Season 2, Episodes 7-8
I’ve written before about how Falling Skies is a show divided against itself – it’s very good at providing
the action and sci-fi thrills (and sometimes chills), but doesn’t have quite
the same level of skill when it comes to the other elements of the show, mostly
the character-building and pathos. It often seems as if the show is
begrudgingly doing the latter time as a way to bide time until and save money
for the former, and the filler status would probably explain why it never feels
as affecting as the action set-pieces. This contrast becomes even more apparent
with “Molon Labe” and “Death March”, episodes that tackle only action and
character building, respectively, to disorienting effect.
“Death March” is almost the complete opposite, an
hour that asks us to spend time with characters that we supposedly care about,
as it starts to deliver to us more details about them. This episode was
obviously one of those saddled with cost-cutting measures, if all the time that
the cast was stuck in the car sets with the horrendous green-screen is any
indication, but this alone isn’t a deal-breaker for the episode. Indeed, the
episode takes the form of one of my favorite types of episodes, the bottle
episode. It’s not a true bottle episode as there are multiple sets and guest stars
at play, but it does effectively strand the characters in a limited space – in
this case, the road, with very little around to distract them – and use that
stranding as an opportunity to get at some real pathos for the characters.
Where the episode seems to fail is that there
isn’t really enough established character work built up for this episode to
play off of. The best bottle episodes tend to be those that take what we
already know about a character and the play off of that, either digging deeper into
one aspect of their personality, or to reveal something new and deep about them
that’s been hiding under the surface. You could argue that this is what the
episode was trying to do with both Tector and Maggie, and technically that is
correct. The problem is that there’s not really that much for these new
revelations to stick to. Maggie and Tector have both been cyphers for the
majority of their screen time – Maggie only recently got fleshed out with her
cancer backstory, which doesn’t actually tell us a lot about her – that these
revelations feel as if they were randomly tossed off, without much thought into
whether they really make sense.
I say that with full recognition that Maggie’s
backstory caused drama in her relationship with Hal, which I think just makes
me even madder. Maggie’s backstory – with the drugs, and the pregnancy, and the
jail time – is just so intense that it feels calculated, like the writers
dumped every bad thing they could think of on Maggie just so we would believe
Hall being scared off. None of this really feels like it makes much difference
how we few Maggie – who acts most of the time like this baggage doesn’t weigh
her down in the day-to-day – that I doubt it’s really going to come up again.
At least Tector’s army-based regrets have ac actual effect on his current life,
and this is something that could be built off of later, even if it doesn’t mean
all that much now.
Let’s not even talk about Matt’s story with the
harnessed kid Jennie, which really only sought to remind us that Matt can still
be compassioned and open-minded, which of course, because HE’S A FUCKING CHILD.
Anyways, what undermines all of this shoddy
character building even further is how the episode ends. While I’ve been
relatively happy with the creation of Charleston as a small, attainable goal
for the 2nd Mass (and the show) to aim for, the fact that this
episode ends with them reaching the new human capital feels both unearned and
as if it cut the rest of the hour off at the knees. Seeing as how the 2nd
Mass took off for Charleston at the end of “Molon Labe” and arrived at the end
of the next hour, combined with the fact that “Molon Labe” and the episode
before that took place at one location, makes it feel like the trip their
didn’t take as long as the show seems to want us to believe. To that end, all
of the character work of the hour feels as if it was created because the writers
needed a low-budget way to kill time until Charleston was reached. That this
comes at the end of two ridiculous and pointless fake-outs that also seemed designed
to pad out the hour – Hal et. al.’s capture/rescue by Porter, and the 2nd
Mass believing that Charleston held no human settlement – only served to further
push the pointlessness of it all.
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