the real world, is she a rogue function? Can she do whatever she wants at this point? Maybe I’m overthinking this…
  • I cannot take that orb in the sky seriously. It looks like a giant Pokemon ball, and I keep waiting for Pikachu to show up.
  • It was nice to see comedian/actor Tony Hale (as Sleepaway’s customer service guy, “Tom”) who played Buster Bluth in Arrested Development, the hilariously dweeby “Gary” in HBO’s Veep and who also provided the voice of “Forky” in Toy Story 4 (which also featured Jordan Peele) and Disney’s ongoing animated series Forky Asks a Question on Disney+.
  • EASTER EGGS:
    • Whipple (of the classic Twilight Zone episode, “The Brain Center at Whipple’s”) is the creator of “Sleepaway”. You’ll remember that most of the technology featured last season came courtesy of Whipple as well.
    • The cafe where Michelle takes her break is called “Cafe Du Coeur” which is featured in the visual novel, “Repeat”. That story is also about a seemingly normal city and school under the control of a supernatural force. Whether this was intentional or coincidence (“Repeat” seems so obscure and means nothing within the “Zone” universe) is to be debated.
    • The “Busy Bee Diner” returns in this episode. It was all over Season 1.
    • Michelle runs past a 1956 Ford Farlaine Club Sedan, the same car that caused its driver some problems in the classic Zone episode “You Drive”.
    • There’s a sign in the city that reads “Maple Street”, a nod to the classic Zone episode, “The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street”.

‘The 100’ Season 7 Episode 6 Review: “Nakara”

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fun in cave
Clarke and the gang go spelunking! image c/o imdb.com

In episode 6, “Nakara,” Indra does what we’ve been assuming she would, Clarke and crew are not having fun on the Ice Planet, and we finally learn Diyoza’s fate.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OkyXpeEfPFI

 

We’ve got three storylines vying for attention, with the first being Diyoza’s.

Is it ironic that Diyoza, an alleged war criminal, has her time lapse of events scored by Interpol? Definitely fitting, I’d say. Either way, we get to see our navy seal in action, and she does not disappoint.

Unlike Octavia, who hasn’t had the kind of endurance training designed for one of the most elite military branches, Diyoza knows how to bide her time and make calculated moves. She pays close attention to her surroundings, which allows her to escape capture a lot longer than Octavia does.

However, she also almost kills Hope in her desperation to avoid being recaptured. Luckily, Hope’s helmet saves her life and we get to see a mother and daughter long-awaited reunion. Octavia gets in on the hug, and Diyoza gets filled in on what happened to Bellamy – that he’s “dead,” at least as far as Octavia, Hope, and Gabriel know.

It’s a bummer, but then Octavia sees Levitt – he got demoted to a janitorial position – and he advises her to go through the oxygen garden and escape to the surface. Gabriel thinks that plan is crazy, especially when some random dude tells them the surface is uninhabitable, but he’s outvoted since Octavia trusts Levitt. It looks like he’ll go along quietly, until Echo kills the random dude, and he betrays the group in favor of a more conservative approach (it doesn’t help that Echo’s been killing everyone she comes across and he’s certainly not a fan).

Back on Sanctum, Indra is not having a good day. A cache of Wonkru’s weapons have been stolen, and Russell is getting more blatant in his defiance of their unspoken stalemate. He learns about the weapons, and when Nelson (Lee Majdoub) – leader of the Children of Gabriel – comes a calling intent on killing him for the good of Sanctum, he takes charge of the situation managing to recruit Nelson to his cause.

Indra suspects the prison miners stole the guns, but, since Wonkru broke up, she doesn’t exactly have the means to take them back. She tries to talk to Nikki, which goes about as expected, and settles on the reluctant choice to rope Madi back into her commander position.

Jackson (Sachin Sahel) (Abby’s protégé), Murphy, and Emori are all in agreement that dragging Madi back in as commander is a terrible idea. Indra doesn’t see any other choice, but they all do: Indra should be commander! I mean, why this hasn’t occurred to anyone else at this point is beyond me, even Clarke should have thought of this when they realized Madi was out. Guess Clarke is just so used to taking on burdens…or maybe she secretly likes the power – wouldn’t that be a cool twist? The answer is yes, but I doubt that’s likely.

So, Indra finally steps up. She battles the leader of Sangedakru, Knight (Xavier de Guzman), after announcing she will be taking charge of shit from here on out. No, she doesn’t carry the Flame, there are no more commanders, but Wonkru isn’t breaking up and she is their leader. With Knight defeated, she lays the task of getting the guns back from Nikki’s people as his responsibility then leaves. Bam!

Clarke Griffin in a cave with a flashlight.
Photo Credit: CW

Over on Ice Planet (called Nakara), Clarke and the others need to get back to Sanctum. Raven’s got the deus ex machina helmet so she’s super self-assured that, as long as they follow the computer read-out, they’ll reach the stone in no time. Here, follow me into this innocuous looking cave!

Later, we’ll discover this is actually a living creature that is gradually digesting them…so…ew. Raven has a crisis of conscience when she realizes how much danger they are in, and when her trail to the stone leads to a dead end. She really doesn’t want anymore bodies on her hands, but Clarke is with her and gives her a patented Clarke pep talk about having hope and not feeling bad for killing people to save other people. Weirdly, it works, though that could be due to the fact that everyone in this storyline makes it out alive.

So there’s some stuff to unpack here:

Dr. Eric Jackson has been a series player since the start; he’s one of the many folks I couldn’t get to in my initial series overview (it’s a huge ensemble cast). Jackson is now Sanctum’s default doctor since Abigail died, and he’s also one of the queer characters still living (along with his partner Nathan Miller, who is off with Clarke). I like Jackson as a character; this series has often tested his ability to balance between his duties as a doctor – do no harm – and his human response to the wrongs he and his people have suffered – get revenge! He offers a great perspective of someone that isn’t in a position of supreme power and responsibility, like Clarke or Octavia, but he exists among the side characters, making sure the wheels keep turning even if he isn’t on-screen. Granted, his position does require immense responsibility, but, in the wake of Abby’s death, he hasn’t been featured nearly as much. This could be because one: he isn’t Clarke’s mother and two: Abby only just died at the end of last season. It would have been interesting to see if, given more seasons, his appearances on-screen would have increased.

There’s Clarke’s speech to Raven, which comes off as simplistic. Raven even counters with how the people they killed had people they loved too. I’m giving Clarke the benefit of the doubt here and speculating that she’s a little like Sheidheda in this moment. She knows in order to push ahead and succeed Raven must be on their side, and she must be able to table her guilt enough to get the job done so Clarke tells her what she needs to hear. Whether she really believes her own words are up for debate, though, I fail to believe a character as complex as Clarke would simply wipe away all her guilt and apprehension with a few words.

Finally, we have Nelson’s willingness to jump into bed with Russell. This is after Russell reveals he isn’t really Russell; he’s Sheidheda. I can understand this alliance sheerly for the fact that Indra has been giving Nelson the brush off ever since this whole shit with Russell went down. It’s not really surprising Sheid is able to take advantage of that frustration and twist it to fit his own agenda – that’s how dictators work! They promise you power, a solution to all your woes, and of course, revenge against your enemies.

Should be interesting to see what happens next on the 100!

 

‘Harley Quinn’ Season 2 Episode 13: “The Runaway Bridesmaid”

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Left to Right: Wedding Photographer, Harley Quinn in a dress, and Kite Man in a tuxedo.
Photo Credit: DC Universe

In the Season 2 finale, “The Runaway Bridesmaid,” Poison Ivy and Kite Man prepare for their wedding, and Harley Quinn wants to do what’s best for the couple, which means trying to stop Commissioner Gordon from ruining the big day.

S2E12 Review (Spoiler-Free)

Kite Man now knows about Harley Quinn and Poison Ivy‘s “mistake.” I mean, all of Gotham saw them having sex, thanks to Doctor Psycho‘s projection. What happens next?

Well, the wedding is still on.

The big day is here, and every bad guy that’s worth something is invited. Harley doesn’t seem like she wants to go and decides to pass on go. That is, until she finds out Jim Gordon is going to crash the party and arrest everyone.

Will Kite Man and Ivy’s wedding go off without a hitch?

Does Gordo succeed and make his big arrests?

Where does Harley go from here?

These questions and more are answered!

Left to Right (in tuxedos): King Shark and Clayface
Photo Credit: DC Universe

Takeaway

Magnifico! Brilliant! Bravo to the cast and crew of Harley Quinn for another tremendous season.

After a crazy season and a lot of hard work, the show finally delivered on an amazing, epic season finale. 

It was better than I could imagine. Twists and turns, ups and downs, highs and lows, it was an emotional ride that allows us to enjoy the journey we have been on for two seasons.

It has everything you could want: stellar voice acting, beautiful animation in the form of action scenes and visually-pleasing framing, call back to characters, and a random celebrity. 

Kaley Cuoco really deserves a lot of credit for her work on this show. She breathed new life into this character, and Harley Quinn was already establishing a place in the public. I’m happy she’s Harley, and I want more!

This show really delivers on the work it has built over every episode, and the character development has been its shining quality. We are rewarded for the development of characters we love and characters we didn’t expect to enjoy watching. In a way, everyone gets what they deserve.

Harley Quinn is brave, moving, in-your-face, and a must-see for everyone.

EGOTforharley.com

 

SPOILERS are present for the rest of the article. Proceed with caution!

Left to Right: the mayor's aide holding six keys to the city, the mayor holding one key, Superman, Wonder Woman, and Batman.
Photo Credit: DC Universe

S2E12 Recap (Spoilers)

Breaking News from GNN! Behind a crowd in front of Gotham City Hall, reporter Tonnie Young is reporting with the lower third saying that “Gotham has a Mayor.” She reports that the mayor, who barely comes out in public, is going to reward the heroes that fought for the city in “the Battle of Gotham.”

The mayor, who is standing next to a line of attentive people, is handing out keys to the city, with him holding one and his aide holding six. He goes down the line, giving a key to Superman, Wonder Woman, Batman, a Space Cabbie that the Mayor says he couldn’t have done it without, and two other people that aren’t recognizable (one looks like a bootleg Aquaman and the other looks like an 80’s cross between a rock star and early X-men member. At the end of this line, the seventh one down is Gordon. He doesn’t know who these guys are either, but then he gets quickly interview by Tonnie. She asks what he thinks of the ceremony to which he replies that he is honored to get a key to the city since he in Gotham, the whole time, fighting for the city. He thinks the mayor is saving him for last. The mayor announces he has one last key to give and delivers a speech talking about how this person was important and, even though he has no super powers, he is still super. Gordon feels humbled for the kind words, until he finds out the mayor was talking about him.  Gordon is outraged, and the GNN feed is cut.

Later that night, at Arkham Asylum, a guard makes his rounds. Doctor Psycho is levitating and mediating in his cell. Riddler is in his cell, flexing and enjoying himself. Then, the guard comes up to a cell that has Harley Quinn. Her back is turned towards him and is upset. The guard says she’s not supposed to be here, implying she came to Arkham on her own choice. Harley says is she supposed to be anywhere, in which he responses offering to listen to her troubles, over a fruit cup. She declines, saying she wants to be alone with her thoughts, and, when she’s done, she’ll break out. She does take up the offer of the fruit cup but is denied because the guard would only give it to her if they had a convo. He leaves.

The next day, Poison Ivy is on the back of Kite Man’s kite, as they are discussing the “mistake” mid-flight. Kite Man rightfully questions her motive for sleeping with Harley, which Ivy doesn’t really give a good answer to. She just reinforces that she loves him and everything else was a mistake. Kite Man gives her a out if she doesn’t want to marry him, saying he’ll just got drink his miseries away, get into an argument about the best Metal album of all time, and then puke on himself. Ivy reinforces that she does want to marry him and then says that if Kite Man was a metal album, he would be Appetite for Destruction by Guns N Roses (seemingly it implies that she was only half listening to him). He’s confused because Guns N Roses isn’t metal. Ivy apologizes for hurting him, says he deserves the best, and tells him to land ahead.

They land at the Old Gotham Corn Factory, the place he wanted for his wedding venue but lost out to Condiment King. Kite Man thinks this is some kind of torture to remind him of his failure, but Ivy reveals that she got the place for their wedding. He’s confused because Condiment King got the reservation for this “rustic monument to perfection.” A flashback shows that she found the baddie his fiancée in a bar, and they were eaten by Frank the Plant. Ivy, though, explains that she found Condiment King, and he just gave it to her and is very much alive and as went out of town indefinitely and probably won’t be coming back. The head of the Corn Factory comes out to greet them and says he’s excited to host the wedding. Kite Man, excited, is so blown away that she risked her life against one of the “most formidable villain” in Gotham just to get his dream venue. She downplays the magnitude of Condiment King but agrees to the sentiment because she loves him. He is clearly overwhelmed with emotions, and Ivy tells him to take his time.

Left to Right: Poison Ivy and Frank the Plant
Photo Credit: DC Universe

Meanwhile, in an armored prisoner transport, a clearly peeved Gordon, with shotgun in hand, is sitting across a locked-up Two Face. Two Face asks why Gordon is so upset with the villain going back to Arkham, but Gordo tries to hide it saying he is complex and has layers of emotions. Two Face immediately guesses the correct answer, and Gordo flips out about being overlooked, before trying to hide it again. Now, in an Arkham cell and prison clothes, Two Face tells Gordon that he has some advice: don’t be the key-getter, be the key-giver. Two Face says Gordon should be mayor. Gordo refutes this, saying he got into public service so he could shot people and lie about the occasional accident. Gordo doesn’t like politics, but Harvey Dent does. He offers to run Gordon’s campaign from behind bars, like a real campaign manger. Gordon refuses and walks away, only to come back and ask a hypothetical: he’s police commissioner of a danger city; he’s got low favorables. Two Face says he seems like a low-trigger guy that runs his mouth off when backed into a corner. Gordon yells that’s bull, ready to fight. Two Face says that Gordo’s a cop, not a hero, unless he does something heroic enough worth mentioning. He leaks info to Gordo about Kite Man and Ivy’s wedding and provides the Commish with the guest list of a ton of criminals. Gordo gets the idea of busting up the wedding and arresting them all. Two Face’s manipulation is complete. “Mr. Mayor” sheds a single tear.

Back at Harley’s cell, she’s approached by King Shark, Frank the Plant, and a shape-shifted Clayface, all dressed like security guards. Yes, all of them. They ask her if she’s got the electronic invite from Ivy and Kite Man informing everyone the wedding is still on. They say Ivy wants her there, but Quinn says she ain’t going because she doesn’t want to be a distraction. They argue with her saying it’s her best friend’s wedding and everyone wants her there, but Harley won’t go. Not even Clayface’s annoucement of him singing an aria at the reception changes her mind. Shark tries one last time with the promise of vanilla cake, but she refuses. He says they’ll save her a seat, and the three walk away.

In the Asylum’s cafeteria, Quinn is approached by Two Face, who’s learned she ain’t going to the wedding. Harley is upset that everyone is so chatty; this placed used to be so good for silent brooding. He says that Ivy’s wedding is going to be ruined but only offers the reason if she agrees to help him escape. She doesn’t believe him but eventually changes her mind. The two manage to break out, with him telling her that Gordo is planning to crash the wedding and arrest everyone. Two Face is playing it as if it’s Gordon’s idea all on his own, and, even though he won’t succeed, he is going to try; he states that weddings are so meticulously planned that any thing that is off ruins the whole thing. Harley makes it her mission to save Ivy’s wedding, and the two escape.

Left to Right (in Arkham clothing): Harley Quinn and Two Face
Photo Credit: DC Universe

At GCPD headquarters, cops are taking doughnuts as Gordon explains the plan, but not before he reveals the doughnuts are vegan, causing everyone to vomit. He gives them he has a mission, which upsets a cop because it’s Saturday and she has her half-sister’s baby shower. He mentions the wedding, which two cops that are twins are upset that each member of the couple are still getting married. The baby shower cop says it sounds like a problem for Batman, and Gordon gives a speech about how he’s tired of supers getting all the glory. I mean, look at how the guest list has some big names. Who cares if the villains have superpowers? The mission is badass and key worthy, which he has a frame to put said key on the wall with an inscription that says “Reserved for Jim Gordon’s Key to the City.” He is confident they will succeed because he has a damn good plan.

It’s Saturday, and Gordon and his squad arrive at the Corn Factory to stake out the wedding. He spots caters, florist, and a bearded man coming out of hatchback car that’s a priest and a lot like Gordon. Gordo intercepts the priest and says he has a sin to confess and punches out the priest. He takes his clothing and puts on a fake beard, getting into character. Members of his squad take out various workers, like someone designing the cake, a bartender, and a waiter, only to replace them.

In the back of the florist truck, there is a big floral arrangement with purple and white flowers. Next to it is Frank, who’s in a tux and is hitting on the flowers. Gordon tases Frank and closes the truck door.

Frank the Plant in the back of a floral truck, getting tased.
Photo Credit: DC Universe

Inside the event space, the room is filled with villains. Catwoman walks in with a date, revealing the room’s occuptants are the likes of Black Manta, the guy that looks like Aquaman and got the key to the city, Livewire, Man-Bat, and Killer Croc. King Shark and Clayface are there and are enjoying themselves. They comment on the aesthetic, prompting Clayface to call Kite Man a “basic bitch” and Shark to get excited over Man-Bat drinking out of a mason jar. Clayface is nervous, but Shark reassures him weddings aren’t a big deal. The two are joined by Tabitha, Shark’s wife. Clayface clarifies he’s nervous about his performance because Catwoman’s date is none other than Tim Burton, and he wants to impress him. This makes Shark upset. The conversation and party is interrupted when Harley Quinn arrives.

Quinn approaches the trio and asks them about the layout of the room, staking out for any mischief. She see a guy with his back turned, talking to a waiter. She is intercepted by the photographer for the wedding, who pulls her to another room to get ready with the bridesmaids or the Cobb Squad: Catwoman, Norma Fries, and Jen (Jen and Norma are in dresses, Catwoman is not). Jen’s upset Harley didn’t show up for the rehearsal dinner, and Catwoman claims she abandoned Ivy. Harley is shocked Catwoman is there, who replies that she doesn’t like the fashion but wants to be a good bridesmaid. Harls asks her if she can wear the dress, which Selina says she needs to lose ten pounds.

Jen tries to get Harley in the dress, but it’s too tight. Harley sees her suspected Jim Gordon walk by and runs off. Jen is upset because Quinn promised to braid her hair. Harley is searching through a sea of people that includes Solomon Grundy and Bane, calling Jim a rat bastard. Kite Man hears this, thinking someone is talking to him, and turns to find Harley. Awkward. Kite Man is feeling things and looks for Frank, who promised him Xannies if this happened. She’s intercepted by the photographer again, who calls her a “runaway bridesmaid,” and is taken outside for a photo (also he’s tasked with keeping Kite Man and Harley apart).

Outside, she is standing next to the other bridesmaids for photos and spots the venue representative and the priest (Gordo) standing next to each other. She runs towards them, believing to have found Gordon, who is low-key panicking. Harley punches out the venue rep (Mr. Cuttington), choosing wrong. Gordon whistle-walks away, as Harley stands over the knocked out, bleeding rep, and the photgrapher, who faints at the sight of the blood. Poison Ivy walks out in her dress and sees the mess. Ivy is furious and pulls Ivy inside. Gordon’s cover is safe. He calls up Tonnie to give her the scoop of the wedding and arrest that will follow, tell her to bring her cameras.

Left to Right (in dresses): Poison Ivy and Harley Quinn
Photo Credit: DC Universe

Inside the venue in a private room, Ivy chastises Harley for ruining the wedding, which Harley says she’s trying to do the opposite. Ivy points out how Harley is failing and says she promised Kite Man things would go smoothly. Also, she reveals that Chuck didn’t want Quinn there, which devastates her. Ivy apologizes for saying that but continues that today is supposed to be the happiest day of her life, before going on a tirade of how the view of marriage is a patriarchal construct. Harley confirms that they don’t believe in that, but Ivy doesn’t want to hear it. Ivy says that day is supposed to be good vibes, and she is sick of managing everyone’s feelings except for her own. She’s nervous and scared but doesn’t get the time to reflect on that before going down the aisle because Harley is making a mess of things. Ivy loves her friendship with Harley but realizes she can’t have her cake and eat it too. Harley yells that Gordon is here to mess up her wedding, but Ivy doesn’t believe her. Harley defends the claim due to Two Face’s intel, which Ivy immediately dismisses because the man’s name is Two Face. Ivy thinks Harley wants to ruin the wedding and is looking for any excuse to do it so she asks Quinn to leave.

On her way out, Clayface asks her if she’s leaving the party. Quinn admits her defeat, believing that Two Face lied and Gordon isn’t there. While she is saying all this, Gordon is in the background, putting down a potted plan and running away. Hmmm. Harley goes to the table, sees her name plate, and picks up a flower before leaving. She goes outside the venue and sniffs the flower. It has no smell; the flowers are plastic. Harley turns back, shifting from sad and defeated to focused and determined.

Now it’s during the ceremony. King Shark and Clayface are the groomsmen for Kite Man, who is giving his vows. He goes over how they met, saying cringy things like he knew he couldn’t do better and that he was rejected over and over again. He says he was determined to share a life with her, this in response to claims that some may call it stalking. He looks over to the guests, and there is a TV on a rolling stand that shows Sy Borgman (he’s not convinced).

A TV on a rolling stand that shows Sy Borgman.
Photo Credit: DC Universe

He says he’s excited to spend the rest of his life with her in a modest, ranch style, suburban home, grilling meatless proteins, while, on the weekends, shuttling their four kids between soccer, ballet, karate, capoeria (his defintion: a sick mix of karate and ballet), spending sunday dinners at his parents’ house when they allow the couple back into their lives, annnd just a lot of chillin on the couch, binging premium streaming content and looking at our phones. (I’m sorry for the long runon sentence, but that’s pretty much how it sounded.) Ivy is not happy with this extremely detailed version of the future. While this is happening, Harley is sneaking back in. Jen spots Harley and confronts her. It’s Ivy’s turn, and Kite Man’s vows have thrown her off. She tries to recuperate by checking her notes that she wrote on a note card. The guests softly murmur. Ivy finally starts, but all that’s heard is “Charles ‘Kite Man’ Brown.”

While her vows are under way, Jen is not letting Harley interfere. Quinn says that she is trying Ivy, but Jen doesn’t buy it; she’s 37, and this may be the last wedding she can be a bridesmaid at. She punches Harley twice: once in the boob and once in the face. Harley falls to the ground, and, when she looks up, she sees one of the caterers, who looks very nervous. Quinn asks, very loudly, why he’s at the ceremony, and he doesn’t respond, looking away. Ivy and Kite Man look in their direction, and Harley jumps up, kicking the caterer in the face. It grabs the attention of everyone in the room, which includes Zsasz, the MC from Hedonikka, and the Cheetah. Harley rips open the guy’s shirt to reveal a GCPD uniform underneath.

The priest, Gordo with a terrible Irish accent, skips ahead to the “I Do’s.” Kite Man and Ivy both agree, and Gordo pronounces them “Under Arrest” right after Tonnie and the GNN camera crew bust in. Gordo tells his men and Sheryl (the bridal shower cop) to pull their guns, and he goes to take off his beard, realizing he put too much glue. Kite Man breaks down, crying, and Ivy thinks up of the flowers as a way to get them out. It’s now when she realizes what Harley knew, the flowers are fake. Gordon tells the cops to put their gas masks, and Sheryl presses a button, releasing a knock out gas that comes from the fake flowers. The GNN crew can’t see anything through the gas, and the cops are the same, as Harley punches a cop to get her gas mask. Catwoman tells Tim they have to leave, which upsets Clayface, who decides to start his song but faints due to the gas. Everyone is knocked out, except for everyone with a gas mask, and Gordon handcuffs the new bride and groom.

Kite Man holding an unconscious Poison Ivy
Photo Credit: DC Universe

All of the sudden, Harley Quinn leaps in the air and kicks Gordon in the face. She notices the Commish has a grenade and a rocket launcher equipped to his belt, takes the launcher out, and blows a hole in the roof. The hole clears out the gas and allows everyone to wake back up again. Tonnie Young starts her broadcast prematurely and leaves. The villains, now conscious again, get into a fight with the cops, as Clayface properly starts his song. The solo is beautiful, as the operatic sound is flanked by total chaos and violence around them. Burton, who hears the song, sheds a tear, but he is ushered away by Catwoman, who’s freaked out by Clayface. Important note, she calls her date Gary, which could imply he isn’t actually Tim Burton. The song goes on, as a montage plays off the supervillains making their way outside and besting Gotham’s finest.

Harley carries the unconscious bride and groom to safety outside behind cover. Ivy comes to and sees Harley in front of her. As Kite Man comes to, Ivy thanks her for not leaving when she was told to. Harley says she just wanted to do something right for once and wants them to be happy (all while evading what looks like electric bullets). Kite Man says it’s too late because everything is ruined. Harley says it isn’t because she became an ordained minister online and can marry them now. Ivy is impressed at how thorough Harley is, but Kite Man ain’t having it. Ivy says let’s do it, but Kite Man rejects her.

He FINALLY stands up for himself. He rants about that he should have known that, since the third proposal, he’s had to constantly redo things in the relationship over and over again. After this debacle, he is not redoing his wedding. Ivy is confused, asking if he wants to get married still, and he says he does, but she doesn’t. TRUTH BOMB dropped by Kite Man. He saw her face during the vows and knew she wasn’t on board. He may be simple, but he is not a fool; he can finally admit that he is not the person for Ivy. Then, he quotes Ivy, “he deserves the best,” and turns his back on Ivy. He pops out his kite that says “Just Married” and has confetti before flying away.

Gordon and the cops finally catch up and shoot a rocket at them. Harley saves Ivy and they both run. They steal a red car with no top, which happens to have a “Just Married” sign on the back and cans dangling on a string. They speed away as Gordon shoots at them, and he eventually gets in his car to follow. They are trying to find the exit, but, as it is a Corn factory, the parking lot is a maze. They drive by the parked florist truck, which is rocking. Frank’s voice is heard saying “it’s pollen season in this bitch. POLLEN SEASON!” insinuating that he is having sex with the floral arrangement.

Left to Right (In a red car no top): Poison Ivy and Harley Quinn
Photo Credit: DC Universe

Harley, while driving, tries to reassure Ivy that Kite Man will come around, but Ivy can finally say she doesn’t want to be with him. Ivy is finally able to stop denying what she wants and stop going along with what others want. Harley says people change, which Ivy agrees with, using Quinn as an example. Ivy says today, because of everything Harley did, she finally got to see the Harls she always wanted. She knows that Harley will be chaotic and messy, but she also knows Harls is trying to grow and is actually growing. That matters to Ivy.

Harley tells Ivy that she loves her, and Ivy says it back. They are about to kiss, but they realize they are about to hit the factory. Ivy tells her she loves her but she hasn’t to keep her eyes on the road; the car goes through the doors of the factory and hits Clayface, who just reforms and keeps singing (yes, he’s been singing this whole time). As the car launches out of the building from the second floor, the car is flying in the air. The two ladies look at each other, and ask the song reaches its climax, Harley and Ivy finally share a kiss that is intentional and in the right mind. The car lands, and they continue their car chase.

The two are in love. What a wonder season, folks. Until next time.

Harley Quinn and Poison Ivy sharing a kiss.
Photo Credit: DC Universe

‘The Twilight Zone’ Season 2 Episode 1 Review: “Meet in the Middle”

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The Twilight Zone is back with Season 2 premiering on CBS All Access. Here’s how episode 1 “Meet in the Middle” did and what grade it got.

 

THE TWILIGHT ZONE
Season 2, Episode 1
“Meet in the Middle”
Available on CBS All Access
GRADE: B+

Every single one of us, man or woman, has been Phil Hayes. By his own admission, he’s not successful, he’s not some alpha male with a swinging dick…there’s nothing remarkable about him — yet, there’s Hayes, sitting there, sweating over another disaster date, listening to her negotiate over ordering chicken wings and croquettes and other various Tapas. And that’s the least of his issues. The second season of The Twilight Zone leads off with “Meet in the Middle”, an insanely dark satirical take on the modern dating scene.

It isn’t until Hayes (Jimmi Simpson of HBO‘s WestWorld) is interrupted by the enigmatic “Annie Mitchell” (Gillian Jacobs) — but not in the way you’d think. It turns out that Phil can only hear Annie — and can speak with her, in his own head, as if she was sitting across from him. And who wants Tapas when your date has the same superpower that you do?

Pretty soon, Phil and Annie get close. They watch shows on the couch together and talk about their favorite restaurants and even “have sex” by presumably masturbating together while they talk to one another (it’s an admittedly silly scene that, even though it only lasts a few seconds and shows nothing, brings the episode down a letter grade) — but all is not that simple: Phil wants to meet for real. Annie wants no part of it. She’s married and even breaks things off with Phil to the point where he goes back to the very definition of insanity: dating with no hope of successful progression of his personal happiness.

But things take a turn when Annie returns, having changed her mind, seemingly for no reason whatsoever.

To give anything else away at that point would be grounds for justifiable homicide on your part.

Jordan Peele in the middle of a circle, presumably an O.
Jordan Peele in “Meet in the Middle” on CBS All-Access’ “The Twilight Zone” Photo Credit: CBS

Jimmi Simpson, fresh off of WestWorld, shines as Phil Hayes, playing the pitiful, yet hopeful, bachelor role to a tee. He’s a loner, insecure, seeing a psychiatrist, and it’s that notion that makes the viewer wonder if the voices in his head are real or just wishful thinking. This is something that plays well right up until a bold, fearless climax, which makes one feel as though they’re finally watching the show Rod Serling created over 60 years ago.

Gillian Jacobs plays Annie with all the snark and character of a wife and mother that’s been through it all and, like Phil, is tired of the monotony of her everyday married life. You don’t see her much in this episode (it’s Simpson’s episode and he carries the bulk of the camera time here), but she’s great at conveying all the necessary emotions one would need to sell the character with just her voice and that’s pretty impressive.

Even with the runtime (which still exceeds 30 minutes, a complaint I and many other reviewers had last year when this variation of the show made its debut), it’s the characterizations that make the episode work. Unlike last year, the episode feels tighter. It plays with your emotions. You care about the couple no matter how upset and borderline abusive Phil gets and no matter how wishy-washy Annie comes across. They’re not caricatures like they might have been had this episode aired last season with its “woke” style and attitude (something I do NOT eschew, unlike the more “fragile” elements of the Interwebz) and you can relate and agree with both Phil and Annie as they ride this rollercoaster together.

“Meet in the Middle” is a fantastic way to start the second season of The Twilight Zone. It’s solid stuff, if only slightly uneven (it’s weird to go from a “romcom/meet-cute”, ala Spike Jonze‘ “Her” and then get hit, face-first, with a bucket of ice water. Even still, it’s a hopeful indicator that this season might be a little more consistent than the last one.

LOST IN THE ZONE

  • Welcome to my daily reviews for “The Twilight Zone” on CBS All-Access. Unlike last year, this season’s entire run has been uploaded to binge so I will be bringing you one review per day for the next ten days. I hope you enjoy!
  • So…the twist (HIGHLIGHT THE WHITE SPACE TO SEE IT) is that Annie and Phil set up a real-life meet. They plot to “meet halfway”, meaning, they will travel, via train, to the same station and meet there. On the way, Annie is attacked and abducted by a man who followed her on the train. Her voice goes silent until Phil gets to the station they’re supposed to meet at. It leads Phil to a house in the middle of the nearby woods. Phil mentally asks Annie if the man who abducted her is the man he is looking at (he describes the man) and Annie says it is. Phil physically attacks him and eventually beats him to death with his bare hands. Suddenly, a little girl shows up. It’s the man’s daughter…and Annie is with her. She’s horrified by what Phil has done…to her husband. Phil can’t believe it. What’s more, Annie denies knowing Phil. The cops arrest Phil for murder and Phil becomes convinced that “Annie” was just some voice in his head…until he hears Annie again while in the back of the squad car. She tells Phil that he just did her bidding: killed her husband so that she’s now out of her horrible marriage. She’s free now. And she did it by seducing him and telling Phil what he needed to hear so he’d do anything for her. And, after that, she’s out of Phil’s head for good. That ending stuck with me for a few hours. It’s just clever, given the world we live in today. With social media, many of us have friends we’ve never met. When push comes to shove, and a live meeting is agreed to, would you be able to trust that person?
  • The opening narration bit is very cool with a shot of Phil checking out his face in the mirror. It’s shot from behind his head so that, when he moves, we can see the reflection of Jordan Peele giving us the story on tonight’s freaky set-up. It’s very much a Serling-style intro.
  • The new series has had this neo-noir, open-spaced feel — yet feels so claustrophobic at times thanks to some great camerawork and editing. This is never more fitting than with the tight shots of Phil, fidgeting during a date or tapping a foot while nervously blathering to his psych. It’s beautiful stuff.
  • The pulp sci-fi novel Phil holds up while buying some new clothes is called “Kalokagathia-One”. The meaning of “Kalokagathia” varies depending on where you look but the overall consensus seems to be that everyone has worth and that what’s good is beautiful and vice versa. This would especially be true in Phil’s case, seeing as though he tells Annie that he’s “not special”.
  • The ending is just driven home beautifully with a great cover of Frank Valli‘s “Can’t Take My Eyes Off of You“. The first time he meets Annie after having done his “deed”, the line “You’re just too good to be true” echoes across your speakers. It’s true, SO true in this case.
  • EASTER EGGS
    • Only one old egg that I noticed this time around: Annie’s broken glasses on the ground are much like Henry Bemis’ in “Time Enough at Last“.
    • The commercial playing inside the man’s house near the episode’s climax features a new technology which will be very relevant in the upcoming episode, “Downtime.”

 

Catch The Twilight Zone on CBS All Access, and watch the first episode for free on YouTube.

‘Doom Patrol’ Season 2 Episodes 1-3: Reviews and Reflection

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Abigail Shapiro as Dorothy Spinner
Photo Credit: Mark Hill/2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

The first three episodes of Doom Patrol season 2 have finally dropped, and it’s off to a roaring start.

Doom Patrol is not your average show. It’s not your normal show. Honestly, it may not even be your show, but it is an amazing show. As you can tell, I am a BIG fan. After I obsessed over Season 1, I penned a love letter to the show, explaining why it absolutely needed another season. Soon after, I was granted my wish. Season 2 of Doom Patrol is among us, and god is it great so far. 

Just to start this off, if you haven’t watch any of Doom Patrol, you need to do some things: first, question yourself, and, two, make time to watch it. DC Universe is a very inexpensive app with tons of content, and, currently, the first three episodes of Season 1 is available for free on YouTube. It is also available on HBO Max, which is the same app that will air the new season (DC Universe will also air it). 

Seriously, go watch it now. This article will spoil Season 1. 

Have you watched it yet? 

Riley Shanahan as Cliff Steele next to a race car.
Photo Credit: Mark Hill/2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

You sure? Okay. Here is a Spoiler-Free Review and a SPOILER-Filled Reflection for the first three episodes of Doom Patrol Season 2. 

 

Previously on Doom Patrol

The Doom Patrol finally face Mister Nobody (Alan Tyduck), who had kidnapped Niles Caulder AKA The Chief (Timothy Dalton) in a painting. This painting also housed Danny the Street and Caulder’s daughter, who happens to enlarge Ezekiel the Roach (Curtis Armstrong) and Admiral Whiskers. The two animals have become gigantic and terrorized everyone. By manipulating Mister Nobody, the team is able to execute a plan of action: the Doom Patrol, except for Larry Trainor (Matt Bomer), to get eaten by Ezekiel so they would be protected against Larry’s nuclear blast. The blast kills Whiskers, reduces Danny the Street to a brick, and traps Mister Nobody and the Beard Hunter (Tommy Snider) in the painting. Everything is fine, right? Well, back at the Manor, Cyborg/Vic Stone (Joivan Wade) cuts the team free from Ezekiel, but now everyone is miniature sized. What will Larry do? Also, the team is finally introduced to Nile’s daughter, Dorothy Spinner (Abigail Shapiro).

Timothy Dalton as Niles Caulder and Abigail Shapiro as Dorothy
Photo Credit: Mark Hill/2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Episode 1 – “Fun Sized Patrol”

S2E1 Review (Spoiler-Free)

In the season premiere, the Doom Patrol, minus Larry and plus the Dorothy are still miniature-sized, and it’s been a while. Living on Cliff Steele‘s (Brendan Fraser) toy race-track in the Doom Manor, Caulder tries to find a way to fix everything, their size and the recent betrayal from everyone knowing he was responsible for their misfortunes.The only one that’s positive is Dorothy, who tries to befriend everyone, mainly both Cliff and Jane (Diane Guerrero), who have their own problems to worry about. While all this is going on,  Rita Farr (April Bowlby) wants to finally take control of her body and asks Vic for help in using her elastic abilities for good, yet Vic is dealing with his own demons: the continuous trauma caused by Mister Nobody.

Will they finally find a way to get big again?

Can they ever trust Niles again?

Who and what is Dorothy?

All these and more answered!

Left to Right: Diane Guerrero as Jane, April Bowlby as Rita Farr, Joivan Wade as Cyborg, and Brendan Fraser/Riley Shanahan as Cliff Steele.
Photo Credit: Bob Mahoney/2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

The Cast

All the actors involved killed it in an important season opener. Each character had different layers and motivations for their shitty predicament, and the cast put so much effort into bringing life to this wacky group of heroes. 

Newcomer Abigail Sharpio is clearly the focal point of this episode, as it’s our first foray of meeting Dorothy. Shapiro, coming from the world of theater, delivers a brilliant performance, showcasing her range and nailing every scene she’s in. Her unflattering positivity (or childlike naivety) is a welcomed addition to a Doom Patrol team that’s constantly made to feel small. My favorite parts with her was when she was talking to her friends (and I don’t mean the Doom Patrol).

Matt Bomer continues to shine in his role of Larry Trainor, and we get some scenes of him without the bandage, which is also a pleasure to watch. I was really big on him and the work he was doing last season, and, from what I can see so far, this season will only further it. 

Matt Bomer as Larry Trainor talking to his son, Gary, in front of his wife.
Photo Credit: 2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

The Vision

Doom Patrol is a beautiful, twisted, and wacky show that can make you laugh, make you disgusted, horrify you, or make you cry. The writing is responsible for the show’s growth, talents, and unwavering magic. In this episode, Jeremy Carver and Shoshana Sachi greatly delivered a properly balanced recap, new danger, and some weeeiiirrrdd stuff. Hats off to you. 

Aesthetically, it was gorgeous to look at. There must have been an increase in budget (partially HBO is responsible) because there were some amazing effects in the premiere. From life-like corpses, prosthetic proficiency, or an improved use of CGI, this show has made it more and more fun to watch.

Takeaway

This show kicks off its second season with a bang. There is so much to address and unpack that I can’t possibly imagine someone watching it and not wanting to keep going. 

Go see it!

 

Brandon Perea as Doctor Tyme
Photo Credit: 2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Episode 2 – “Tyme Patrol”

S2E2 Review (Spoiler-Free)

In episode 2, Niles is faced with a ticking clock, now that he has traded his chance at immortality to restore everyone to their original size. Dorothy is processing and dealing with the idea that her father may not be with her forever and wants to enjoy her life. Rita wants to find a way to help Niles find a way so she recruits Jane and Cliff to go on a time adventure to face the Evil Doctor Tyme (Brandon Perea). Jane is dealing with push back from The Underground, as her tenure as the primary personality is being judged. Cliff, seeming to be upset the most by the Chief betrayal, is not doing well with his emotions (more than usual). Vic has left the Doom Manor and finds himself in Detroit, where he goes to a trauma support group. There he meets Roni Evers (Karen Obilom), a military vet that is dealing with her own challenges, showing Cyborg the world isn’t black and white. Finally, Larry continues to confront his past, learning that there is a death in his family. He can’t hide away anymore. 

Will confront Doctor Tyme solve the Chief dilemma?

How will Dorothy deal with this new revelation?

What does life outside the Doom Manor give for our heroes?

All these and more answered!

Left to Rig=t: TImothy Dalton as the Chief, Brandon Fraser/Riley Shanahan as Cliff Steele, Diane Guerrero as Jane, April Bowlby as Rita Farr, and Matt Bomer/Matthew Zuk as Larry Trainor
Photo Credit: 2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

The Cast

What I am appreciating about this new season is that the story is giving each actor a chance to shine in the spotlight and show their chops.

Abigail Sharpio continues her turn as Dorothy and is balancing the childlike innocence and hidden darkness well. Her chemistry with Timothy Dalton is fantastic and heartwarming at the same time.

Dalton, by the way, has been putting in the work this season. He is showing increased compassion, regret, self-doubt, and defeat. It’s a side of the Chief that we aren’t used to: human and not in control.

Diane Guerrero is keeping up her stellar work as Jane, and we get plenty of moments of her personality shifts. This character is a tough one for anyone to juggle, but she has been face it head-on.

Brendan Fraser also has a phenomenal monologue that commands the room, in tandem with the physical performance of Riley Shanahan. It will make you want to take a second to realize how powerful these two are when they work together.

The two standouts though are April Bowlby as Rita Farr and Matt Bomer as Larry Trainor.

Bowlby is such a treat to watch: she’s funny, confident, poised, yet gives us the right about of worry, doubt, and struggle. She was a part of the group that grew better and better during season 1 and is the moral glue of the group. In a way, she is the new Chief.

Matt Bomer has been putting in the work, man. The moments he is on screen are perfection and his voice acting throughout is on point. I would be remiss to not also give credit to Matthew Zuk, who is the actor portraying Larry in the bandages. He needs to get more recognition for the amount of physicality Trainor needs. The combination of the two is a contender for show stealer every single episode. 

Doctor Tyme and friends booging.
Photo Credit: 2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

The Vision

April Fitzsimmons and Neil Reynolds teamed up to write a beautiful grounded episode. Emotionally, there is so much to unpack and explore, which makes the few out-there moments a fun and entertaining break. The whole section with Doctor Tyme was extraordinary.  Also, the continued story of Larry and his past has been worth the emotional investment. 

Visually, the episode really benefits from visiting Doctor Tyme, with its funky ’70s aesthetic. A consistent element of this show is knowing that they are having fun making it.  The series should also be recognized by its mastery of framing, as a majority of shows make even a neutral background seem exciting. 

Plus, the butterflies are beautiful.

Takeaway

I am loving the narrative progression. I am willing to invest in every character and see where the stories go from here. Cyborg’s may be the weakest, but not a fault to his own. There were some moments that felt a bit clunky dialogue wise, but I am still all in.

 

Diane Guerrero as Jane, sitting on a bed in the Underground.
Photo Credit: 2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Episode 3 – “Pain Patrol”

S2E3 Review (Spoiler-Free)

Misery comes in a three’s, and, boy, does this episode bring the pain. On his personal journey, Larry has been taken prisoner by the evil Red Jack (Roger Floyd), who is using Trainor as a way to get to the Chief. It’s up to Niles and Rita to travel into the mouth of madness to save their friend. Meanwhile, Cliff, who’s been vehemently opposing Caulder at every turn, decides to go visit his daughter in Florida. Jane tags along, but, while her physical body is joining, she’s pulled into the Underground to face the other 63 personalities. Vic, still in Detroit, is continuing to bond with Roni, as they learn about each other and themselves. That leaves Dorothy, alone in the Manor, so she does what any child would do: play hide and seek with her imaginary friends.   

Will Rita and Niles be able to rescue Larry?

Who is this Red Jack?

How will Cliff’s daughter, Clara (Bethany Anne Lind), react to seeing Robotman?

Hide and seek is a harmless game, right?

All these and more answered!

Roger Floyd as Red Jack
Photo Credit: 2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

The Cast

Another stellar addition. You will hear me say this over and over again, but everyone puts in such a tremendous performance, I could go on and on about each of them. This episode, with the theme of pain, shows the characters in extremely vulnerable positions.

Two actors in particular, April Bowlby and Matt Bomer, are putting in career-defining performances. This is not an exaggeration when I say this: Doom Patrol should be put in consideration for the next awards season. The friendship these two display is heart-warming and comforting. We all need that support in our lives, even when we are at our lowest. I wish I could hug them both. The character of Rita Farr has grown the most over the series, and Bowlby is a rockstar. Bomer has provided a truly human element to the character of Larry. Support by Zuk’s physical execution, the detail in tone, emotional range, and pain heard from Bomer’s delivery is masterful.

This episode is also a great highlight for Brendan Fraser. Tasked with the desire to tell his daughter the truth, Cliff drives all the way to Florida to reintroduce himself. The pent-up anger and messy rage Fraser has been displaying finally is rewarded some focus. We are allowed to see Fraser work through different emotions and mental checkpoints, as he has to process everything around him. The veteran actor is being fed monologues and is taking each one with stride. Out of all the episodes, Shanahan’s work really shines in this one. In portraying a robot, the amount of effort in execution and performance may be lost on the casual viewer, but it is respected here.

Diane Guerrero as Jane surrounded by other personalities.
Photo Credit: 2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

The Vision

This episode, penned by Tom Farrell and Tamara Becher-Wilkinson, is one of those examples where the dark and twisted aspect of Doom Patrol is front and center. While Cliff goes on his personal journey, the audiences goes on a tour of torment when being confronted with Red Jack, a villain that has lived for centuries and played the role of terrible killers in the past. As Larry suffers in prison, we were taught the real cost of pain and how we can even consider moving forward.

Visually, we are taken to different places with a dark side to all of them. One is the Underground, where we spend some time with a plethora of Jane’s other personalities. Another is the lair of Red Jack, which fills the criteria of sick, demented Victorian; a gathering place of sick trophies and uncomfortable sadism. The last place is Florida. Enough said.

Oh, and the butterflies. SO. MANY. BUTTERFLIES.

Takeaway

The show has really taken up to new highs in terms of stakes and characters. I really don’t know how many times I can say this, but you need to be watching this show.

 

The rest of this article has SPOILERS.

Brendan Fraser/Riley Shanahan as Cliff Steele sitting on the road.
Photo Credit: 2019 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Reflection (SPOILERS)

Doom Patrol is a show about heart. It’s a show that doesn’t pigeon-hole what it means to be a hero. In displaying a group of misfits that, in their appearances, look completely different than you or me or any superhero we think of, they are actually true heroes.

These characters are flawed. They are broken, battered, and barely themselves. The heroes of stories are characters that are forced to overcome obstacles to achieve their goals. What makes these heroes compelling is that, inherently, they are facing external and internal obstacles. Many can blame the Chief, but they all have their own demons to conquer. Many did their best to confront it last season, but it was just the beginning.

We are seeing two things within the group in response to the revelation of Niles creating the Doom Patrol to find immortality and protect his daughter: serious character growth, and the five stages of grief (denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance).

Vic is dealing with extra trauma from everything that happened with Mister Nobody, his first real face of pure evil. Just seeing the painting that Nobody is trapped him makes him think that mission to save Dorothy from the rats is a trap. Seeing the situation he is in, he decides that he can’t be in the Manor anymore and leaves for Detroit. He joins a support group to help him get over his experience but instead falls for another member of group, a girl named Roni Evers (the female version of Ronald Evers, an eventual villain for Cyborg). Sure, he has a fun night with her as they hook up, but he constantly comes across situations where he assumes one thing and is proven wrong. Wanting to be a superhero and join the Justice League, he sees the world as either black or white. He shows interest in Roni, wanting more than the one night and is immediately rejected by her. Later in the day, Roni is attacked by a mugger but fights him off. Cyborg calls the police, which brings a negative reaction from her because she doesn’t want him to just be arrested and go through the system. Finally, after he convinces her to go on a date with him, she sends him an email, showing him parts of her past she’s been keeping secret. She has always hinted that her past made her do terrible things, and people should be judged by their past. In keeping with that, she shows Vic her prior history in the armed forces, which includes voluntary manslaughter and a photo of her proud she’s killed many people (her past mistake). She is waiting outside the restaurant to see his reaction, and Vic leaves upset. In a constant mission to be a superhero, Vic still hasn’t learned that the world isn’t just good or evil, black or white. There is a lot gray, and he doesn’t want to accept that. That’s why he is denial.

Cliff is leaving his life like he always has, racing with emotions. Understandably upset with Niles’ responsibility for the car accident, Cliff does not do a good job handling his feelings. Leaning into the cold, robotic body, Cliff is using anger, frustration, and cursing to feel any satisfaction; these decisions lead to consquences that he is forced to deal with. When he is mini, he is killing tons of rats, possibly as payback for Admiral Whiskers. Dorothy had thought Cliff was feeding the rats (the lie Cliff was telling her) and goes to the rats. With her in danger, Cliff has to go save her, and he is confronted with a rat that just gave birth (and eats one of its young). His experience gives him some clarity, and he feeds the mouse family when he is bigger. He constantly chooses to go against Chief’s wishes because he cannot get over the decision to prioritize Dorothy over his daughter, Clara. This leads him to make an impulse decision to go to his daughter’s house and reveal the truth. He also finds out that his daughter is pregnant. Predictably, Clara doesn’t take this well, and Cliff has a breakdown. Though he doesn’t hurt anyone, he destroys parts of the bus he drove down and vents and vents, especially now there will be a grandchild he won’t be able to see. After some hours, he realizes he is ruining the night for his daughter and is not making everything better. Acting without thinking and running off impulse isn’t the way for Cliff, and he has to lay off the gas. Obviously, Cliff is the stage of anger.

Rita, an actress that was showcased of being self-centered and selfish has reversed her course to be extremely selfless and caring. Even after the revelation of Caulder’s betrayal, she still makes continuous efforts to help the situation. Rita is searching for purpose, a meaning, and she wants to stop seeing her situation as a negative; she wants to take her abilities and turn it into a positive. Her three episode arch is 1.) deciding to do better and control her powers, 2.) leading a team and putting her powers to use (which leads to the issue of killing Doctor Tyme and then having to fix her mistake), and 3.) stepping up when it would have been easier to stay back and saving Larry. She is the most positive outcome of finding out of Niles’ revelation. In many ways, she is trying to retake some control and not feel like a failure in the context of Niles’ attempt for immortality. Though she is growing in a positive direction, she does take the stage of bargaining.

Jane is reacting to everything with spiraling. To keep everything underneath the surface, she is shooting up a serum into her arms as if she is shooting up heroin. The process is definitely slowing her down and not making as involved or as loud as she would normally be. The one thing that is driving her is to help Dorothy. She doesn’t want to see another little girl be taken away or locked up again. When she runs out of her serum, she realizes that she is having trouble keeping control over the Underground. This leads Jane to decide to stay with Niles instead of running away and doing things on her own. She believes he is the only one that can help her and doesn’t want any other support. Her other 63 personalities are unhappy with her performance lately as the “primary” and hold an intervention. They plead with her not to keep doing drugs, and, even though Jane does stop, they demand that she leave Doom Patrol because the Chief is her real drug. In her behavior and predicament of not feeling like she has control makes her the stage of depression.

Larry has, in my opinion, the most compelling personal journey because he is forced to face his mistakes over and over again. In pursuing his real love and work, he neglected his family. Now, he is slowly being forced to face those decisions. Without his special bandages, he will harm anyone around him because of the radiation, which he is forced to deal with as a prisoner for Red Jack. We also see that, without his bandages (meaning pre-accident), he also caused harms to others. He failed to appreciate the love and support his son and family showed him, only focusing on things and details that can fact-checked. Because he couldn’t pursue the love he wanted, he wasn’t appreciate the family he created. Once being warned by the Negative Spirit, he finds out his eldest son has died from a suicide attempt, sparked by the long-term guilt of not being enough for his father. Larry, accepting his situation now is due to a failed attempt at immortality, by Niles, goes to pay his respects. There, he runs into his youngest son, who know learns his father is still alive. Larry comes across old letters of his son, Gary, writing to his missing father, telling him he loved Larry. The guilt is too much, making Larry a perfect target for Red Jack, a villain that feeds off the pain of others. After these three episodes, Larry has come to realize that what he needed all along was a support system for who he really was. In his past, he couldn’t see his family as that because they didn’t know he was gay. Now, he gets a support system that includes Rita and the Doom Patrol that sees him for who he fully is. In this lesson and his journey, he has become acceptance.

‘Dirty John: The Betty Broderick Story’ Episode 5: Review

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Betty Broderick sits alone.
Photo Credit: USA Network

In this week’s episode, Betty must deal with her life falling apart as she tries to keep her sanity.

I think marriage is one of the most difficult agreements one could ever undertake. To cherish, hold, and value a person for an alleged eternity. I can’t even commit to my own decision to eat bagels for breakfast. It’s hard. I don’t know if I could trust someone to the fullest extent.

Which is exactly where Betty Broderick finds herself in this episode: finding her trust utterly betrayed. By her lawyers. By her children.

In this ugly legal battle, it’s obvious that Dan holds all the cards. Betty has no representation, no rebuttal, and no ability to fight back against Dan’s legal prowess. It doesn’t help that she keeps leaving harassing phone calls feeding into Dan’s claims of psychological incompetence. Dan uses each aggressive emotional snap against him and Linda, as they are worthy of continually fining and sanctions on Betty. As a result, the money she’s owed by Daniel is now becoming money she’s no longer receiving. In fact, it’s become money owed to the courts. All because he’s a lawyer and knows how to work the system.

At this point, Betty has no kids, no money, and no life. She’s alone, and all she has is aggressively leaving voicemails again-and-again. Dan stopped talking to her ages ago, and so, with no way to reach him, she just leaves message-after-message on the machine. She has also destroyed her own house (paid for by Dan). It’s psychological terrorism, and Dan is winning.

Though, eventually, all is not loss and some of Betty’s old friends notice what he’s doing. They help Betty out by indirectly getting her a lawyer: Hilary Clark. A woman who specializes in cases like these. With her help, she’s able to retain some rights for Betty, along with getting her a psych evaluation, wanting to pivot the narrative that Betty is crazy. This, added on with a finally fair judge, who sees that Betty has had no minor infractions prior to this, allows visitation for her to see the kids. Yet, Dan keeps custody because of the incident where she left the kids as their former house (which is oddly considered abandonment).

A pyrrhic victory, we see Betty go insane, under house arrest and solitary confinement. Dan stops sending money, and she goes crazy. But still, Betty does this because she wants to be a mother — seeing as how her son caught lice from poor parenting — she has her doubts over Dan and Linda.

Betty Broderick sits alone.
Photo Credit: USA Network

The episode highlights just how hard it is to see your kids, who are legally under the other partner’s custody, and how tooth-and-nail people have to fight just to spend time with them. Even if it’s just for a simple Easter holiday. Worse is that, when kids are involved in a divorce, it breaks the relationship. In this case, it’s Betty’s son asking and blaming all three parents (which is telling that he considers Linda his official parent now) for how bad things had gotten over the phone.

Even worse than this, Dan is recording that very same phone call Betty has with their son for evidence. Calculating that, eventually, Betty would snap, and keeping phone evidence will, unfortunately, weaponize Betty’s own son against her without his knowledge (which is still admissible in court as evidence despite the means of attainment so long as the intent is never officially proclaimed: i.e. Dan never admits he was using their son).

Of course Betty would mentally snap, given the gaslighting, silence, and stripping away all that she holds dear. Yet, the courts don’t see it that way.

Atop of all this, therapy seems to working: really getting to the underlying root of the problem. This is unacceptable to Betty so she dumps her therapist. She wants to stay angry at Dan for ruining her life. It’s a decision that haunts her as her actions inevitably lead her to serve jail time.

It’s an unfortunate serious of events, yet a classic case and point of why the law can be, in many cases, bullshit. Especially if you’re the ones whose job it is to spin the truth, as Dan Broderick’s was as a skilled lawyer.

Justice has ultimately failed Betty Broderick.

Tune in next week for more on USA.