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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Dec 14, 2010 18:04:08 GMT -5
general impressions 1.18 A Bug's Life *Oooh, here's where it starts to get really good. *In this episode, the Moyan's are going along with Crichton's Plan, which... works out about as well as it did in "Till The Blood Runs Clear." I have this thought that whose ever plan it is is the one who ultimately pays the price. *Crichton wears peacekeeper leather for the first time. He seems so stiff and uncomfortable, but it's amazing how quickly it becomes like a second skin to him. *The lines between play-acting and reality get blurred a lot in this episode, particularly with the use of violence. There are strong shades of the Stanford Prison Experiment and the effects of role-playing and costume wearing, touching really deep upon Crichton's psyche in particular. There are also layers upon layers of play acting, most notably when the virus is pretending to be Crichton, pretending to be a peacekeeper. And of course it's Ben Browder underneath it all acting. *I'm think that the virus represents Power in the abstract. I wonder if there's some significance in the path that it takes, from Thonn to Chiana to Crichton to Larraq. *These peacekeepers are quite likeable. I love the conversations between Aeryn and Larraq, she opens up to him more than we've seen with anyone else at this point, but it's only because she's lying about her true circumstances. His appraisal of her and her offer to help her with promotion is tinged with such sadness because he's right, but can never be fulfilled. *Drink every time some one says "spores." *I'll just nod and smile WRT the bad science writing, mmm-kay? On the plus side, I love that this show uses pipet men as the shiny sci fi medical device in this verse, cause pipet men are really cool. I love 'em. *The Accent. Is truly terrible, but considering how amazing Ben Browder is at playing ScorpiusCrichton in Die Me Dicotomy, I'm wondering is that was a deliberate choice.
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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Dec 14, 2010 18:52:48 GMT -5
general impressions 1.19 The Nerve *Scorpius!!! *Stark!!!! *and Gilina. Who I like just fine, she's just not as exciting to me as Stark and Scorpius. Hard to believe that she was only in 3 episodes though. Seems like her role was bigger than that. *This episodes arc is just jammed packed with pay-offs and set ups/foreshadowing, parallels and triangles, connections to other episodes, like a spider web stretching out over the whole series. *This the the first time we see Crichton put himself at risk for something other than the chance to go home or for short term survival. Scary obsessed Crichton is scary obsessed. *Crichton wear's the special ops peacekeeper uniform, which he will wear some variation of for the rest of the show. He becomes a "Back Ghost," as Aeryn said. *The Gammak base reminds me a lot of the description of the base on Eros in Ender's Game. *Since Scorpius can tell if people are lying by reading their energy signature, he must have known Crichton was an impostor from the first time he saw him in the officers lounge. *We learn in this episode that Aeryn seems to be the only Peacekeeper who actually follows the rules. *It's interesting to see how differently Crichton and Gilina interact here than they did in PK Tech Girl. Though...did Gilina really not pick up on the vibes between Crichton and Aeryn before? Seems like she really should have. *The Aurora Chair as the Peacekeeper equivalent of Room 101. *I like the symbolism of Aeryn's body being filtered of toxins ("being decontaminated") by Moya, and the parallels between that and Scorpius filtering through Crichton's mind. *Interesting that Scorpius can't even conceive of Crichton's real purpose for going to the Gammak Base, nor did he uncover (or perhaps he just ignored) any of Crichton's memories of Aeryn while probing his mind. *I wonder if Crichton popping through the wormhole in the Premiere is what inspired the Peacekeepers to start investigating them, or whether they had been interested in them before then. *"The chair did this to you." OMG, that line kills me, cause even though we know that Stark's not simply crazy (or maybe he is, but it's more complicated than that), to Crichton, it must seem like Stark's "My side/your side" stuff is what lies in store for his future.
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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Dec 14, 2010 19:52:58 GMT -5
general impressions 1.20 The Hidden Memory
*I love the multiple meanings of the title -Crichton's memory of kissing Gilina -Crichton's memory of the Ancient's implanting the wormhole knowledge -Crais' memory killing Teeg -Stark's memory of Katratzi -with Talyn's birth, a callback to They've Got a Secret, and D'Argo's memory of Jothee -also a callback/foreshadowing of The Way We Weren't
*Chiana and Rygel don't know nuthin' about birthin' no babies! Actually, which Crichton's "Frankly, I don't give a damn," to Crais, I'm wondering if there's more connections in this episode to Gone With The Wind.
*"If you can be an idiot; I can be an idiot" That should be the Moyans' motto.
*"Everyone can block thoughts for awhile. but eventually, you'll tell the chair. [Or Scorpius] I'm the only one who can block thoughts forever." Oy...
*"What won't you tell me. I already know everything else. I know you're living on a stolen leviathan with escaped prisoners and I know that leviathan is pregnant." "You know who the daddy is?" Hee! Also great on a meta level.
*I love all Stark/Crichton bonding, particularly the sweet moment when Stark comforts Crichton when he's close to going over the edge. Aww...
*"Outsiders think that we don't feel, it's only that our feelings don't always show. What I know deep inside, Peacekeepers will never see." I wonder if Stark is supposed to be a bit autistic/Aspergerish, cause that sounds kind of like it to me.
*I love the story about origin of the Qualta blade.
*"That... is the radiant Aeryn Sun." "How many Peacekeepers do you know on this base?" Hee!!!
*I love Rygel and Chiana stuck in...whatever they are stuck in, particularly the homage to Titanic. Hee.
*"You know what I give you, Crais? Your life. I will make you watch your life." Boo-yah!!! OMG, I just love that whole speech. Such a great scene.
*Also, it's more than a little disturbing that Aeryn knows exactly how to operate the Aurora Chair. Is that just a standard part of her training or was she assigned to operate one of the chairs at some point?
*Also, I wonder if Aeryn knew Teeg.
*Gilina. Gilina, Gilina, Gilina. I feel for her, being caught in the middle of the great Crichton/Aeryn love story, but seriously... her decision to join the Moyans is contingent on whether Crichton chooses her over Aeryn? It's just so *girly* that it really tries my patience. And frankly, if she has to ask whether she should join the Moyans, than the answer is no. You only become a Moyan when you have nothing left to lose.
*"Come on, let's give them something to remember us by." Oooh!!!
*Talyn!!
*I didn't know better, I would say something about how easily the Moyans' got away from the Gammak Base. I would have expected that the Peacekeepers should have at least attached a homing beacon to the transport pod (a la Empire Strikes Back) or something, only I know that the truth is far, far worse.
*There's some really great meta with Gilina and Scorpius, as Crichton's light side/dark side or some similar dichotomy. Crichton gets out of his predicament only by allowing his memory of Gilina to be extracted by Scorpius. And then, of course, Scorpius shoots Gilina is going to shoot Scorpius when he's got Crichton, but Scorpius Gilina instead. Fasten your seatbelts, it's going to be a bumpy ride.
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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Dec 15, 2010 18:32:08 GMT -5
general impressions 1.21 Bone To Be Wild
*This isn't a bad episode, but placed as it is such a whiz bang trilogy of episodes and the season finale, it can't help but feel like a letdown
*Such as it is, we get some interesting exploration of ecological dynamics and what happens when things get out of balance. Also, some nice Aeryn/Talyn bonding, and political maneuvering on board the command carrier.
*Braca!!! I had totally forgotten that this was his first episode.
*This episode revisits the conversation Crichton and Zhaan had in Exodus from Genesis (the "who lives and dies in your world; is it as arbitrary as it is in mine?") as well as Chiana's off hand comment in Through the Looking Glass about whether the creature is "something that we eat or something that eats us." We've got the reveal to Crichton about Zhaan's status of a plant (and his "animal centric attitude"), M'Lee who seems a victim but turns out to be a monster, and Br'Nee, who at first seems to be a monster, then seems to be a victim, and finally is revealed to be a monster but of a different sort.
*Interesting ethics behind D'Argo's idea of siccing M'Lee on the Peacekeepers.
*In this episode, Crais' downfall is made complete.
*"I am not dragging this ship into a conflict not of it's own making." "We don't have a choice." Aaand therein lies Talyn's downfall. Combined with the fact that Aeryn is the only one who acknowledges him as an independent being (and even she will resort to using him in Liars, Guns, and Money). It really sucks being the baby of the family.
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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Dec 16, 2010 11:40:44 GMT -5
general impressions 1.22 Family Ties
*This episode is styled much like a BTVS/ATS ending, with lots of little, powerful 2 character scenes strung together.
*I absolutely love the main music theme.
*I wonder what happened to M'Lee after this.
*I love Aeryn's origin story. And that her father is as much a dream as Crichton's is.
*Scarrans are mentioned for the first time.
*Crais becomes a Moyan.
*I love the conversation between Crais and Crichton, particularly Crais' confession.
*I love how all the Moyans except Rygel are willing to be the one to suicide/sacrifice themselves. They are all so fucked up.
*Scorpius' obsession with Crichton becomes clear for all to see, and like Crais, will eventually lead to his own downfall.
*I wonder if "irrevocably contaminated" better or worse than "irreversibly contaminated."
*Talyn can support a pilot but he doesn't require one. And I think what we see happen to Talyn is the reason why leviathans need to be bonded to pilots. That it's more than just navigation, but another being devoted to him fully that Talyn was lacking. Crais becomes bonded to it, but he still maintains his independence, despite Talyn's increasing possessiveness.
*I love Crichton's final message to Jack. Every line in it is loaded with meta and meaning.
*I love that we see the DRD with the broken antenna again.
*"Fear accompanies the possibility of death. Calm shepherds its certainty."
*I love that image of the D'Argo and Crichton floating in space with the moon on fire behind them.
*And the puzzle ring, having served its purpose, floats away, never to be seen again.
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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Dec 23, 2010 20:03:01 GMT -5
general impressions 2.1 Mind the Baby
*This episode explores the question of trust and the question of need. Particularly, Crichton's issues of trust surrounding Aeryn, which rear there ugly head for the first time, and Talyn making his needs known.
*The other Moyan's reactions to Zhaan's decision to resume The Seek is interesting. I'm not quite sure what to make of it.
*Lots of relationship triangulation in this episode: Aeryn-Crais-Talyn, Aeryn-Crais-Crichton, Zhaan-Chiana-Rygel/D'Argo-Crichton-Aeryn, Command Carrier-Talyn-Moya, Moyans-Crais-Scorpius, Crais-Scorpius-Braca, Moya-Talyn-Crais
*This is the first time we see Scorpius' cooling rods, showing that despite his menace, he has great vulnerabilities.
*Crais's parenting skills could use some work, heh.
*That's some...interesting blocking in the Aeryn/Crais scenes on Talyn. Exactly how much attraction is there between these 2?
*I love the whole rock-paper-scissors conversation. "It's not supposed to be realistic, it's supposed to be entertaining!" Hee!! And then D'Argo tries playing with himself later. Hee hee.
*Chiana's flying leap to hug Crichton is completely silly but really sweet.
*I love the hand holding gesture between Crichton and Aeryn and the scene at the end when they're sitting in the neural cluster.
*The "hand of friendship" sounds dirty to me. Also, it's the first sign that Crais was more intimately involved in the creation of Talyn than he initially let on.
*I feel for Moya when Talyn rejects her, really, but I can't help but point out that she carries some of the blame for how things turned out.
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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Dec 27, 2010 10:43:42 GMT -5
general impressions 2.2 Vitas Mortis
*I'm kind of meh about the main plot of this episode, but all the actors really sell the emotionality of it. And I love all the B plot stuff going on on the ship.
*This episode has a lot about people trying to be useful, which dovetails nicely with the previous episode. And of course, there's a lot about life and death, and sex and death, interconnectedness/symbosis-parasitism spectrum
*This episode also has parallels to Rhapsody in Blue.
*I like the establishing shot of the castle. Of course, it's completely derviative dark and scary Transylvania castle, but I think it's because it's so derivative that it crosses the line between being lame and amusing.
*The scene where the Moyans first meet Nelaam has a lot of references to Little Red Riding Hood
*I love that the show addresses how the Moyans do such mundane things as cleaning their clothes. And that is shows how the Moyans innovate in order to get these things done.
*"The spiritual realm frightens you?" "Losing those I care about frightens me." Actually, that whole conversation between Crichton and Nelaam is well done.
*I love everyone pitching in to get Chiana unstuck
*"When I sensed your astonishing power, I decided to try the ritual of renewal instead. See how well it worked?" "Look princess, you damn near killed him!" "Actually, I've never felt better." Ooh!
*I love how Rygel's butt plugs that hole in Moya's hull.
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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Dec 27, 2010 19:16:18 GMT -5
general impressions 2.3 Taking the Stone
*I like the exploration of youth culture and nihilism and ageism in this episode. I know it's really derivative, but it's derivative of a story archetype that really I like. And the atmosphere created makes it work better for me here than it does in logan's run or one star trek.
*I also think taking the stone ritual is really cool, and the way they adapted the existing sonic net technology for it. And the sonic net is really cool in general.
*And of course it's got pretty strong connections with Crichton and wormholes and foreshadowing for both Crichton's and Aeryn's character arcs, with the exploration of grief and suicide.
*The story also touches on Crichton's concerns about aging that he raised in A Human Reaction.
*Chiana gets some nice back story and character development.
*I think the see through uterus is pretty cool.
*I like seeing Crichton and Chiana develop into surrogate siblings for each other.
*I like how the theme from Family Ties comes back towards the end of the episode.
*"Lately, do I seem a little crazy to you?" "What do you mean lately?" Aiee!!! This is the kind of thing that really freaks me out. Of course, Crichton's been questioning his sanity since Premiere, and the other Moyans find him strange on a good day, but this is the first hint we get about the neural chip and it's just dismissed out of hand, and that's what scares the crap out of me.
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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Jan 2, 2011 17:22:19 GMT -5
general impressions 2.4 crackers don't matter *Yay, such a fun episode. I'm inclined to think that this is a better episode to introduce people to the show than the premiere, cause it has more of the general craziness that is characteristic of the show. *First appearance of Harvey! *First time we see crazy trigger happy Crichton. We've seen glimpses before, but this is the first episode where it's sustained. *favorite lines, moments -Pilot listing all of Crichton's/humanities flaws. "Is there anything you do well?" "watch football." I also love that "spiritually imposing" is one of Pilot's criteria. Hee. -"I've got great eyes, they're better than 20/20 and they're blue!" -The Scorpius beacon becoming real/hallucination/Harvey and scaring the crap out of Crichton -the Moyans' putting Crichton's warrior's costume together, and the Moyans' reaction shot, and his "I look ridiculous, don't I?" *I have a lot of fun imagining Crichton giving his dissertation in the style of his little briefing about Traltixx. I'm sure the committee would have loved that. *I wonder how much of Crichton holding it together better than to do with his "poor vision" and how much had to do with Harvey. *Crichton's assertion that humans are superior echoes Aeryn's claims of superiority in season 1. *Traltixx marks the first person that Crichton directly killed of his own volition.
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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Jan 24, 2011 19:57:32 GMT -5
general impressions 2.5 the way we weren't
*This is such a wonderfully complex, intricately layered episode, with shifting perspectives, where the addition of each puzzle piece completely changes the picture.
*lots about complex moral dilemmas, and the parts everyone plays, and choices made. The countless decisions that contributed to Talyn, Aeryn, and everyone else coming to be.
*Lots about the nature of relationships. Comparison and contrast between human sebacean relationships and pilot-leviathan symbiosis, corporation vs community. It comes as no surprise that the Peacekeepers take a Brave New World approach towards sex and subsequently comes as no surprise that corruption is rampant and the institution is crumbling from within.
*Aeryn unwittingly follows the same pattern with Valorek as her parents did, though, ironically, it's likely that the decision she made to betray Valorek was motivated by desire to *not* follow in her parents' footsteps.
*The relationship between Pilot and Moya we see in this episode foreshadows the relationship Aeryn will have with TalynJohn and Moya John in seasons 3 and 4.
*I find it interesting that Crichton's trust in Aeryn never wavers in this episode, unlike in Mind the Baby and as we'll see in some future episodes.
*We get another parallel with Ender's Game, with the Valorek's compassion and empathy perverted by the Peacekeepers to serve their own brutality. And at the same time, we see Valorek's determination to fight the Peacekeepers from within. It's interesting to speculate what he could have done had Aeryn not turned him in.
*It's also interesting that Valorek was more willing to kill a pilot than a leviathan.
*I find Aeryn's "no means no" comment to Crichton when he asks her to talk about what's bothering her, especially juxtaposed with the first sex scene between Aeryn and Valorek, which start off looking like sexual assault.
*I love the Pilot's backstory, especially seeing his homeworld (even if it is only darkness and smoke). Pilot's story, with his desire to see the stars, is the closest farscape gets to Star Trek motivations. Pilot dreams the dream of the astronauts, the dream Crichton used to have.
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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Feb 18, 2011 14:36:02 GMT -5
general impression 2.6 picture if you will *This is the second of 2 Maldis episodes. I'm thinking there's got to be a bookend type quality to this one, but I haven't quite figured out what it is. There's a theme of things breaking/shattering, so maybe it's got something to do with that. There's probably also symbolism to the events that the picture portrays, but I haven't figured that out either. *"Have you eaten, drunk, smoked, sniffed anything weird lately?" "No, have you?" "Not lately." *Nice discussion between D'Argo and Chiana about their relationship. *Followed by Crichton and Aeryn's conversation: Crichton suggests not letting anything/anyone else on board (hey); Aeryn suggests kicking everybody but her off Moya. *I also like's Crichton's sciencey side reasserting itself with his "it's not a theory; it's a hypothesis" in that conversation. *The Evil Thing that will not be gotten rid of is one of the few horror tropes that actually gets to me. *The image of Crichton being electrocuted like that famous image in the Watchman.
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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Feb 19, 2011 20:21:29 GMT -5
general impressions 2.7 home on the remains *As one of only 2 budong episodes, this episode naturally has strong connections with The Green Eyed Monster. -The Chiana/D'Argo, foils for Aeryn/Crichton is taken to the next level -B'Sogg and Temmon foreshadow/parallels the two Crichtons in their relationship with Aeryn Their make up design of their species has their heads splitting open, in nice nod to Crichton's upcoming grappling with his sanity *It's also got strong connections with Exodus from Genesis, with the continued -exploration of who lives and who dies, who eats and who is eaten, in the Moyan's world -in Exodus from Genesis, Crichton balked at the idea of using dentics to clean his teeth; here, he's willing to eat them, even though he can't actually do it. *I'll bet the Moyans are really irked that half the food cubes got destroyed in Crackers Don't Matter. Of course the metaphorical hunger is what this episode is really about... *The symbolic act of eating, as the process of turning The Other into The Self, is explored in depth. Very much a Green issue, as are the exploration of food security, the critique of the use of food to control and exploit others, and the value placed on meat. *I love Crichton trying to make dentics palatable by deep frying them. "You can eat anything if it's deep fried!" *Aeryn continues to get her science on, paralleling Critchon's continued embrace of violence. *I keep thinking in the scene where Crichton kills the Keedva that I hope that the Keedva doesn't have bad breath. LOL. *The end of this episode marks the beginning of Chiana/D'Argo 1.0. The foundation to the relationship is so very shakey, that's easy to see where things will all go wrong.
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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Mar 28, 2011 17:14:18 GMT -5
general impressions 2.8 Dream a Little Dream
*So...first a comment on episode placement. Would have been a lot stronger as a season premiere the way it was originally edited, but the way it was changed including references to the previous episode, I can't still watch it in that order. I still haven't decided what it's final place in the structure of the season and the series means, though.
*Episode touches several series themes. Justice and imprisonment of course. Home is remembered as a dream. Duality, with the 2 moons giving a moonburn, which burns only half of the cop's face. Those susceptible to moonburn, including both the perpetrator and the victim, have blue eyes, which isn't that notable, except that Crichton made a point of mentioning a few episodes ago that he had blue eyes, which makes me think that there's a meta connection to be made there. Or I'm reading way too much into things.
*Very strong Zhaan episode. I find it interesting how quickly she completely breaks down, considering her outward serenity and her inner rage. I'm not sure what to make of it. Very interesting expression of her fears and insecurities through her conversations with DreamAeryn, DreamCrichton, and DreamD'Argo and her assessment of Chiana and Rygel. Of course, Aeryn, Crichton, and D'Argo actually do die, more or less, so Zhaan's not completely off base in her fears. There's some foreshadowing here, I think, for Zhaan's eventual sacrifice for Aeryn and Crichton. However, I'm not sure exactly what we are to think of Zhaan's quest for the seek. It's portrayed as a positive thing here, and a negative thing in Mind the Baby. Hmm. Also, Zhaan finds herself caught up in a political situation very similar to the one she faced on Delvia. Zhaan, the only one who had been rightfully imprisoned on Moya, finds herself again accused, only this time for a murder she did not commit.
*Nice commentary on the US, a nation founded by lawyers, with the creeping legislation, the corporatization of the law and government, and the dedication to the letter of the law overshadowing it's spirit.
*The gag on Zhaan makes me think of Woody Allen in sleeper. But that probably doesn't mean anything.
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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Jun 26, 2011 9:30:27 GMT -5
general impressions 2.9 Out of Their Minds *Yay! this is such a fun episode. *It's also one of the best body swap episodes there is, and certainly the most complicated. It's also unique in that while most body swap episodes focus on the discrepancy between internal and external identity, this one mostly focuses on the characters perception of themselves, how much of their own identity is formed by their mind, and how much by their body, thought vs feeling. *Mind Body connection is explored pretty heavily in this episode obviously. The experience also creates tighter bonds between the Moyans- witness the end of the episode, where everyone is feeling all couply. There's also duality and triangulation going on as well as some fun gender bending. A lot could also be written about the multiple layers in every scene with the discrepancy between the characters and the characters bodies. Aggression vs passivity is also explored. *All the actors do such a great job in this episode. The puppeteers for Rygel also deserve commendation; making the already made muppet copy the actors' mannerisms and facial expressions is no mean feat. *This is the 3rd episode in a row where Zhaan is isolated from the rest of the group. I'm not sure if that means anything. *I never noticed the thing that Ben Browder does with his thumb until this episode. *I love that the DRDs can print polaroids. ;D *I like the description of how Pilot perceives Moya and how they communicate with each other. *Creeping vomit! ;D *The sound indicating the body swap is a video game sound. *Chiana seems to care the least about whose body she's in. The body swap has the most serious effect on Pilot, though Rygel, not surprisingly, complains the most. *highlights -"have you sent the don't shoot us, we're pathetic signal yet?" "it's the first thing we tried" Hee! -PilotInChiana and D'argoInPilot conversation about who has the better memories -CrichtonInAeryn having to show RygelInCrichton how to pee. -CrichtonInAeryn feeling herself up. *snorfle* -"Go on, go on, get it all out...that sort of thing happens all the time on Moya. I just peed in the maintenance bay" -Expression on CrichtonInRygel's face, his excitement in figuring out how the body swap works and the "are you sure about this?" "nope!" "another blast could kill us" "yep!" exchange. Hee!!! -RygelInAeryn bitching about how everyone else ignores him, and then Rygel pitiably resigned about it at the end of the episode. Hee! and Aww...
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Post by Spaced Out Looney on Jun 26, 2011 16:47:56 GMT -5
general impressions 2.10 My 3 Crichtons
*OK. This episode. Sigh.
*I guess this episode's has got more interesting stuff in it than I always remember, but it's still my least favorite of the series. I just really have a problem with this stereotypical depiction of cavemen in film and TV, particularly in sci-fi and fantasy. Rational or not, cavemen bother me more than all the conflating of bacteria and viruses and nonsense with DNA and all the other butchering of medical and scientific concepts put together. And it really makes me embarrassed for Ben Browder, even though he does a good job.
*There's more triangulation and duality of course. Crichton questions his identity and where he belongs in a big way, foreshadowing the TalynCrichton/MoyaCrichton split in season 3 and the Earth arc in season 4. And then, as always, there's the search to find a 3rd option.
*The contrast between the three Crichtons is a nice depiction of where Crichton had been, where's he is now and where he's going (though I wish they could have figured out a better way to do it- OK, OK, I'll stop bitching now), and the symbolism of the pumpkin suit and the peacekeeper uniform is really nice. That last scene of the episode with Crichton and the pumpkin suit-which we never see again, except for that bit in Unrealized Reality- is really poignant, especially knowing about everything that happens after this.
*There's lots of foreshadowing to Die Me, Dichotomy -Future Crichton's skull alluding to crichton's brain exposed on the exam table -Crichton's concerns about losing his intellect, memory, ability to speak -Aeryn wondering whether she needs to start hunting Crichton; and Future Crichton knocking her out -half this galaxy has Crichton's memories -crichton's identity crisis and self loathing
*OK, that's all I got and good riddance. Anything else that would help me appreciate this episode more? Lola? Anyone?
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