Homeland
Season Two
Episode One
'The Smile' - 8.0
By the way, this is my tenth review. Double digits! |
I wrote the review for the first season finale of this fantastic series only a
couple of hours ago, and here I am pounding out the entry for the second season
opener. This whole blog thing is making me wish I had this kind of commitment
to my school studies, you know? Yeah, admittedly these aren't my best work, but
my process is simply watch-write-post, with only about an hour or two spent
looking at the recap. I don't call them reviews because when I started, that
was what they were, but by switching to recaps I was able to make them longer
and they were significantly easier to write. Why is longer important? I don't
know, just a long inbuilt assumption that a longer essay was far superior to a
brief one, irrespective of quality. One day perhaps I will become more adept at
writing in general and will muster the courage to return to reviewing rather
than recapping. For now though... ok, let's give reviewing a go.
'The Smile' was a terrific way to start a new
season, but I have to posit that perhaps a show like Homeland could have pulled
it off better. To me it seemed... more thrilling? But in a bad way? I'm trying
to get across that the show kind of sold out without saying it with that
excessive a connotation, but there appeared to be a conscious decision to pick
up the action. Maybe it was just me.
The one thing that was definitely bad about the episode was a character; Roya Hammad. She was a journalist/member of Abu Nazir's group and contacted Brody early in the episode in order to get him to pull some info out of Estes' special safe of mysteries. There was something confident and sassy about her, but when you boil it down she's a quick attempt to make a plot device/villain trope into a likeable and interesting character. She's that amoral and fast talking bad guy that always emerges at some point, who always talks with a flirtatious smirk on her face and is able to confound the men with her feminine wiles. You know what, miss? You can take your 'wiles' and collapse into them like the failed concept that you are. I don't despise you, but I can never respect you as a character or a story arc, so I hope your hinted future dealings with Estes turn out dead, or you turn out dead.
To be honest, when she strutted into Brody's new congressman's office and asked if there were cameras or recording devices, I thought she was going to take her top off and slut it up. I thought maybe he was cheating on Jess again, but no. She's just a messenger, and despite what they say the messengers always get shot. I wouldn't get too close to this one ladies and gents, some way or another she'll take her spinning path down the drain. Hopefully.
Something I've been incredibly anxious about was exactly how the writers were going to bring Carrie back into the middle of things following her very clear-cut dismissal from the CIA at the end of the first season. You simply can't picture how delighted I was by the process that sends her back in, it just made sense. See, some chick - a former asset of Carrie's and the wife of a Hezbollah district commander - approaches the embassy in Beirut looking for her with information about a coming attack and refuses to speak to anyone else. Carrie is whisked to Nicosia where she prepares to take on a temporary new identity; a Canadian. THE HORROR!!!
It made sense, and it wasn't just like she’s had a single short beat off the job. She's been gone for months and has settled into a life without the CIA. In fact, you could literally see her tone and posture change the second she spied Agent Galvez waiting outside her classroom. Just so you know, she's now an English teacher, which is a perfect fit for her in my opinion. Also on a side note, has anyone ever seen Claire Danes as herself, as in like on talk shows or on the red carpet? She LOOKS different to Carrie, she lacks the crazy-intense eyes and jerky, flightiness that prevails the character. Weird.
Off topic, yeah, but the point is that Carrie was calm and happy, then suddenly her world is fucked with by the CIA and she's asked to fly out of the country, threatening to unbalance her fragile state of sanity. I found her reluctance and clear annoyance refreshing, though I agree with Maggie who believes that deep down she really does want to go and be a part of it all again.
For Brody the episode concerned the sudden likelihood of him becoming the running mate for the Vice President's campaign for the top job. I don't know how often inexperienced and unproven politicians are randomly picked as possible Vice Presidents but it... was... Ok, Sarah Palin, you win this round. I won't complain any more.
DANA. She's someone to talk about! All she did was
piss off some school kids and openly and loudly admit her father had converted
to Islam to a whole bunch of Quakers. You know what? Fuck you Quakers, from
what I saw tonight yous people be crazy. So orderly and polite, until bitches
be gettin' all islamic in ya faces. SUCK MY QU'RAN QUACKERS.
Luckily the Quaker retards don't take her admission too
seriously, but Jess does get a call from the school's - yes, it was a Quaker
school - dean because she'd spoken out of turn doing the... what was it? Some
sort of horrible, one-person-at-a-time debate that was very, very anti-Islam and
anti-Iran. I just shudder at the thought of all this 'MY RELIGION'S SO MUCH
MORE RELIGIOUS THAN YOURS. IPSO FATSO I FUCKING RULE YO' garbage, so I just
adored the treatment of Jess' outrage at her daughter for implying Brody was
Muslim. She went off her rocker yelling at poor Dana who just keeps looking at
her father for guidance, before good ole Brody comes to her defense by
admitting the horrible truth; he's converted to a different faith! THAT FAITH!
MORE HORROR!!!
Except this time there was actual mortification,
with Jess wigging out like a chemotherapy patient in a hairdresser's, storming
into the garage and pulling her husband's Qur’an from the cupboard and hurling
it at the ground, much to Brody's disgust. Did you know that Qur’ans aren't
supposed to touch the ground? I didn't. Makes sense though, they don't like
feet, which is why throwing shoes is such an insult. Anyway, both sides had
merit, even though Jess was somewhat narrow minded she did have a fantastic
speech about 'these people', who she says had held Brody captive for eight
years and would stone Dana if they knew she was sexually active. When Brody is
disturbed by the book hitting the deck, she gets even more distraught,
mentioning Carrie's accusations on their lawn a few months prior. Little does
she know that her husband had illegally acquired classified intelligence for
his terrorist group only that day...
Shortly after arriving in Beirut, Carrie attempts to rendezvous with Saul, only to be forced off the meeting place by a man on her tail. Rather than turn herself in like Saul suggests, she decides she'd rather just escape him, and they go on a big long chase that's as thrilling as they normally are. I somewhat wanted her to be apprehended, if only to see where the show would take it. Alas, she gets away with a well placed knee to her pursuer's groin. Damn Canadians and their knees.
I did appreciate her smile - possibly the titular one? I wasn't sure - as she walked away from the pained man, and I think it will possibly be the beginning of a decent into more and more dangerous situations, maybe. Danger is always good, I guess, but I don't want this to turn into a full on action drama. A political thriller was satisfying enough.
'The Smile' focused entirely on Carrie and Brody,
and rightfully so. They are both intriguing characters who represent two
misplaced facets of a similar coin, with both almost in better places following
the dramas of the last season, only to be thrust back into lives that they
don't want to live anymore. I can already see how this season will differentiate
itself from the last, though I can't help but notice the differences; different
music, for example. Abu Nazir is now kind of sloppy in his methods of
communicating with his operatives - Damned Roya - and it is considerably faster
and more edge-of-your-seat, a quality that is generally good, but perhaps a
betrayal of the show's original restrained, documentary-style feel. Yes, I
liked it, of course I liked it, but it was not Homeland's finest hour, though
I'd certainly continue to tune in if this level of quality is held, because
when compared to all shows it is still fucking great.
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