Season 2, Episode 4
Perhaps my biggest problem with Falling Skies first season was its
tendency toward the maudlin, to fill up on those sappy moments that are
supposed to move us simply because. My go-to mental reference point to this is
that episode that ended with the whole of the 2nd Mass. sitting down
to have a meal together, but there were many others along the way, and it’s
probably for the best that I’ve forgotten about them. Such the curse of a show
that seeks to have a family angle to it, that it feels it must use those
relationships and feelings to fuel its stories, regardless if it’s really
warranted or not. (Some say that this is more likely due to Spielberg’s
producer role, but it’s hard to know exactly how much say he has over scripts
and the like.) So it was that this week’s episode turned to one of the most
predictably and manipulative family element: the children.
Fortunately (or unfortunately for me, since it
sort of undercuts my argument), this common knowledge isn’t entirely off-base. While
putting children in danger doesn’t automatically generate sincere tension
(especially, again, when you know the show you’re watching isn’t really into
killing or seriously harming any main character), it makes for a much more
understandable character motivation than Death of a Supposedly Close Friend
does. As a society, we are much more used to and comfortable with the idea of
parenthood than we are of death, so it becomes easier to buy Tom rushing into a
factory to save Matt than it does him getting in a fight with Pope over Jimmy’s
death.
It doesn’t hurt of course that much of the action
of Falling Skies’ first season was motivated by similar emotions, with Tom and
the other adults of the 2nd Mass. hoping to get their children back
from Skitter control. That the show returned to this well tonight shouldn’t
exactly be surprising, but it is a letdown none the less, considering this is
only the fourteenth episode of the whole series, and it seems a bit odd
for the writers to have run out of ideas so quickly. Can’t they think up
something else besides putting more kids in danger?
Well, that’s not being entirely fair to “Young
Bloods”, which utilizes the child-parent dynamic in a number of ways. When
Weaver’s daughter Jena shows up as part of Diego rag-tag bunch of kids, it’s an
opportunity to explore what an angry man he supposedly is. And when Matt allows
himself to be bait for Berserkers Techor and Boone, it’s supposed to ignite in
Tom a crisis about raising his son in a post-apocalyptic world. The problem with
the first instance is that it is both too clichéd too far out of left field to
really work. And while Matt’s darkly humorous “Awesome!” in response to seeing
two Skitters’ heads blown off suggested an interesting discussion about how one
would raise kids in a world with a different moral code, that idea got lost
under Tom’s boring bout of anger with Matt and the two Berserkers who put him
in harms way.
So then what did work? Well, the entire scene at Harness
Factory with the Skitters attempting to Harness more children was effectively
chilling, and works well as a form of insight into the alien’s invasion
operation. The show is usually pretty stingy with details about the Skitters
and the overlords, so this was a nice way to be reminded of their cruel and
effective means of taking over the human population. It also led to another
instance of Ben’s spikes glowing, and while having only Hal notice once again
leaves the story more inert than I would like, at least somebody knowing should
add some tension.
But really, “Young Bloods”, like “Compass” before
it, once again displays the problems with Falling Skies’ emotional side. Too
much of it, and the story doesn’t chug along with enough speed to really
matter. There are a lot of good plot elements percolating on the show right
now, and I hate to see them wasted every time the writer want an emotional
slow-down.
Quotes and
Other Thoughts:
“Good news.” “Aliens left.” “Who told you? I
wanted to be the first. I thought you’d be more surprised.”
Say, did you know that Lourdes had family in
Mexico? Well you do now. Do you care? I doubted as much.
I’ll admit that I did kind of like Techor slowly
working his way back into Tom’s good graces (and out of sanitation detail) throughout
the episode. I’m not saying it added much, and I’d rather there be something with
more momentum in its place, but it was a nice touch for what it was.
That reminds me: I hope the show will do something
more interesting with Tom now that he’s apparently in charge of the Berserkers.
Tom and Ann continue to play smoochie-face with
one another, which is a thing that is happening.
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