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Westworld - "Dissonance Theory" - Season 1 Episode 4

October 31, 2016

Source: HBO

In this episode things start to become a little more clear.  Dolores has strayed far from her routine, under the care of William, and I guess Logan too, as they go on a bounty hunt that William insisted on.  She’s still meeting with Lowe and while he may be guiding her away from her constant victimhood, she offhandedly says things that haunt and intrigue him.  While the bounty hunt goes as it’s supposed to, Logan and William have very different approaches.  William is ever as immersed in the story and the world, and chivalrously protective of Dolores, while Logan’s fun is had by treating the game as it is, invincibly shooting and killing at will.  Things come out in the open a few times in their day, once when William realizes that the family he’s marrying into has a larger stake in Westworld than he was led to believe, and again when Logan realizes the bounty they collected is an Easter Egg that will lead them on a quest that is more to Logan’s tastes.  While he has no problem being a murderous monster, knowing that the host he shot to free their captive and Dolores aren’t real and really don’t matter, William defends her as if she were an actual person.  What’s interesting here is that he calls Logan evil.

Source: HBO

The Man in Black continues his quest with Lawrence to the blood arroyo and finds that the snake they seek is the tattooed outlaw and member of Hector’s gang, Armistice.  Rather than murder everyone, the Man in Black only kills two people, and they join the posse.  In exchange for the next clue to the location of this maze he’s obsessed with, the Man in Black offers to single handedly raid a prison and free Hector.  Whether Armistice understood what he was talking about or not, he espouses a bit about his motivations.  He mentions Dr. Ford’s partner Arnold, who supposedly died on accident in Westworld, but believes there’s more to the story than that.  Either the Man in Black wants to know exactly what happened to Arnold, to peel away the veil of Westworld, or thinks that there’s a storyline out there that offers real danger, remains to be seen.  Part of Armistice’s posse are guests, and when one tries to talk to MiB (I’m tired of typing that all out) about his foundation, he’s threatened.  MiB is obviously a premium player in Westworld and we’re finally seeing how and why that came to be.  He frees Hector easily and gets his next clue, and he’s off to find the villain of Teddy’s storyline, Wyatt.

Source: HBO

Maeve continues to be plagued with flashbacks of her escapade through Westworld’s underbelly. She barely functions as a host, and bits and pieces of her interactions with Clementine seem too familiar.  A few things vex her: the strange masked men she remembers standing over her, and a wound she suffered from the last time the saloon got shot up, that she remembers despite being wiped.  The answers begin to come when she draws out what she remembers, only to find that she’s made many of the same crude sketches before.  The masked man eerily resembles a doll she sees a Native girl carrying, and a nearby soldier remarks that it’s a symbol of their religion.  This leads her to have questions for Hector when he comes into town for the big finale.  Somehow the natives regard the masked men as gods, but don’t see them as benevolent entities but puppet masters of the waking world.  The final hint comes from the bullet fragment Maeve cuts out of herself.  She isn’t crazy, this will all be (mostly) forgotten, they aren’t really going to die when the law men bust through the door, and nothing really matters.

Source: HBO

Meanwhile Elsie is sidelined in her investigation into why an errant host tried to break a rock over his head, and Theresa is warned by Dr. Ford not to fuck with him in a most creepy way while construction of his new story arc gets underway.  It’s a scene that highlights Ford’s awareness of literally everything that goes on in Westworld, and while he says he’s comparatively saner than Arnold, I think he’s just crazy in his own special way.

Source: HBO

The last few minutes of the episode were perhaps supposed to be tense.  Hector’s grand entrance and big finish were again cut short, because the Westworld staffers felt that the families returning to town shouldn’t be subject to the bloodbath.  Armistice meets a defiant and violent death, the two guests in her posse were tackled and arrested (to be later compensated), and Hector and Maeve presumably get blown to smithereens.  As I learn more about these hosts, I begin to get more and more annoyed by the guests’ presence and how they don’t have agency within their own world.  Obviously we’re headed toward a shift but for as much as Westworld is touted as a living, breathing world, it’s still just a theme park.

Source: HBO

Logan is a giant prick but his reckless abandon is a great contrast to William.  Of course there’s more to the story of Logan’s family as Westworld investors, and I think his assholism will push William a bit too far.  Is what happens in a fictional setting, a game, worthy of sundering a relationship...perhaps even a marriage?  We can look at William as someone who plays in character, and cares about his immersion and the story.  He reads all the quest text, knows the lore because he collects little fluff artifacts strewn throughout the world, and hates people who use “memespeak” in world chat.  He may even actually use the sit emote in a tavern.  Logan is the troll, the overpowered jerk who runs around in low level areas killing guards and new players, and harasses others in chat.  In Westworld terms, sure the hosts are there at to serve at your pleasure but they have function and purpose to an extent.  And they’re real enough: they bleed, they cry, they feel pain, or they appear to anyway.  Isn’t that enough to keep someone “in character” or at least respectful of the immersion?  Perhaps not.  In a consequence free environment, what does it matter?  I fear a great many people would run amok if it weren’t for whatever law and social structure we have, and all that goes out the window in Westworld.

Source: HBO

The Man in Black still doesn’t have my sympathy, but at least now we’re gaining some insight into who he is.  Obviously he’s been in Westworld a long time and he’s trying to squeeze the last few drops of enjoyment of his “vacation.”  Or perhaps he’s trapped there?

And god damn it, can they cut Teddy a fuckin’ break once this season?


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 westworld, western, science fiction, sci-fi, hbo
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The Walking Dead - "The Well" - Season 7 Episode 2 Review

October 31, 2016

Glenn and Abraham’s skulls and brains are still wet puddles in the gravel of some podunk road, but fuck it, this week we’re goin’ to The Kingdom.  Yeehaw!

Source: AMC

On their way, Carol, Morgan and their two rescuing knights are waylaid by walkers for a bit until the literal cavalry arrives.  Men and women on horseback, armored but with mostly polearms and swords.  It’s pretty awesome, but one has to wonder how that’s going to stack up against the brutality of the Saviors when the time comes.  Either way, Carol wakes up and is given the nickel tour of The Kingdom.

Source: AMC

I’ve actually been looking forward to the Ezekiel/Shiva reveal for some time so I suppose after last week’s multiple nut (or equally sensitive organ) kicks we needed a bit of fresh air.  The Kingdom is considerably more prosperous than Hilltop, but perhaps without the amenities of Alexandria (Pre-Ricktatorship).  It makes sense in a way; if Ezekiel is king then his people are servants or serfs.  It’s a nice scene: there are people tending to gardens, grooming the horses, and children are being taught their lessons in an outdoor gazebo.  It’s nice to know that elsewhere, life is returning to normal, or perhaps a better version of what they had before.

Source: AMC

Ezekiel himself is charismatic and presents himself very royally, with a huge assist by Shiva and his personal guard, Jerry.  His manner of speech is ridiculous and while everyone else seems to buy it, it’s hard for Carol to believe a guy like this exists.  She puts on the airhead housewife act to get through their meeting.  She doesn’t buy it but as long as she’s laid up, she has to pretend.  While Morgan is off with Ezekiel and a handful of knights tending to some pig “farming” and other things the residents of the Kingdom need not worry about, Carol plies her act all over, gathering supplies for her eventual escape.

Source: AMC

As it turns out, the pigs they farm are for the Saviors, and it’s their little secret that the pigs are fed with walker meat.  Still, there is tension between the two groups and we see that Negan has his fingers in everyone’s pie.  It’s the price they pay for living the way they do, but while some Saviors are not completely sociopathic jackoffs, they still enjoy their power way too much.  No amount of royal posturing from Ezekiel changes that.

It’s a fact that he’s painfully aware of, and as he catches Carol making her exit by night, he sits down with her and is honest about who he really is.  You can’t bullshit a bullshitter, and Ezekiel knows Carol has seen some shit and done some shit too.  But he says he fights all the bad by going overboard with the good, and I can deeply relate to that.  It’s true to a point.  He keeps the Saviors and their agreements and all the walkers outside their walls, so that he can cultivate all the good things in life within.  

Source: AMC

Still, Carol’s insistence on being a loner without any ties to a community wins out and Morgan escorts her to a wonderfully creepy house with a graveyard.  They part ways as friends but it’s tough to believe she won’t swoop in and wreck someone’s shit later on in the season.

Ezekiel isn’t ready to say goodbye either, and nothing impresses the ladies like a pet tiger.

Source: AMC

It’s not clear how much cruelty the Saviors may have visited upon the Kingdom, or how Negan and Ezekiel met, but their arrangement is too good.  The Kingdom has a friggin’ choir and movie night and all the other things that Alexandria had, and Morgan has taken a nice kid under his wing, and I know they’re setting all this up just so the Saviors can knock it all down once Rick involves them in his war with Negan.  Jerry is too likeable, Morgan’s young apprentice is too pure, the kids eat all their vegetables.  I hate to be a cynic but I also don’t like when I’m shown all this idyllic crap purely for the sake of having Negan roll up, talk some shit, then execute a puppy and an elderly couple.

Also, RIP other horse.


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 review, television, article Tags the walking dead, twd, walking dead, amc, zombie, zombies, horror
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Supernatural - "The Foundry" - Season 12 - Episode 3 Review

October 28, 2016

It didn’t take long to realize that this episode was starting with a case, finally!  A crying baby in an abandoned house is enough to grab most people’s attention. But to run into said house not knowing what lies behind the door? Not too smart. I mean, have you ever encountered an angry crackhead? I have, and it’s not as funny as it may sound. But, I digress. Unfortunately for this well-meaning couple it didn’t take long after discovering the baby wasn’t a baby, but a creepy doll, that they met their demise.

Source: The CW

We also see Mary decide to make a big change as she chops off her hair. And as we all know, when I woman cuts off her hair, 99% of the time she is about to make some major changes. Change your hair, change your life. But I don’t think the guys caught on to that hint. Or perhaps they just don’t want to see the truth for themselves, their mom is struggling, big time. Castiel surprisingly caught on to her struggle after a simple late night conversation with her. Shocking for the man who seems to always be clueless. And it seems that perhaps Sam isn’t as clueless about her struggle as it first seemed. However, Dean doesn’t seem to want to admit anything is wrong, after all it was his dream to have her back.

Source: The CW

While the boys head out with Mary to take on a case, Castiel follows a lead on Lucifer. He feels that it is his responsibility to get him back to Hell since he is the reason Lucifer was back in the first place. Little does he know, he’s not the only one on the search for him; Crowley is already there. I have to admit, Castiel’s choice of names always cracks me up, especially this episode when he chooses to go by Agent Beyonce.  Crowley being too scared to go after Lucifer himself, and too proud to admit it, pushes Castiel to join forces in the search for Lucifer. I’m sure at some point this is going to blow up their faces, as it always seems to do.

Source: The CW

The one thing I found quite frustrating this episode, was how dismissive the guys seemed to be of their mom. After all, she was a hunter way before they were even thought of, so it was quite surprising to see them not trust her instincts about their case. She was the one with direct contact with the spirits, so I would think they would have listened. But, I suppose if they had, it wouldn’t have been as interesting an episode.

When Mary was touched by the little ghost child, I felt bad for her. She was already going through so much transitioning from the afterlife and being back with her boys. And being injured by a scared looking ghost child Lucas, I’m sure didn’t ease her anxiety. After all, in her mind, her boys are still little, and Dean was still the child’s age.

Source: The CW

While the Winchester’s are busy with their case, our angel, demon duo is working on their leads as well. They track down the sister of Lucifer’s new vessel Vince (Rick Springfield). And it didn’t take Castiel but two seconds to know Lucifer had already been there. He sensed that the sister Wendy was recently healed. The wheelchair in the room drove that point home. And the good cop bad cop routine worked perfectly to get her to cooperate. Crowley, always the jerk, threatens to undo the healing that had been done; not cool Crowley.

Speaking of Crowley, the look on his face was priceless when Castiel realized the true reason he was so hell bent on getting Lucifer. He has his mother, Rowena. And right now, he was trying to get her to use a beauty spell, to reverse the aging on his rock star vessel. It’s quite amusing to me that Lucifer is using the vessel of a rock star, seeing how many once thought and some still think that rock and roll is the devil’s music.

Source: The CW

One thing I thought was interesting was the way they had Mary have a vision. It made me wonder if she was given this ability from being touched by the child Lucas, thus giving her a connection to him, or if she was able to have the vision because of her connection to the other side? I mean being dead for 30 years must give you some kind of connection to the spirit world, right? In my opinion, it was a jerk move for the guys to treat their mom like they had to baby her. But it gave her the opportunity to do things her way, which as we saw, ultimately solved the case. We get to see how similar the guys are to her in this episode more so than the first two episodes. Like Sam and Dean have done many times in the past, she went solo into the house with not much more than a gut instinct and a bag of weapons. And like Sam and Dean, this decision nearly cost her her life, again. She was able to fight the possession long enough to communicate with Sam to let him know just what to do to save her. Something we have seen her boys do quite a few times before. Also, her emo tendencies in this episode mirror that which we have also seen in Sam and Dean in the past. Both of them have also chosen to go off on their own to collect themselves. Let’s just hope her leave of absence is temporary and she comes back stronger than ever.

Source: The CW

Speaking of strength. How in the heck has Rowena not learned her lesson yet? Screwing over and tricking Lucifer has never worked well for her. I don’t understand why she thinks it will be different this go around? He asked her to restore his vessel, instead she sped up the decaying process. Why he thought he could trust her is another question I have to ask myself. Wishful thinking perhaps? Once weakened she sent him to the bottom of the ocean. This is not going to be good for anyone when he returns, as he always does. And it seems by what Rowena said to Crowley and Castiel when they found her, she knows it too. I have a feeling Rowena will be the first to see Lucifer again, regardless of what she is hoping. It should be interesting to see how this plays out. 


Written by Kaylynn Kasandra. Awkward hippie who enjoys helping people, creating things, reading, sci-fi, fantasy, and Thor. Find more from her at kaylynnkasandra.com and
http://www.youtube.com/c/tiedyesmurf

In review, television, article Tags supernatural, destiel, dean, sam, castiel, crowley, cw, the cw
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