Season 2, Episodes 5-6
“You can join us and survive, or fight
alone and die.”
Let’s just get this out in the open: Falling Skies is far from an original
show. Part of that comes from the fact that it works in an archetypal
framework; alien invasion stories have a long history, and at this point coming
up with new stories to tell within the genre has got to be difficult. But I
also get the feeling that the writers and producers aren’t really aiming to
take their show to new heights, and that they’re happy to tell those familiar
comfortable stories. (And TNT and the audience are happy to receive them, so
it’s not like they have any incentive to change things up.) But even by that
low clearance bar, there are two marks that the show should be able clear, yet
over the past couple of weeks has failed to do so: unpredictability and the
ability to generate new story lines.
- Two-Face got capture by the 2nd Mass., and clued them into a rebellion some Skitters were planning against the Overlords (which is a fairly boring name for those Silver Alien Dudes, but whatever works).
- Hal and Maggie shared a kiss, before she blew him off and ran away.
Sure, the 2nd Mass ended the episode
camped out at a hospital, and Ben claims that he will be leaving the company
since most were weirded out by his post-harness nature. But the episode itself
hinged on those two developments, and those alone, and as such it felt a little
empty overall.
This isn’t to say that the episode felt empty
solely because it only hinged on two main ideas. In fact, I praised the season premiere for having one simple idea and executing it in a way that it filled up
the whole hour with fun adventure times. However, what made the premiere work
was that while it was a simple idea, it was open enough that it allowed for the
episode to go a number of places, and afforded several story beats to play out,
instead of just going in one direction and stopping there.
Last week’s plotlines by comparison were both
simple and short-lived – at least for
now. Maggie and Hal kissed, and then she ended it – for now. Two-Face clued Tom
and the others into the plan for the skitter rebellion, and that’s likely all
we’ll here about it – for now. These are but steps along the way of
long-gestating – but rarely seen – long-term plots for the show.
And that’s the main problem with both of those
developments. Since these are developments that have been teased since season
one – we saw the chemistry between Hal and Maggie early on, and it was made
clear toward the end of last season that the Skitters weren’t working for the
Overlords of their own volition – neither of these things come as a big
surprise, even though we haven’t heard much about them in a while. Really, the
fact that we haven’t heard much about them in the interim works against these
moments even more; not only are they not surprising, but without any real build
up, they don’t really mean anything either. Instead the just sort of limp past
out eyes, filling time until the Next Important Development can happen.
And that Next Important Development occurred this
week, as the show got back to the more solid One Interesting and Exploitable
Idea formula. Unfortunately this week’s conceit – Karen is found de-harnessed,
and everybody doesn’t know whether they can trust her – came with it’s own
baggage, in this case it’s a lack of originality in the plotline. Sure, Karen’s
return brings with it an interesting, knotty meeting of plotlines that includes
the love triangle between Hal, Maggie, and Karen, as well as Ben’s own feelings
of isolation from the rest of the 2nd Mass. It was a beautiful way
to bring some long-running tensions to the surface without bending over
backwards, and on that level the story succeeded. But I can’t shake this
feeling that we’ve been down they road before, mostly because we have.
In the first season, when Rick, Ben, and the other
children were rescued from the Skitters and de-harnessed, a large through line
for the rest of the season was discovering just what was wrong with the
children, and weather they could be trusted, or if they had been corrupted by the
Skitters. That’s still been has been an issue with Ben this season, and
bringing in Karen with the same question attached her is meant to achieve some
parallels between the two characters, which it did. However, since we’ve
already seen others corrupted by Skitters/harnesses in the past, the fact that
Karen was faking her human sympathies wasn’t all that surprising. The mere fact
that Karen seemed perfectly normal at
the outset was sort of a dead give away that she wasn’t, and no matter how much
ambiguity Jesse Schram gave to her performance, the writing made this twist far
too telegraphed.
In fact, I would say that Falling Skies seems to be having some problems coming up with new
things for its characters to do each week, and for a show that’s only aired 16
episodes, that’s a bit of a problem. Obviously the humans are always going to
face alien threat for the entirety of the series, but how those threats manifest
themselves can differ greatly. All it takes is a little creativity on the
writers’ part. And with TNT to renewing the show for a third season, and
subsequent season also seem probable, and it’s about time the writers start
letting the creativity shine through.
Other
Thoughts:
I don’t have a whole lot to say about the other
subplots, Weaver’s sudden infection and Tom and Anne’s budding relationship.
With the former, it was another plotline that didn’t have enough build-up to it
to really feel earned or charged, and it only seemed to exist as a reason to
keep the 2nd Mass. in the hospital for another episode. As to the
latter, the show has been kind of playing it low key with the romance angle,
letting it slowly build-up in the background, which was nice, but once again
these sorts of things taking front stage don’t really work. For both, they were
quickly resolved, so we can’t really pretend that the stakes were all that
large in the first place.
Another recycled plot element, this one from “Other
Acts of Courage”: Rick serving as translator for the Skitter, something that he
had done as well during the first season.
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