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Preacher - "See" - Season 1 Episode 2 Review

June 21, 2016

Source:AMC

There is very little in the second episode of Preacher that is more important than its opening.  In the year 1881, we meet a solemn, grizzled man who rides to retrieve medicine for a sick girl, who we assume is his daughter.  He encounters some settlers who left the city and were a might optimistic about the West for his tastes.  The mysterious man continues his journey past a tree full of hanged natives on his way to a town called Ratwater…

Source:AMC

Jesse has taken to baptizing the town of Annville in his renewed quest to save everyone.  Cassidy has made himself at home, his only problems being a lack of funds, booze and Eugene’s face “like an arsehole.”

Although Jesse and Emily are making strides in improving the church, all is not well.  Chief among Jesse’s concerns are Linus, the town bus driver who confesses his sexual attraction to one of his little passengers in the Loach family.  Traci lays in a coma and her mother Terri has no time for Jesse’s contrivances.  Also, Fiore and DeBlanc finally catch up with him in search of his powers.

Source:AMC

We see that even though Jesse’s heart is in a place to help, the God he represents is painfully absent.  Linus’ lust for young girls is somehow absolved by his confessing, and even though Jesse knows this man doesn’t plan on seeking help or distancing himself from this girl, he still has to say he is forgiven by the Lord Almighty.  Trying to explain to the mother of a brain dead girl that this very same protector of child molesters has a plan that involves her daughter having a skull like a rotten melon also poses certain challenges.  There is a strong stink of bullshit in Jesse’s nose and he’s tired of shoveling it.  Even getting blackout drunk with Cassidy doesn’t provide any solutions, although once Jesse passes out we see that Cassidy isn’t necessarily a good dude.  Indeed, he’s a bit of a con man who will make off with your keys and steal your car.

Source:AMC

This is where Fiore and DeBlanc attempt at a strange ritual with infernal machines to perhaps remove the Power from Jesse.  When that doesn’t work and things begin to get a little more...uh...dismembery...Cassidy thankfully has an attack of conscience and stops the two mysterious men by literally tearing them limb from limb.  Another savage fight scene courtesy of Cassidy.  He even cleans up his mess!  Everyone needs to have a drunk vampire as a friend.

Source:AMC

Once Jesse comes to, he sets off to make things right by taking the will of God into his own hands, using his power to make Linus forget his lusts and the episode ends before we get to see if this power can wake Tracy from brain death.  Another interesting and poignant episode that sets things down a curious path and introduces a very important character, as well as several different side plots.

Source:AMC

We get to meet Odin Quincannon and get a glimpse of his meat and power company’s influence, and see that Donnie is still an asshole, even with a broken arm.  Eugene and Sheriff Root have an odd moment with some good ol’ boys that call Eugene a murderer, and Tulip has made herself at home at the Toad Vine brothel and is still trying to convince Jesse to take this job she has.  But this time, she mentions the name Danny, and that means something to Jess.  Oh yeah, and although Cassidy buried them in their own luggage, Fiore and DeBlanc aren’t dead.

Did you notice the hanging tree make a reappearance?  


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 preacher, amc, comics
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Preacher - Pilot - Season 1 Episode 1 Review

June 9, 2016

Preacher is another graphic novel adaptation from AMC and it tells the story of Jesse Custer, a small town Texas preacher (surprise!) who is struck by a supernatural force that gives him strange powers.  What those powers are, isn’t really explained in the first episode.  All we see is this streak of light travelling through space and gurgling like a baby.  When it reaches Earth, it strikes several different men of faith, who for whatever reason, are not worthy of the power and thus violently explode.  It’s a good attention getter.  After each explosion, two men are seen investigating each scene around the world.

Source: AMC

While this force seeks out another person that may be worthy, we get a look into the daily life of Jesse Custer.  He’s not a particularly good preacher, nor does he exactly command respect of his parishioners.  He’s surly, he drinks and smokes, and he has a quiet disdain for the frankly backwards redneck way of life that goes on around him.  Yet he remains in the town of Annville out of a sense of duty and a promise he made to his father, himself a preacher, some time ago.  Other residents of the town hint at Jesse’s prodigal son-ish return and that he has, if not a dark past, a certainly more violent one.  A boy, Chris, asks Jesse for help with his abusive father, Donnie.  The Sheriff in town, Hugo Root, also asks Jesse to pay his son a visit.  Again, out of some odd sense of duty, Jesse obliges his flock.  Even something as tiresome as listening to one of his congregation (played perfectly by Jason Lee) complain about his mother, is not outside of Jesse’s list of things he’s willing to do for his people.

Source: AMC

Meanwhile we meet Cassidy, who is a hard partying Irishman bartending on a private jet.  That is, until he realizes that his new buddies aren’t what they appear to be, and neither is he.  In one of the best introductions of a character I have ever seen, Cassidy reveals himself to be a vampire on board a jet with vampire hunters.  It’s a messy, gory, hilarious fight that ends with Cassidy pouring some blood out of one of his fallen foes into a to-go cup and jumping out of the quickly descending jet.  He takes an umbrella to slow his descent.  That works, right?  Upon impact, Cassidy finds himself not too far outside of Annville…

Source: AMC

Also on her way to Annville is Tulip, a woman from Jesse’s past and a pretty tough customer herself.  We meet Tulip as she fights two guys in a car that has gone off the road and into a cornfield.  Again, the action is brutal and darkly hilarious.  After killing both men and stopping the car in a yard with two kids playing in it, she recovers a mysterious map and enlists the help of the children to build a homemade bazooka.  This is to shoot down a helicopter full of friends of the men she killed.  If I thought Cassidy was a badass, Tulip’s introduction makes her just as badass, minus the whole vampire thing.

Source: AMC

Jesse pays a visit to Chris’ mother to ask about Donnie’s abuse and doesn’t get the answer he’s looking for.  He also visits Sheriff Root’s son, Eugene, who has quite a unique disfigurement.  His path also crosses Tulip’s, and she offers him a part in a job...a job to end all jobs.  Yet another hint at Jesse’s past.  He declines but that doesn’t scare her away.  The day proving too much for him, Jesse retires to the bar to drown his worries.  This is where he briefly meets Cassidy, and where Chris’ abusive father Donnie sucker punches him for asking his wife questions.  Now we see just how violent Jesse’s life was before he became a preacher, as he mercilessly pummels Donnie and his friends, with an assist from Cassidy.  He may not be the fighter Tulip or Cassidy are, but there’s a certain sadism that he enjoys.  He and Cassidy are thrown in jail and make nice before Jesse gets bailed out by his organ player, Emily.

Source: AMC

Throughout the episode it’s clear that Jesse is grappling not only with his past, but his current tiring situation and his faith overall.  The people of Annville are all too content to be assholes every day but Sunday, and everywhere he goes it seems that he’s either unwanted or his help doesn’t make a difference.  He vows to quit, tells Emily as much, and retires to a pew inside the church.  It is here that the supernatural force finds him and strikes him down, for three days.  On the third day, he rises to find Cassidy has moved in and it’s time for him to tell his congregation that he quits.  As people file in, Jason Lee’s nervous man-child again lays his problems at Jesse’s feet.  Jesse repeats the advice he’s always given, but this time the words have a more profound impact, and with unintended consequences.

Source: AMC

As we see these consequences play out, Jesse begins to tell people he’s giving up, but something inspires him to reverse his position.  Indeed, he’s going to save the people of Annville, whether they like it or not.

I’m not going to do a whole lot of comparing between the comic and the show, because they are very different.  The graphic novel itself is very much a product of the ‘90s and though several adaptations of it have failed, it remains a damn good read, one of those “essentials” if you like comics.  The show’s success is that it’s somehow more ridiculous than the books, but has its toes in reality.  It’s gory, campy in parts, and pitch perfectly dark and dryly humorous.  I was so damn entertained by this first episode and I can’t wait to see the rest of this odd cast of characters make their debut, if Cassidy and Tulip are any indication of how they will make their entrance.


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 preacher, amc, comics, tv, television
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Fear the Walking Dead - Season 2 Episodes 6 and 7 Review

June 9, 2016

Season 2 Episode 6: "Sicut Servus"

Source: AMC

Finally the group makes it to Baja, but not without a few snags along the way.  A handful of locals receive the word of God before taking up arms and almost storming Abigail’s villa, and while Thomas Abigail himself tries to intervene, a nasty illness takes over the church goers and before he expires, the priest warns Thomas of “the evil he protects,” namely Celia.  It seems the unassuming maid is much more than she was made out to be.

At sea, Luis’ deal with the Mexican military, an exchange of gold for safe passage to shore, goes awry and Luis finds himself shot and dying while the boat comes under fire.  Before he dies he tries to hand a mysterious coin to Ofelia to give to his mother, but an unsympathetic and constantly suspicious Daniel chucks it into the ocean.  So much for last requests.  Nick stays with Luis for a bit, who mumbles something about his mother once again.

Source: AMC

Once ashore, the group is accosted by the dead and newly risen congregation.  It’s a standard zombie melee affair, but with Daniel having a flashback and Chris purposely hesitating to help Maddie, things have become strange and irreversibly complicated.  No matter, they get to chill in a big ass house for a bit until the next pile of shit hits the fan.  The shit, as it tends to do in the zombie apocalypse, piles up almost immediately after our heroes enter the villa.  The workers are friendly, but odd.  Strand finds Thomas bitten and dying, and settles in with him.  Chris tries to make nice with Alicia but she calls him out on his earlier hesitation, to which he makes a creepy school shooter type threat.  Nick meets Celia and they automatically hit it off, to Maddie’s dismay, and perhaps ours, since we know something about Celia the rest of the group doesn’t.

Source: AMC

Daniel also gets a weird vibe from Celia, and the villa in general, as he spots the same strange owl symbol carved in a tree above a memorial.  He himself is starting to crack up, but he manages to do some more snooping and discovers that the workers in the villa are keeping their undead in the cellar.  It’s Hershel’s farm all over again!  But this time with a creepy matriarch instead of a sweet old man.  Things come to a head as Thomas’ condition worsens:  Maddie confronts Travis about Chris’ behavior and Daniel confronts Celia about her collection of walkers.  Travis and Maddie separate to be with their respective kids and Daniel realizes that Celia poisoned the church congregation with communion wafers, and leaves Daniel to his thoughts to help both Strand and Thomas ease into undeath.

Nick and Celia have another little chat as she celebrates her twisted ritual, but a gunshot rings out and reveals two things:  Strand doesn’t go quietly into that good night with Thomas, opting to shoot him in the head instead.  The poisoned wafers remain untouched.  And the noise wakes Maddie and Alicia, who find Chris standing over them with a knife… DUN DUN DUNNNNN

I think we’ve reached a point where something has to give, and since next episode is the mid season finale, something will give.  Chris is obviously disturbed, so is Celia.  With Daniel onto her weird death cult, who of the two will lose that struggle?  Can Chris remain a part of the group after this?  Will Travis choose his son or his girlfriend?  Someone is going to have to pay the price for knowing too much.  


Season 2 Episode 7: "Shiva"

Source: AMC

In the mid-season finale, we begin by seeing just how deep Daniel’s demons are rooted.  The “killing” of Thomas has everyone in a confused uproar, but Celia is inconsolably upset.  She rebukes Strand, his character and his friends and tells them they have to leave the villa by sunset of the next day.  Chris’ failed double murder has sent him into the wind and Travis after him, and while Strand digs a grave for Thomas, Daniel acts like a paranoid weirdo and sharpens a blade.  Perhaps his paranoia isn’t completely unfounded, as Celia watches all from her window...like an owl.

Source: AMC

Travis demonstrates exactly how not to go looking for someone by going after Chris barefoot.  Basics of the zombie apocalypse:  stamina and good footwear.  Nick makes a smart play by bringing Luis back to Celia, all dead and shit, but a mother’s love knows no end.  This earns the group a place in the villa once again, but Strand still has to go.  In trying to explain his motives to Maddie, it seems like Nick may be under Celia’s spell.  Daniel cracks up a little more and gets himself beat up and taken captive by the villa workers.

Source: AMC

However no one is more disturbed than Chris, who holds a father and son hostage while Travis gets off his bloodied feet.  I’ve said it since season one, this kid has to go.  Travis seems to realize this and it’s up in the air as to what he’ll do.  Daniel meanwhile is Celia’s hostage, and while she is perhaps an insane bruja (a witch/witch doctor), she does manage to get inside of his head.  It becomes clear that this new world has given new strength to the ghosts that haunt him.  If there was one perfect moment this season so far, it would be him confessing his first sin to his phantasmal wife.  It’s scenes like this that keep me a fan of the show.

Source: AMC

Meanwhile, Maddie plays Celia for a stone cold fool and locks her in her own walker storage room.  However she’s nowhere to be seen when Daniel, having escaped his ropes, sets fire to the cellar.  Conveniently, Strand had just been exiled so he was ready with the truck as the world record for fastest spreading fire overwhelms the villa and Maddie, Alicia and Ofelia narrowly escape.  This leaves Daniel’s fate uncertain, as well as Celia’s perhaps.  Travis is still leading Chris to hopefully look at the flowers, and disillusioned by the destruction, Nick wanders off to go be with his people, the walkers.  So ends the first half of the season.

Source: AMC

I think this was a good, if a bit anticlimactic episode.  I suppose I might be spoiled by TWD, being treated to a shocking death almost by clockwork.  Though Nick did touch on a recurring theme in both shows, that the supposed “good guys” are the ones that cause the most destruction.  Life at the villa was mostly an idyllic separation from the madness overtaking the world, and I suppose anyone could get used to being a part of a Mexican death cult, but noooo… our heroes had to go fuck it all up.  And for what reason?  Misguided morality, some kind of religious conviction, both of which have no place at the end of the world, or is it just pure survival?  Burn it all down and kill and ruin lives if it means you get one more day, or in Daniel’s case, some kind of empty absolution.  Say what you will about this show in comparison to TWD but I think both have managed to blur the lines of good and evil, and make you wonder if you’re rooting for the right group of people.  I can’t wait to see what happens in the next half of the season, all I know is I’m going to be proper pissed off if Chris doesn’t die.


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 ftwd, the walking dead, fear the walking dead, amc, zombie, zombies, horror
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