what the heck is carrie doing? she's really comitted to manipulate people
"What the fucking fuck!"
I thought it out of Saul's character to let himself be talked out by Carrie on the runway. He should've stuck to his principles and gone out with a bang. Disappointed with that scene. Otherwise, such a great episode.
I'm really curious on how they got that arrow out his body
6.5/10
Homeland is what it is at this point. It's still adept at doing tense scenes involving the threat of a terror attack. It's still adept at Quinn: the badass spy sequences. It's still adept at showing scenes of backroom politics in the CIA. What it's not particularly good at anymore is making me care about the characters involved in those types of sequences.
I have a hard time getting on board with Carrie's 5-minute (or 2-year) retirement. The show has to hammer the point home that no one believes she's really out, and maybe that's in keeping with the audience's expectations -- there's not a show if Carrie doesn't get involved with the CIA again, or, at least, there's a very different show. So the scenes where she calls back home, where she talks about having someone there waiting for her, meant to show that she's different, feel cheap because it seems inevitable that she's going to fall off the wagon in more than one sense of the term this season, and showing us "how far she's come" is only a weak sense to give that predictable fall from grace some stakes. Obviously, your mileage may vary, but maybe I've just gotten too familiar with the structure of these types of stories for them to have meaning for me anymore. Or maybe the show will subvert my expectations and I'll look like a fool. But I'd be shocked if she doesn't end up sleeping with Quinn and/or the head of the foundation and getting involved with the CIA again by the end of the season despite her Brody-expy waiting for her back in Berlin.
The journalist story felt kind of perfunctory. The character's pretty annoying, even when she makes good points, but perhaps that's intentional. The power struggle with Saul, Dar, and Allison has promise, as does the hacker character, but it's a big "withhold judgment until more goes down" on that front.
And Quinn's hunt for his latest target, who appears to lead a number of western girls toward some kind of attack, was intriguing as to where that seed is going to pop up later in the season, but the teaser at the end where Saul(?) is telling him which target to go after next seemed strange and a little hacky.
Overall it wasn't the most inspiring episode of the show, but as usual, there were some decent elements and the promise of both well-done and facepalm-inducing things to come.
This show is pretty F good, except the fact they are constantly forgetting that there is no gravity in space
It's funny, before I'd even seen the title of this episode, I said to my wife, "I know it's going to be controversial to portray Carrie's mental illness as a super power." But however good or bad that depiction is, it's one the show has held to since its first season, and I think it worked surprisingly effectively here. As pleasant as it is for someone who's been watching Carrie develop as a character for four seasons, to see her in a place of stability, there is something undeniably compelling about Crazy Carrie, at least in small doses.
And to the point, the show doesn't use Carrie going off her medication as a means for her to solve the major mystery presented at the end of the last episode. Sure, it allows her to figure out that someone used the kidnapping of her boyfriend's son to figure out her location, but it's also shown as a way to remove the protective shielding Carrie's erected around herself to keep her from feeling all the deaths she's been responsible for. It's a little corny, but the image of Carrie sitting within a star made up of the faces of the people she's killed (including, as the episode's direction draws our attention to, a number of women and mothers) is a powerful one.
I must admit, I am something of a sucker for gut punch of a character on television hallucinating the presence of someone close to them who's passed on. House did it to great effect; it's been a reliable arrow in the quiver of The Walking Dead, and shows as varied as Buffy and The Sopranos used figurative (and sometimes literal) ghosts to bring the sins of the past to the fore. Having an innocent like Aayan be the manifestation of Carrie's misdeeds and the lives lost in the process was affecting, and I appreciated the surprise and the way it was used here.
I also liked that they developed Jonas a bit. Thus far he's been a pretty generic studly boyfriend, but it was nice to see him disgusted by Carrie's actions, but also strong enough to go toe-to-toe with her when she was going off the deep end. To the same end, I appreciate that the show did not hold back on showing how ugly and manipulative Carrie could be when she was off of her meds. They didn't sell the bipolar disorder as a magic cure-all, but rather as something with a pretty severe cost, which worked in the context of what we know about Carrie's prior condition.
As for the other storylines in the episode, Saul is pretty scary this year. Mandy Patinkin absolutely sells that Saul is a changed man from when we last saw him before the time jump. Sure, he could certainly be steely, but there was always a warmth behind the strength that came through. Now, despite the reveal that he's sleeping with his subordinate (and was that a baby bump?) he seems so cold, so angry, so harsh with everyone from During to the expelled embassador, that I completely buy him as both the kind of calculating guy who would be orchestrating a coup with Dar Adal and as a much different presence in the series than he's been historically. Patinkin's face tells the story in almost every scene, and it's great stuff.
Hacktivist/Reporter Lady story is still a little eh. As I've said before, it has promise, and I'm especially liking the way the Newman character is being developed, but I'm a little less confident in how the story itself is being developed.
In the same vein as Saul, robotic, chessmaster Quinn is frightening in his own right. The establishing of Jonas's ex wife and son was well done before I realized what was happening (a nice little twist), and he seems so single-minded and coldly effective in everything he does, from kidnapping Jonas's son to connecting with his old flame for equipment. The episode's final scene with his and Carrie's cat and mouse game was incredibly well shot and directed, with a great sense of building tension. The last little bit was a very Dexter-esque end-of-episode tease, but overall, I was incredibly impressed by not only how well each individual story was told and acted in this episode, but how all three were balanced together. One of the best episodes the show has put together since the end of the original Brody storyline.
This was the sort of episode where it felt like a lot of pieces were finally snapping into place. I liked the fact that Allison is having trouble coping with her role as a double agent. She's not just a cold and indifferent spy. She's caught up in something that's put her under a lot of strain and stress and while she seems cool and self-assured in the thick of it, she's having a lot of trouble in private moments. It's solid, character-based take on the hoary mole story that takes advantage of the actress's abilities.
To the same end, I also appreciated Jonas, of all characters, in this episode. He's something the show's desperately lacked for more than a few seasons now -- a regular individual who can look at the world of spooks and spies and remark as to how batshit insane that entire sphere is. It helps ground the show a little, and to put Carrie's transition into civilian life into perspective. He's not my favorite character on the show or anything, but he's a voice of reason to some extent here, in opposition to the take-it-for-granted personalities of everyone in the muck of intelligence gathering on the show, which makes the role he plays in the episode interesting.
I do appreciate that they're shining some light and connecting a number of dots here. Carrie puts together the general nature (if not the specifics or motive) for the people who put a hit on her. We understand the goal of the Russians and it's set up nicely with what we've seen from Saul and his colleagues so far. There's even some legitimate connection between Carrie, Laura, and Numan via the documents, to where it seems like they're legitimately positioning them to come together (as is inevitable) in a way that feel's natural rather than contrived. The disparate threads of the plot are all being tied together nicely so far, and it helps.
The weaker parts of the episode, however, were the hacktivist story and Quinn's wounded duck routine. The hacktivist protest, with Numan's mask and the lowgrade "I am Spartacus" routine just reeked of watered-down attempts at topicality, though having witnessed a couple of Occupy protests, it wasn't necessarily off the mark. It still just feels like this storyline was stapled into Homeland from a different show. The tone is a little off, and while Homeland is not always subtle, there's a bluntness and an all-too-tidy nature to how this plot is depicted that renders the storyline less than pleasing.
In the same vein, Quinn's weak-willed suicide attempt to protect Carrie felt like too much. He loves Carrie; we know that, but I thought this was a bridge too far and not necessarily depicted artfully either. Plus, I have no idea where they're going with the religious guy following him around. I suppose I should withold judgment.
Those griefs aside, I appreciated how this episode put an interesting spin on some spy cliches, like the troubled mole or the concerned civilian, and how it's started assembling the plot and bringing disparate elements together in a way that both makes sense and is intriguing.
This was an episode comprised of three stories from three of the show's most significant characters. One was great; one was good; one was godawful, all for different reasons. Let's take them in turn.
Saul's storyline was tremendous, and much of it has to do with the direction and cinematography of the episode. Mandy Patinkin certainly held up his end of the bargain, but the way his scenes were structured really elucidated Saul's paranoia without having to be more explicit about it. The way the camera seemed to be spying on him (a technique the show would employ in its first season) sold Saul's feeling cornered and needing to do something risky and/or desperate. I also appreciated how he gave Carrie the kiss off at the beginning of the episode, but that what he was experiencing gave him reason to believe her. Straining the relationship between your two most significant characters and then bringing them back together is an old trick, but they're doing the legwork to make it plausible and compelling. At the same time, it was nice to see Saul using those spy skills again, from downloading the documents after creating a diversion, to slipping During the drive without his CIA tail being able to catch on. Great stuff.
Carrie's storyline was only OK, but it was heightened tremendously, as always, by Claire Daines's acting. Whatever they are paying Daines, it isn't enough, because in scenes where her character is lonely or isolated or desperate or blindsided, the written dialogue does her no favors -- full of cliches and weak lines -- but she sells in her reading of those lines, in the pained or blindsided or wistful expressions that show she's at the end of her rope, and in the way she carries herself that lets the audience buy into her situation. She's succeeding in a herculean task on that front, and it elevates the material.
The Quinn storyline, however, was ridiculous, in a bad way. I realize that any show, especially one involving spycraft, is going to require a certain amount of willing suspension of disbelief, and a tolerance for things working out just as they need to for the plot to move along. But my god, a nearly-mortally wounded Quinn being rescued by a random good samaritan who just so happens to be flatmates with a terrorist who was released because of the very documents that Carrie is so worked up over and revealed Saul's plan with the Germans? That just strains plausibility too far. It's far too convenient as a plot development, and Quinn overhearing a terrorist plot, and then becoming the Pirate King by killing the terrorist guy in a final showdown rumble at the end of the episode was just too cartoonish for me to bear. Really hacky stuff. I don't know where they're going with all of this, but it had better be good to justify this level of B.S.
I'm just going to start off by listing the 3 shittiest things that He-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named did in this episode, okay? By the way, please enlighten me, how does a dude who does multiple shitty things per episode even stand a chance with Kara, let alone actually get together with her?
Calling Kara helping people as Supergirl "little superhero-ing".
Immediately disregarding Kara's wishes and telling everyone about their relationship.
Ignoring what Kara said (again) and trying to brush it off (again).
I just don't get it. A part of me thinks, or hopes, that the writers are doing this on purpose to show what a toxic relationship looks like and how not to treat your significant other, but let's be real, that's probably not it. They actually seem to think that this shit is cute and romantic. And it makes me sick.
Sure, Man-Hell was right about Jeremiah. But contrary to popular belief, the end doesn't justify the means. He could have proved his point without being an asshole. But I guess that's just how he rolls, right? And we're supposed to let it slide because... he's conventionally attractive?
Honestly, fuck this guy.
Alex's confrontation with Jeremiah was a powerful moment and Chyler Leigh once again brought her A-game.
How long will I have to scream into the void about Maggie's lack of screentime before someone finally hears me? I can't believe the showrunners think I'm more interested in What's-His-Face than in this amazing woman, who:
is simultaneously an absolute badass and the softest human being I have ever seen (those dimples, man, Jesus Christ, what a bae)
was outed to her parents and kicked out of the house at 14
is such a good detective that she figured out Kara's secret by herself
is a good, pure, unproblematic fave who deserves better.
I have no dignity left anymore, I will literally beg if I have to. I'll sell my soul if that's what it takes to get her a proper storyline. Sure, the family dinner thing was cute, and the way she comforted Alex was wonderful. Maggie Sawyer is a kind, supportive girlfriend who listens to Alex and is always there for her, and the way they keep trying to draw parallels between Sanvers and Karamel lowkey makes me want to die. They're not similar! At all! Not in a million years! One is based on mutual love, respect and support, and the other is an abusive garbage fire. I'm starting a campaign. Let Maggie Sawyer deck Fuckboy in the face 2017.
And another thing: I guess Karamel can be all over each other, make out, wake up in bed naked after obviously having sex, but God forbid Maggie and Alex do anything more than kiss for exactly 1.5 seconds. No, I'm not bitter, why do you ask?
Does Cadmus want to send all aliens back into space? Hey, here's a thought: maybe they can use that big-ass ship to launch Mayo-El into the Phantom Zone? Pretty please?
I like the idea of this episode--slowing down a bit and telling the story of how Allison got involved with the Russians in the first place--but the execution was pretty clumsy.
I don't mind the flashback interspersed with developments in the present structure, but it is a bit played out and they made it really obvious when scenes from the past were meant to inform the present. For instance, Carrie telling Numan to google "Banana Joe's in St. Lucia" after seeing the guy's screensaver was more than enough to let us know that she'd put two-and-two together without needing to cut back to the scenes where Allison mentioned St. Lucia.
The story itself was a bit too paint by the numbers. Spy gets frustrated and wants to escape, skirts the rules, gets caught and turned is pretty standard stuff, and it's not as though there was some specific twist on it here than made Allison's journey through it more interesting. The dialogue didn't help either. Both the actress who plays Allison and Claire Daines haven proven themselves to be superb actresses in the show so far, but their exchanges in the flashbacks were awkwardly worded and pretty stilted. What could have been an interesting dive into Allison's psyche and what brought her to where she's willing to play turncoat became more of the facile backstory type bit that wouldn't feel out of place on Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
The other big stories are puttering along. I'm still not a fan of the Quinn story the show's embarked on in the second half of the season. Him becoming the pirate king was suspect to begin with, and again, it feels a little too convenient that he just happens to fall into the gang of terrorists who are planning to unleash a dirty bomb of some sort on Berlin. If too much of your story relies on coincidence, and the reasons for getting all your major players in one place are a bit contrived, it's hard to buy in.
Saul's story continues to be a highlight. I've always enjoyed the backroom dealing and horse trading sides of espionage that the show occasionally traffics in, and there's enough twists and turns in his story to make it interesting. I assume Etai is lying to Saul or at least not telling all that he knows (collaborating with the Russians?) so I'm curious to see where it goes.
Similarly, there continues to be more to During than meets the eye, but I can't for the life of me figure out what his game is. Maybe he's trying to embarrass the intelligence community writ large? Sleep with Carrie? Both? Who knows.
But overall, this was a weaker episode that had the right idea in deepening Allison's character and making us care about her journey, but couldn't really get the execution right to make it actually happen.
Too little too late. Pad her out and hamfist her whole 'important' character this season all they like I don't care for this Allison character. Feels like Howard Gordan is just rehashing so many stories from '24' this show feels way too deja vu/stories and twists have been done before.
Certainly one of the most taut thrillers of an episode the show has done this season. Giving the episode a more singular focus, the hunt for Allison, not only allowed the episode to feel more direct and powerful, but it led to the smaller details around that main story feeling more salient as well.
I've said it before and I'll say it again, the acting on this show is what has kept it worthwhile even as the storytelling has been more uneven from season-to-season and even episode-to-episode. The quiver of Carrie's lower lip as she looks at Saul for the first time since he told her off before he embraces her, the light in Saul's eyes when he tells Alison "I was asleep for ten years. You woke me up," the subtle pain and mild regret in Alison's eyes when she hears those words, was all masterful and added personal stakes to the larger spycraft story being told. The actress who played Alison did a particularly good job here, communicating her characters steely grace, fear, and determination in equal measure.
But the direction and cinematography deserve serious kudos as well. There were several images of the same person duplicated in multiple frames in this episode -- Alison on multiple surveillance screens, Quinn being videotaped by the terror cell, his soft-hearted would-be savior walking into his own reflection in a room full of reflective glass. The easy read of this motif is the multiple sides to these individuals, the way that Alison is a double agent, that Quinn cycles through identities, that the man who sympathizes with Quinn is both a terrorist but also a human being with empathy. But at base, it reflects the idea that there are multiple sides to these individuals.
And the way the episode's director put together the scenes of Allison's attempted escape and capture were superb at conveying the tension and pressure of the moment. Surveillance has been a recurring visual theme in this show, people's most personal moments watched through a digital frame, and it worked well here. But even when the show switched to steadicam and showed Alison weaving through the Berlin train station, it conveyed her sense of panic, of how tenuous Saul and Carrie and the Germans' hold on her was. It's one of the series' stand out sequences, and the (momentary) payoff to this season's game of cat and mouse was a satisfying one.
Unfortunately, Quinn's storyline was something of a drag. His plotline has been the weakest on the show since he all-too-conveniently found his way into a terror cell planning an attack on Berlin. The idea of the terrorist who has second thoughts about what he's planning and who is both humanized and sees the humanity in the people he's fighting against is a legitimate story beat, but it's also a bit of an easy one,, and there's not much of a distinctive take or twist to it here. Chekhov's sarin antedote injenction was a predictable turn in the story, and the entire enterprise feels like something to keep Quinn busy until it's time for him to rejoin the main plot of the season.
But still, the effort to trap Alison, the personal moments between Carrie and Saul, and the bits of spycraft we witnessed in both efforts, elevated this episode to being one of the best of the season so far. Alison's attempt to spin the events with Ivan as her asset is an interesting story direction, and while I have no doubt that Quinn will survive, there's still lots of intrigue going into the final three episodes of the season.
Another very solid episode from this season. I appreciated the twist that even if Dar doesn't buy Allison's story, he is--as he is wont to be--concerned about the political fallout if they were to reveal that the CIA had been duped by the SVR for 12 years and so he tries to maintain the status quo. But at the same time, I appreciated that Saul was clearly so betrayed by what had happened that he couldn't play along, if he was even trying to. Allison is playing this perfectly, and it's an interesting direction.
The other strongest element of the episode was the bonding between Carrie and Astrid. Nobody does a cryface like Claire Danes, but there's a dry steadiness to Astrid to where the clear hurt on her face after she found out about Quinn conveyed just as much as Carrie's tears did. The actress who plays Astrid is always a strong (and often funny) presence on the show, and I'd like to see her get more to do.
On the other hand, the pair's ability to find Quinn based on the floor tile pattern in the video was a little convenient, but they at least laid the groundwork with some CSI-esque technobabble to try to make it plausible that the BND and CIA could narrow down the possibilities enough for Carrie and Astrid to track him down. And the scene where they realize he's alive was a joyous one, even though it was inevitable--again, thanks to the great acting from the actresses who portray Carrie and Astrid.
I was less moved by the story involving the terrorists. Sure, there was tension in the scenes where Bibi discovers that someone helped Quinn, and Qasim is sweating bullets. But Qasim's the only character here who has more than one-note to him. Maybe the show is trying to develop Bibi a bit, but in the mean time, the whole crew just seems like the plot brigade boys, only there to introduce the season's big terror threat without much development.
And at the same time, I got a bit tired of the debate between During, Jonas, and Laura over what to do with the falsely accused electronics store owner who may have information about the attack. The debate itself is kind of facile, and none of these people are in the category of the show's most interesting characters. The intelligence agency (CIA? BND? SVR?) picking him up after Otto tries to bargain for his protection was a semi-interesting way to go with it, but still, meh. In my continuing speculation as to Otto, I'm now wondering if he specifically tipped someone else off to get the electronics store owner taken in away from Saul, but I'm sure we'll get the reveal of Otto's larger game plan somewhere down the line.
Otherwise, I appreciate the focus that an impending terror attack with Peter Quinn as the poster boy gave the episode, to where everything else could revolve around that plot point. It wasn't as strong an hour as some in this season, but it still did a good bit to advance the ball as to the larger season arc, and to give us some insight into the major characters and where they are after all that has happened. That makes it an above average entry in Season 5.
8.5/10. There was what seemed to be a recurring theme in this episode, and it was an interesting one - whether a personal cost is worth the greater good.
It started with Allison, asked to weigh the lives of all those individuals who would be hurt or killed by a terrorist attack in Berlin, with her own personal freedom and financial security. She obviously chooses the latter, but it's an interesting position to put the character in. It's arguable whether she had crossed the moral event horizon so far. Sure, she'd played the CIA for suckers to the Russians after being caught in a similar position, but there's a certain "it's all in the game" quality to the double-crosses among spooks. And yet there's something about shooting an innocent person, one who believes she's been framed, in order to save her own skin and ensure a terrorist plot goes forward that feels unforgivable.
Allison has been one of the most interesting and compelling additions to the show this season, and much of that is due to the actress, who tells so much of the character's story with her expressions, and who has the perfect "I'm faking, not acting" tone when she talks to Saul after the attack.
Mandy Patinkin as Saul is another actor who brings his A-game every episode. In his story, the question is whether the possibility of preventing a terrorist attack justifies harassing an innocent person who may know something about it. When that man commits suicide, the fact that Ingrid (who is also great) just keeps rolling, and Saul has to stop to process and tap out for a moment is a quiet commentary on that idea. Saul is an old hand. He's been through this sort of thing before, but the bodies keep piling up, and even he can't help but feel like he's had enough when his hard-nosed (if softer than the Germans') interrogation leads a man to take his own life.
And then there's he and Carrie risking Quinn's life in the hopes that it will prevent the same attack. Again, there's the same issue of balancing a single life to potentially save dozens, if not hundreds more. It's heartbreaking to see Carrie clearly conflicted, using her genuine feelings for Quinn to try to bring him back to consciousness, but then aghast at herself when he provides nothing useful and seems worse for wear. The fact that they're playing in the space between Carrie the spy devoted to stopping terror at any cost, and Carrie the human being who feels a connection to this poor man who's spent most of the season in some state of being near death's door is interesting moral territory.
Even Laura Sutton, likely my least favorite recurring character this season, has an intriguing storyline where she puts her own safety and security and job on the line for what she believes is the greater good. When she threatens to release the hacked documents until she's given access to the man being held by German Intelligence, it seems far nobler than her general browbeating of the intelligence apparatus to Carrie or During or whomever, not just because it's for one man, but because she sees it as for every man, as her standing up for common citizens everywhere, and every time that a government decides it can suspend people's rights because of an imminent threat. It may seem misguided, at least to me (who knows how many lives will be lost if those documents are released -- though Lockhart handing over documents to terrorists didn't seem to have too much collateral damage last season), but there's at least something that feels self-sacrificing about it.
And then there's Qassim, who starts to question whether the larger goal of driving the West out of his homeland is worth the smaller, but still very significant loss of life -- from the woman in a hijab to a father and daughter -- that the attack would inflict. Again, there's a personal cost to these innocent people that Qassim cannot shake, even in the face of his larger goals, goals that seem all the more hollow when Professor Aziz is an atheist who is disdainful of the country that took him in.
Of course, in the background of all this high-fallutin' thematic material, there is the veritable ticking time bomb of an impending terrorist attack that gives the episode a sense of urgency through it all. We see Carrie at her best once more, running down leads and talking her way through corrupt Hezbollah leaders, good Samaritan doctors, and even strangers on the subway to try to save the day. There's an excitement, a build to all of this that feels very earned and well-realized after the progression of the season as a whole. Let's see if Homeland can close it out at as high a level as the show has been able to maintain so far.
Something like this comment was originally a reply to @Pedro, but I thought I'd put it here.
This show starts a little slow. It does that thing where the first few episodes are your typical boring cop procedural to show the network they know how to paint by numbers. Then it picks up.
It starts actually exploring the morals of mass surveillance, and (minor spoilers) it turns out the Machine is an AI, and they deal with all the interesting ramifications of living in a world secretly run by a benevolent(?) AI. One of the nice aspects of this show is the only fictional element of the Machine is software. Makes for a very grounded science fiction.
The characters start to deal with total corruption of the police system and attempt to take it down, meanwhile learning and redeeming themselves from their dubious past.
They also deal with taking down organised crime, and what to do when someone tries to consolidate power within the families, even though the new boss is less violent.
They get caught up in vast government conspiracies waging massive secret intelligence wars, and must stop innocent people from getting killed while remaining hidden from powerful people.
Heartbreak, romance, homoerotic sexual tension, SciFi, shooting people, explosions!
They stop making another cop show and start making some really compelling television.
very slow start to season 6. i made it through the episode but in my view this is the least interesting opening episode in a homeland season. enjoyed the scene with thew new president.
6.3/10. I thought that Quinn was dead. In some ways, I was hoping he was, not because I dislike the character, who quickly became one of the show’s best, but because I thought it fit with the themes of Season 5. This type of life is difficult, both to live through and to escape. It forces people like Carrie, Quinn, and Saul to make hard choices, to perhaps even have to kill people they love. Saul had to kill Allison, a woman he cared about but was deceived and betrayed by, for the greater good. And it seemed like Carrie had to make a parallel choice, to kill Quinn, a man whom she, in her own fractured Carrie ways, loves, because she believes it’s a mercy when the alternatives are a difficult life he faces caused by her own choices.
The major theme of Season 5 was the quest for a normal life and whether it’s possible after all these people have seen. Including a major casualty in these events, let alone one caused by the show’s protagonists, seemed to drive home the costs of being in this world.
But Quinn, as you know if you’ve watched this episode or any Season 6 promotional material, is alive. And as I rewatched the end of the Season 5 finale, the intentions of that last scene were more ambiguous than I’d recalled. Carrie still seems poised to end Quinn’s life rather than face the difficult and uncertain road to recovery, but then there is that flash of light – the titular “Glimmer,” that seems to symbolize the possibility of a life apart from all of this misery and mayhem – and she pauses.
There is that same glimmer present in “Fair Game,” when Quinn is sitting in some drug den, looking squirrely, disheveled, and thoroughly not himself. He writes it off a glimpse of another life, a sign that he views himself as a lost cause. And after some reflection, I think the move works as a narrative choice, that it turns the final scene from an (admittedly compelling) symbol of the darkness that comes with this career choice, to a symbol of hope, that no matter how deep in you are, it’s worth the strain and struggle to get your head clear and your feet on the ground again.
The problem then becomes how Homeland depicts that path back to normalcy for Quinn and for Carrie. The idea of a guilt-ridden Carrie checking in on a resistant Quinn every day in the hospital gives us a cliché “let me go” story thread. Claire Danes and Rupert Friend are superior actors who can elevate the material, but it doesn’t make the setup any less tired. What’s frustrating is that there’s potential there. In my write up for the Season 5 finale, I compared Carrie to Tony Soprano, with the idea that both shows depict their protagonists as tainting the things they touch to some degree. The idea that what Quinn needs to recover is to be away from Carrie, and that Carrie’s guilt over being a cause, if not the cause, of his current condition prevents her from being able to do that, to Quinn’s detriment, is an interesting one.
But the depiction of Quinn’s downward spiral is hokey as all get out, with this damaged individual going full Riley Finn/Trainspotting to signify the depths of his despair and his hopelessness. Again, Friend is a great actor and makes these scenes work better than they have any right to, but it’s all just well-worn shorthand for rock bottom that doesn’t feel as real or pathos-ridden as it ought to. By the same token, Carrie and Quinn going full Odd Couple (with a side of Bubs from The Wire) has some mild potential given the themes in play, but comes off as more of a conceit to keep them around one another than a natural story development.
But that’s part of what a season premiere, especially for a show like Homeland, has to do – establish the plots and the premise of the upcoming season, even if it has to contort itself a bit to set everything up. We can see that in Saul and Dar Adal’s storyline, where the President Elect seems skeptical of the CIA’s “lethal programs” and proposes pulling out, or at least severely scaling back America’s military efforts in the Middle East and elsewhere. Dar Adal ascribes it to the President Elect having lost her son in Iraq, something she apparently would not discuss publicly and, if the closing scene where she lingered on a locket is any indication, it’s a good guess.
Saul is bullish on the President-To-Be though, wagering that she’s right where it counts and persuadable on the margins, while Dar is a “paranoid fuck” who’s chatting with others in the intelligence committee—without Saul—and presumably deciding how to continue on the same path regardless of the President. We only get the first wisps of this storyline in “Fair Game,” but the promise of a conflict between the President and the intelligence community (something that could only happen in fiction, clearly) with Dar on one side and Saul on the other portends intriguing things.
But it’s the other major storyline introduced in “Fair Game” that holds the most promise, or at least potential. Sekou Bah is a young American Muslim who is painted as a terrorist by the generic special agent who takes him in, but is, through the scenes where we’re introduced to him prior to his arrest, presented as a young man who clearly sympathizes with terrorist actions and is devout, but who is also principled, who believes in a seemingly justified different perspective, and who knows and appreciates his rights in this country.
It’s bold territory to not only present but to humanize a young Islamic kid who praises the actions of terrorists. While Qassim, the terrorist with the heart of gold from Season 5 felt like something out of a generic action movie, Sekou feels far more real, far more three-dimensional already, and, true to the spirit of Homeland, far more relevant to the current issues the country is facing at the intersection of radicalization and xenophobia. Again, this is Homeland, so there’s plenty of ways for this to go off the rails (and please, for the love of god, don’t have Carrie sleep with him), but it’s a promising start.
But “Fair Game” spends so much time on the poorly executed Carrie/Quinn business – Quinn’s unfortunate jaunt, Carrie acting as a civil rights lawyer(?) for people targeted by the CIA/FBI, and other “Hey! We’re in New York now!” moments that it drags the whole thing down. There’s a lot of dull setup that even the consistently good acting on the show can’t overcome.
If the theme of Season 5 was the cost of trying to get a normal life back, the theme for Season 6 appears to be the cost of trying to go it alone. Otto tells Carrie that she cannot make it as a loner (which feels like groundwork for she and Quinn getting together); Saul and maybe the President Elect are being isolated by the rest of the intelligence apparatus, and Sekou finds himself separated from his family, his home, and his life. “Fair Game” isn’t a great start, but like most of Homeland’s premiere, at least offers the possibility of interesting things to come, even if it presents them in a fairly uninteresting way. Let’s hope it can make good on that promise.
This was a perfectly solid episode. The main story on parole and leaving prison seemed, as many recent episodes of the show have, to have bitten off more than it could chew for a half-hour program, and it also seemed a little one-sided, but I did appreciate the brief interview with the ex-con who'd successfully made the transition from prison back to civilian life. Sometimes the human interest segments are too cloying for me, but the guy seemed so genuine up there that it made the segment work.
Why are they all so stupid
Grounders, Reapers, Mountain Men, Sky People - I actually find these names a bit cringe-worthy, like a little kid had to choose names for the different groups.
Yeah, baby! I'm all about crossovers. And a vintage musical crossover? Sign me the fuck up!
I love the fact that Melissa Benoist, Grant Gustin and Darren Criss all used to be on Glee. It must've been a fun little reunion for them to shoot this thing.
Well, would you look at that. Fuckboy isn't just a former slave owner, he's a former prince of slave owners. What a catch, am I right?
(Can he please just die already?)
At least Kara dumped his ass for now, but let's be real, this is the CW. She'll take him back despite the fact that he's a toxic piece of shit. Just free her from this awful relationship. What do I have to do? Cause I'd sell one of my kidneys to make that happen.
Cop Maggie! Cop Maggie! Cop Maggie! Give me more of that, please! Give me 42 minutes of that, I don't give a damn. I love her so much.
Winn is really unlucky when it comes to the ladies. But seriously, this one was his fault. Having sex in a museum? Don't you have a bed for that? Or, I don't know, a kitchen counter? Or any other flat surface in your apartment? If you want an adventure, go skydiving, not commit felonies. And fine, I understand why Lyra did what she did, but why did she even need Winn for that in the first place? She's invisible, for crying out loud. She didn't need a patsy to take the fall. The police would have never been able to prove it was her, anyway.
[6.8/10] It's not like this was a bad episode, but here's the thing. One of the things I've always liked about LWT is that Oliver feels like an honest broker. Sure, he has a certain slant, and always has, but it felt like he was spotlighting things that received too little attention to have political spin, or that he'd wade into more mainstream politics but try to approach the topics even-handedly.
That hasn't really been the case lately. Don't get me wrong, I can 100% understand not being able to keep your journalistic objectivity when you're talking about Donald Trump and the things happening in his wake, but it makes Last Week Tonight a more run of the mill program to me, just part and parcel with the scores of shows out there pointing to how terrible this stuff is with an admittedly amusing brand of snark. Sure, when Oliver talks about the new Republican health care plan, he's more informative about what's in it than most, but it comes off like doing the same thing everyone else is doing.
The best thing to say is that he does find a unique angle on it at the end, essentially saying that whatever you think of the bill, it's not the bill Trump promised, and it's likely to be the best he can do. But even that isn't a sterling or especially novel insight into it. There's some dada-ist glory to the show's "Catheter Cowboy" repeatedly asking Trump is he "gets it" but otherwise it becomes part of the din. And bits like making fun of local news anchors for their responses to International Women's Day or a MadTV level gag reel about Samsung products exploding doesn't do much to distinguish the show either.
Again, it's not bad. It's all sound enough and true enough and funny enough, but for a while there, it felt like Oliver had brought a different tack and a different energy to the political comedy show, and it's starting to feel like everything else.
The end is nigh
It's exposition time in Westworld, y'all! So Bernard was created because Ford wasn't able to recreate true emotion. Only another host could do it. Maybe this is analoge to programming we have now. In the early days of computing coders needed to code in assembly, tell the computer every operation it had to do. Nowadays we have higher level programming, in some cases we can even talk in natural language to it. So i think the way Ford works is not so far away to the way we work with computers. For me it is totally logical, that just hosts can model their own emotions, fulfill such a complicated task. My current Arnold-Theory is, that he was a host, that Ford created to do a similar task. But it got out of hand. So Bernard is Arnold 2.0.
Ford also quotes Mary Shelly's Frankenstein: One man's life or death were but a small price to pay for the acquirement of the knowledge which I sought, for the dominion I should acquire and transmit over the elemental foes of our race.
It is a bit to on the nose for my taste, but i guess this late in the season they really to tell it to the last viewer, who didn't already understand.
One gripe i had with the episode was, that apparently you can photoshop people out of surveillance footage. Who thought this was a nice feature to have? "Oh, and make sure we can edit our security tapes. You know...just in case" "Of course, that is not at all creepy and suspicious"
In the earlier episodes they could easily spot every deviation from the script (even the smallest one) and any suspicious host behaviour. But now hosts just go about they business becoming sentient unnoticed. They openly admit knowing of the outside world, use "cheat-codes". But security just doesn't care for the most part. That makes me think that the so-called "real world" is a also a park. Also, I find it suspicious that we weren't shown any of the outside world, only the park and it's staff facilities. It feels like none of the characters have any backstory or life outside of the park (except for a few, but even then those backstories are just clichés or a few compact lines of the script). Maybe it's poor writing, or perhaps it's very clever foreshadowing. And maybe this whole "hosts going sentient" thing is also just a story to make the guests feel special (hence no one from the staff noticing it).
Oh, and I don't think there is an Arnold. Probably Ford's name before he became a host or simply his alter-ego. Or maybe Ford is the original Bernard.
Really sick of Maeve and these idiot "Butchers". Are there no security cameras? Are they really that stupid?
"If you go looking for the truth, get the whole thing.It's like a good fuckHalf is worse than none at all."
Best quote ever
I hope Ford faked his death with a Host version of himself.
The season is over, and it was amazing, really. But I have a thing to say. I feel it won't be as interesting for binge-watchers as it was to those who followed it live. Part of the fun (for me of course) was guessing, reading theories on reddit and twitter for a week, and then seeing them unfold in the new episode. That's something binge-watchers will not have the luxury of. On the other hand, they won't have to wait for a week either…
That's not to say the show has nothing to offer besides theorising. The cast is terrific (Anthony Hopkins obviously stands out and he is amazing), the setting is perfect, the storyline is engaging, and no Chekhov's guns are left hanging.
This show is a must.
BISEXUAL CLARKE GRIFFIN IS CANON