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Westworld - "Trace Decay" - Season 1 Episode 8 Review

November 21, 2016

Source: HBO

Source: HBO

Bernard has had a pretty rough day.  Not only does he realize he is a host, but he’s also murdered his lover and corporate spy, Theresa.  He’s not just any host however, he’s Dr. Ford’s right hand man, built to counterbalance all his ideas.  His curiosity about human nature added depth and spectrum to the hosts, ironically making them more human than Ford alone was able to.  Yet when he is allowed to remember what he’s done, to grasp that his memories of his life were his personal programmed storyline, he seems to be ready to be rid of those burdens.  Indeed, all of human joy and suffering is all in the mind, and memory is a loose narrative of what’s happened before, but again, it only exists in some dusty room in our consciousness.  There is no qualifying difference between a host and a human and the hosts seem to have the better end of the deal.  Bernard’s anxiety over “false” memory and the guilt of being a murderer is washed away with a few taps on Ford’s tablet.  We on the other hand carry the weight for the duration of life.

Source: HBO

There’s still work to be done of course.  Bernard dutifully covers up the murder and Ford, in his quiet menace, reasserts his dominance of Westworld over Charlotte.  She knows that he knows that Theresa was a mole, but ever the cunning strategist, she recruits Lee to help her smuggle the stolen data out through one defunct host:  Peter Abernathy.  I think she doesn’t know exactly what she’s doing, and using Peter will prove to be messy.  

Source: HBO

Dolores and William are still searching for the place she has a vague memory of, or the place Arnold is leading her.  She seems to be remembering bits of old roles but with Arnold’s specter guiding her, she is becoming more and more confused, if such a thing is possible.  As it turns out, she’s being called to an old town that was scrapped, but is now being repurposed for Ford’s new storyline.  The burnt church seems to be the important part but we won’t find out any time soon since Logan and his new friends show up as Dolores and William try to make their way back to Sweetwater.  

Source: HBO

Maeve is not only “power leveled” but also has admin privileges at her disposal so she’s technically the most powerful being in Westworld, as far as hosts go, but her increased awareness also brings about some grim realizations.  She perfectly recalls her past roles and has always had trouble letting go of memory and emotion, we learn.  It’s heartbreaking to see how casually she’s been repurposed, how very real tragedy is treated as a plot point that didn’t “sizzle,” and that she never really forgot any of it and is more a product of her trauma than her programming.  She can feel elements of her past selves, and in the context of the show it makes sense, but it would be like us recalling past lives.  Is it so far-fetched now?  Are all of our idiosyncrasies and fears and quirks and such merely the product of biology, or have we been who we are for much longer than a mortal lifespan, just in different places and times, collecting bits and pieces of “soul information” along the way?  Is the idea of the soul just the ghost in the machine taking formation?

Source: HBO

Either way, Maeve is pretty much done with Westworld and continues to manipulate Felix and Sylvester to help her escape.  She wants to recruit an army, of hosts we assume, but after she accidentally (?) kills the new Clementine and won’t respond to commands, the techs close in on her.  Surely this is one of the things Ford is aware of, right?

Source: HBO

In all of this mess, we have the Man in Black and Teddy still on Wyatt’s trail.  It’s about god damn time Teddy remembers a little piece of his “past” because he’s been a sucker since the show began.  I mean, he’s still a sucker but at least he isn’t the only host who just keeps blindly following his narrative loop.  He tries to get answers out of MiB but a survivor of one of Wyatt’s killing sprees turns out to be one of his people and stabs Teddy with a god damn arrow.  Before that, we finally get to make more sense of the MiB and what he’s doing in Westworld.  A rich and charitable man on the surface, but his true nature is cold and beastly.  So much so that his wife kills herself and his daughter pushes him away.  Plagued by these revelations of his true nature, he finds himself in Westworld for the sole purpose of being cruel, to see if the game can strip away his mask.  Instead, in Maeve’s suffering, he catches a glimpse of genuine life in the hosts.  He has a chance for his actions to have consequence, and is willing to give the hosts the agency they play at to achieve that.  Just as Teddy is unable to win at playing hero, the Man in Black is unable to be punished for his cruelty.  What will happen to the two of them when the center of the maze is reached?  As Wyatt’s cult encircles them, they may be getting a step closer.

And Elsie?  I’m sure she’s...just enjoying her time off.

In television, review, article Tags western, westworld, hbo, science fiction, sci-fi
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Supernatural - "Celebrating the Life of Asa Fox" - Season 12 Episode 6 Review

November 21, 2016

We start this episode with a flashback where we are introduced to Asa Fox. Asa was a kid when Mary saved him from a werewolf in 1980 inspiring him to be like her and become a hunter. But as Mary has said before, all hunters end up the same: dead. And Asa was no exception. Right after we seen his montage, we see him hung from a tree. Not the most intense way for a hunter to die, but the end result was still the same. The Winchester men find out about his death from their good friend Jody who met him while he was hunting, and they vow to accompany her to the wake. They have never been to a Hunter gathering aside from the ones they had thrown together, so off to Canada they go.

Source: The CW

Unfortunately for them, the flow of war stories and memories gets interrupted when the hunters become the hunted and one of their new friends, Randy, is killed while getting a beer. But before they even find out what happened, Mary appears. Talk about shocked! The boys had no idea where there mom was, and then she appears at the house of a hunter they had only heard stories about. It was clear by the montage we saw previously that Asa was important to Mary, but it wasn’t clear if her sons knew the extent of it. Jody’s reaction to finding out that Mary was back from dead was classic, and over the top. I was just happy to see that Mary was okay. I’m not going to lie, part of me was wondering if she really was on a sabbatical of her own free will or if she was captive somewhere by one of the many people who don’t care for the Winchesters. She told them she was retracing her steps and reading John’s journal to catch up on all the things she missed while she was, well, dead.

Source: The CW

Dean was obviously upset that Mary dropped everything when she heard of Asa’s death to go to Canada but had only sent him a few texts since she took off. I don’t blame him to be honest. He has waited decades to see his mom again, and then when she is back, she is quite distant. That has to hurt. And I also didn’t blame Asa’s mother’s reaction to Mary. She blamed her from her son’s death. After all, he did become a hunter because of her. But they had to push all that aside when they finally saw Randy the hunter, dead and strapped to the ceiling. They’re lucky two of the hunter’s with them were raised by a witch and know some magick, as they were able to see that the house had been warded, leaving them trapped inside, all but Dean. He had been outside clearing his head when it went down. One of the other hunter’s seemed to know who had killed Randy: a crossroads demon, Jael. Who had a vendetta against Asa from the sound of it.

Source: The CW

As Dean is outside he sees Billi, the reaper he knows a little too well. She informs him that she just reaped a soul from inside. Unfortunately the ward put on the house also keeps him from getting in. This gives Billi the upper hand once again as she strikes a deal with him to get him inside. I can’t even imagine what kind of favor he will owe her for that. And after screwing her over with a deal in the past, I was shocked she would even help. And this demon, Jael is a tricky little bugger. He keeps skipping from vessel to vessel, keeping the hunter’s on their toes. They have no idea who to trust among them because at any time the demon could be among them. That’s not cool. So much for enjoying the hunter’s gathering huh?

Source: The CW

When Jael claims the life of Elvis, I was upset I won’t lie. He seemed like such a sweet guy, desperate to connect and make friends. That makes two hunters dead now, so thank goodness Asa had all of the tools he did at his house, because the rest of them weren’t ready for the hunt. They thought they were going to a wake, not a demon hunt. And when Jael takes over Jody, we find out some very interesting news. Bucky had been the one to kill Asa, and Jael was pissed. Jael wanted that kill. But as we know, hunters only kill other hunters if they absolutely have no choice, so I was on pins and needles ready to hear his reasons. And when he confessed to pushing Asa I was shocked. An accident had claimed the life of Asa, not a hunt. But even with this revelation Mary still seemed upset, and everything still seemed so wrong to her. But even with Billi’s offer to take her back to Heaven, she declined. And with reapers unable to take lives, Billi will just have to wait for Mary to die. Giving her just one more reason to be annoyed by the Winchesters. I have a feeling Billi is not going to let go of this very easily, and we will be seeing more of her this season. After all, taking Dean’s mother away from him would be the ultimate payback that she’s been looking for for quite some time now. I’m also hoping we see more of the twin hunters. Their knowledge of magick could really help the Winchesters in future hunts. And with Lucifer still on the loose, they’re going to need all the help they can get.

 

In television, review, article Tags supernatural, dean, sam, cw, the cw
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Westworld - "Trompe L’Oeil" - Season 1 Episode 7 Review

November 15, 2016

hings will go in order of how easily I understood them, and I say “understood” in the very loosest definition.

Source: HBO

Source: HBO

William and Dolores continue their journey into dark territory with Lawrence.  William has finally broken out of the shell he made for himself in the real world, becoming one of the characters he idolized in his books.  In some backwards way, Logan was right about pursuing the Pariah quest line.  Dolores on the other hand seems to be guided by the voice of Arnold to some unknown vista, one she draws on a canvas tarp after her and William spend the night together.  One thinks that she’s with Teddy, but then one remembers they are programmed to be together, and the more Dolores loosens her bonds as a host, the more she can decide for herself.  After the train gets ambushed by the confederados, who in turn get ambushed by the Ghost Nation, Lawrence, Dolores and William come upon the exact canyon she drew.  They part ways with Lawrence and for them, things are uncertain.  I wonder if William plans on staying in Westworld?  Perhaps he thinks there are places Westworld staff can’t track him?  Surely their stay is up at some point and he’ll have to face Logan and his fiancé soon enough.  Then again, perhaps that’s why he’s taking things as far as they can go before he returns to the boringness and consequences “IRL”

Source: HBO

Source: HBO

Source: HBO

Maeve has somehow woken herself up from the matrix and got a lot of answers from Felix and Sylvester, and even had them buff her stats quite a bit, so to speak.  The result is that the game is a bit broken for her.  She doesn’t fit in with the storylines and interactions anymore and the tech’s freeze commands don’t work on her now.  The more she learns about how Westworld works and the true nature of her existence within it, the more she loathes what she sees.  Still, she has her attachments, whether programmed or not.  So when they take away Clementine to be used as an example of the danger of the reveries Ford programmed, she decides she’s had enough and recruits Felix and Sylvester to help her escape.  I like Maeve’s story the most because of her reaction to all of it.  We would be in awe to die and wake back up on a table, to find that we were in the process of being repaired and resurrected by faceless humanoids.  Then to wake up again and again to find out that the world we know is crafted by these same creatures, down to the last blade of grass.  Eventually we’d see these creatures for who they really are: mortal men who are subordinates to some hierarchy of corporate power.  Men, regular low level jackoffs you’ve been dealing with your whole life.  Would you go insane at the thought that your death and rebirth over oceans of time was in the hands of some kid who went to a for-profit tech school, and that all reality is, is a really complex experiment?  Or would you be like Maeve and have those guys amp up your perception, dull your pain, and make them help you get the fuck out of Dodge?

Source: HBO

Clementine was the victim of a staged interaction to show that the hosts remember, can hold grudges, and act violently against guests.  It was a play designed by Therese and Charlotte Hale, the hotshot representative of “the board.”  Not only did Bernard take the fall for the oversight, but Charlotte said there would have to be an unexpected blood sacrifice.  Of course Ford is unflappable and Bernard can see through the bullshit.  He calls Therese out on it, and on being the one sneaking data out of Westworld while taking her to the house where Dr. Ford’s creepy little family lives.  Once there things start to become painfully clear.  Bernard is a host, Ford made him lead Therese there, and the “blood sacrifice” was her own...and it was pretty unexpected.  It was an immaculate scene in a series full of them.  It was tragic and suspenseful, scary and brutal all at once.  Bernard’s realization was rough, especially since memories of a son he never had plague his dreams.  Before he is allowed to fully experience the moment and the emotion, Ford shuts him down.  He once said that he wanted to feel the pain of his loss, and just when he was about to actually experience it, he is denied.  Therese realizes she’s been played by everyone, including Charlotte and “the board.”  She was just another pawn in an endless game of chess between Ford and the powers that be.  And Ford himself, as chilling as Anthony Hopkins has ever been, reiterates that he built everything in Westworld and there is nothing he isn’t aware of.

Source: HBO

Though he and Arnold designed Westworld, he says it was never about playing god.  It was about telling stories and letting people live in them, in the way William has always wanted to and is now doing.  The proprietary technology the hosts use, that I can only assume this Delos Corporation wants to weaponize or somehow apply to the “real” world, is merely a tool of storytelling.  To want it for anything else is truly trying to play god.

The hosts themselves are free and while they don’t have a benevolent master in Ford, they are at least unburdened by consciousness in this strange Garden of Eden.  Ford keeps them in, and keeps the outside world out.  But there has to be an apple of wisdom at some point.  Has Maeve already taken a bite?  Will Dolores find it with William?  Or is that what the Man in Black is seeking?

And where the fuck is Elsie?


Written by A Play On Nerds contributor, Jerry Herrera - Lover of horror, sci fi, and fantasy in that order.  Semi-permanent Disneyland resident.  I'm at least one of the droids you're looking for. Twitter: @FrankenJerry - Instagram: @GeraldoPedro

In television, review, article Tags western, westworld, hbo, science fiction, sci-fi
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