‘Killing Eve’ (BBC America) – Season 1, Episode 6 Review

Take Me to the Hole” – aired on May 13, 2018
Writer: George Kay
Director: Damon Thomas
Grade: 3,5 out of 5

Notice: All episode reviews contain spoilers

After Killing Eve went the extra mile in last week’s “I Have A Thing About Bathrooms” to delight us with the show’s peak scene so far, the 12-minute-long, face-to-face encounter between Eve and Villanelle, I was left wondering where it could go from there, with still three episodes left in the season. After a progressively intense cat-and-mouse game that lasted four and a half episodes, culminating in the Eve-Villanelle collision of last week, “Take Me to the Hole” had to shoulder the difficult task of regenerating viewer energy without coming across as yet another episode chronicling Eve’s quest for Villanelle. In short, it risked falling victim to the high standards of excellence set by the show itself and the narrative structure it chose to pursue – identities revealed early, face-off between Eve and Villanelle a bit more than halfway through the season, major characters already written off, etc. 

It seems that showrunner Phoebe Waller-Bridge and episode writer George Kay attempt to tackle these challenges by injecting a few brilliant twists aimed at creating new narratives for us to chew on. But in the process of doing so, the episode stumbles more than once in terms of maintaining a tight coherence. 

The episode begins in Moscow, with Konstantin giving directions to a disinterested Villanelle (Oksana) on how to get to Nadia once inside the prison. Villanelle’s instructions are to kill Nadia before she blurts out any valuable information to British authorities. Our assassin is to pose as a prisoner herself who is supposedly locked up because, as Konstantin informs her, she stole some “controversial” hats. Villanelle reacts sarcastically: “Wow! I am dangerous.” She says it tongue-in-cheek, but we know it rings hundred percent true.

When she finishes the job, she will meet Konstantin at a pre-arranged place and time in order to get back out. But until then, she is on her own. Her prison sojourn begins with a somewhat petty scene in which she slaps the female headguard whose assistant clubs her a few times in return. I am not sure what the purpose of the scene is, other than filling some imaginary quota of violence (which Killing Eve does not need because it already “does” violence so well), introducing the headguard, and foreshadowing her doomed fate. On a more pertinent note, Villanelle needs to get to Konstantin’s inside man, the prison doctor in this case, whose primary purpose, as we find out later, is to hand her a knife so that she can kill Nadia, and secondary purpose, to tell her when and where to meet Konstantin once the job is done.

In the meantime, our team has figured out that Nadia is imprisoned in Moscow. They intend to go there and interrogate her, except that Kenny and Elena don’t. When asked by Carolyn and Eve, they weasel their way out of the trip in a hilarious babbling-in-unison dialogue as they list all the paltry excuses they can find to avoid going. It only lasts a few seconds, but it is a riot to watch.

Elena also brings up a valid question. She asks, probably echoing the minds of many viewers, if they should refer to the assassin as Villanelle or as Oksana? Let us know when you get a firm answer to that, Elena.

The character in the spotlight during most of this hour is Carolyn Martens, our highly intelligent MI6 agent. She gets to return to her backyard (she had been stationed in Moscow prior to this assignment) where she has connections and speaks the language. “My bones come alive in this country,” she says to Eve as they ride in a taxi. Her storyline and her conversations with Eve are the intellectual gems of the hour, and the actor Fiona Shaw, as always, is up to the task.

This episode excels in that it leaves you wondering by the end if Carolyn is perhaps not as clever as you previously thought or if she is even more of a gifted mastermind. How much does she know? We are well aware of Eve’s unhealthy fixation on Villanelle, but what about Carolyn’s endgame? Surely, she must have chased and caught many killers before, so why the excessive preoccupation with this particular one?

“Take Me to the Hole” raises these questions efficiently and hints at the possible existence of a larger intrigue involving Carolyn and Konstantin. Could they be collaborating? Are they both members of “The 12”? The big twist of the hour, the revelation that Carolyn and Konstantin have known each other for a long time, leads us to consider the likelihood of certain connections that we would have easily dismissed prior to this episode. Stakes are raised even higher when we realize that nobody seems to be aware of Konstantin’s link to Villanelle. Vladimir and Carolyn appear to believe that he is on their side.

We are not alone, Eve’s curiosity is also piqued. For one thing, she does not like Konstantin, and for another, she observes Carolyn behave in ways previously unknown to her. The usually bland and dry – but witty – Agent Martens puts on lipstick, cares about how she looks, smiles, laughs, even gets giddy about meeting again with Vladimir, her Russian counterpart that she has known for “beyond forever.”

In fact, Eve gets so curious that she calls Kenny and, in what anyone with half a common sense would consider as a major miscalculation on her part, asks him to snoop into Carolyn’s correspondence. She even directs him to search “under her bed, her pillowcases” if necessary. She want to know if she has been in contact with Konstantin. Ok, fine, but it does not change the fact that her directive to Kenny pushes the boundaries of credibility. Would she really trust Kenny, whom she recently met, enough to ask him to secretly snoop into the private correspondence of their boss who also happens to be his mother? On top of everything else, Kenny follows her directive, no questions asked, and I begin to feel like I have seemingly entered the arena of absurdity.

I am not certain what writers had in mind here, but it’s an implausible plot device to say the least, unless consequences arise from Kenny’s action and some explanation is brought forward in the two episodes left as to why he would so readily betray his mother. His search does bear fruit. He discovers important letters that contain revelations that are not yet made clear in this episode.     

Carolyn assures Eve that Vladimir will give them access to Nadia thanks to some “good old traditional tit for tat.” Right then, we arrive at the second brief-yet-hilarious exchange of the episode. Sporting a coy smile, Eve dares to ask Carolyn what she means by that: “And when you say ‘tit’…?” Carolyn responds in a matter-of-factly tone that it’s a British expression and means nothing more, leaving Eve jabbering away in an attempt to cover her embarrassment. The exchange is quick, yet lovely.

Later that evening, Eve and Carolyn are having dinner with Vladimir when Konstantin joins them. Carolyn warmly welcomes him, calling him an “old ass,” as they both have a laughter. It is a wonderfully directed scene by Damon Thomas as the camera switches from one person to the next around the table, but focuses on Konstantin’s whenever he gets surprised by what he hears. Actor Kim Bodnia’s performance is praiseworthy as he perfectly conveys Konstantin’s dismay, first when he learns from Eve that Villanelle broke into her house, and second when he hears Eve pronounce Villanelle’s real name. Konstantin, who seems to know everything and anything, as well as anyone and everyone, feels a step behind for once.

We are left wondering if that is also when he decides to betray Villanelle. Alarmed by what he hears from Eve and realizing that managing a loose cannon like Villanelle is becoming too tedious and too dangerous, it would only make sense if he made that call during the dinner. He does indeed betray Villanelle by the end of the hour, when he abandons her stranded in the “the hole” (solitary confinement).

It is a bit strange that Villanelle, who showed doubt toward Konstantin more than once – the knife on his throat in “I’ll Deal with Him Later,” her revelation that she knows his daughter in “Sorry Baby,” and her probing of his connection to “The 12” last week – would place so much trust him for this elaborate prison scheme. It also does not exactly fit her profile so far. She does not have any friends and does not trust anyone. Yet, she willingly engages in an operation knowing that her fate will largely depend on Konstantin keeping his word once she gets the job done.

Then again, what is Konstantin’s end game in betraying Villanelle if she is not completely eliminated? It makes sense that he would want to seize the opportunity to take both Villanelle and Nadia out of the equation, without ever having to set foot inside the prison. But the one person who should firmly understand that you never get rid of Villanelle unless you kill her – especially once you become her enemy – is Konstantin. Is he seriously counting on Villanelle forever being stuck in prison? He cannot be that naïve, can he?

Eve arranges a secret meeting with Vladimir which begs the question, why would Vladimir agree to meet with Eve behind Carolyn’s back in the first place? She obviously wants him to turn Nadia over to them, but he already refused Carolyn’s request for the exact same thing. Eve has a trick or two up her sleeve though. She promises to share with him a secret concerning him that she learned from Carolyn earlier, which begs another question: does Eve realize the potential fallout from doing this, once Carolyn learns of her betrayal? 

The episode spends most of its time setting up these storylines and revelations. We learn that Carolyn had sex with both Vladimir and Konstantin at some point(s) in the past. We learn that Anna, whose name came up twice in previous episodes, was the wife of the man Villanelle killed before being imprisoned years ago. According to Nadia, Eve and Carolyn need to find Anna if they want to learn more about Oksana/Villanelle. 

There is a lot taking place in the prison and Jodie Comer is absolutely magnificent as Villanelle in those scenes. Unlike the intellectual narrative in Carolyn’s storyline, ViIllanelle’s storyline brings pure entertainment. She befriends a “spontaneously violent” inmate, provokes the female headguard, gets beaten twice voluntarily, all in the name of meeting the prison doctor who is Konstantin’s inside man. She even crosses Carolyn, Eve, and Konstantin, who are walking through the prison lawn to meet Nadia, as she is dragged by the guard with a club-lock on her neck. It is a well-filmed scene, rendered terrific by the haunting score – I don’t believe I have praised the composer David Holmes enough in my reviews for the five-star-quality score he brings to the table for each episode, and this one is no exception.   

It is also in the prison that the action kicks into high gear during the last ten minutes. Villanelle gets to kill two guards in plain sight, walk to Nadia’s cell, find her, talk to her, hug her, and kill her. She gets to do all that after killing the two guards, while the alarms blare loudly for minutes, which makes the prison look vastly underpopulated in terms of security personnel. We give that a pass because the ending scene is next, and it is delightful to watch.

The doctor opens the little window on the door of Villanelle’s cell in “the hole” as Villanelle expects Konstantin to arrive at any moment to get her out. When she asks, the doctor replies, “Konstantin who?” Villanelle realizes in a flash that nobody is coming to get her out of solitary confinement. For the first time in the series, we see our ruthless villain genuinely upset and screaming.

Prior to her death, Nadia does give one important piece of information to Villanelle: Konstantin is collaborating with the British. She also manages to slip a note under the door of her cell (neither its destination nor its contents are clear yet), collected by a guard after her death.

On an unrelated plot to the rest of the episode, we get our weekly reminder scene of the Eve-and-Niko marriage falling apart. What begins as a discussion quickly escalates into an argument, then into a shouting match. It literally turns violent when Niko accuses Eve of “getting off on sniffling a psycho” and she physically assaults him in return. Owen McDonnell represents the emotionally crumbling husband well, but his character’s storyline has been relegated so far down the priority list that this scene feels at odds with the rest of the hour.  ​

Until next episode…   

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‘Killing Eve’ (BBC America) – Season 1, Episode 5 Review

I Have a Thing About Bathrooms” – aired on May 6, 2018
Writer: Phoebe Waller-Bridge
Director: Jon East
Grade: 4,5 out of 5

Notice: All episode reviews contain spoilers

“I Have a Thing About Bathrooms” picks up exactly where the previous episode ended, with Villanelle approaching Eve, Elena, and Frank in the car and taking a hot at them, as Eve is about to drive away. As I mentioned in my review of “Sorry Baby,” it was one of the best cliffhangers on TV in recent years, featuring the two leads coming face-to-face for the first time since becoming aware of each other’s identity. We spent four episodes leading up to this moment and writers cleverly teased us with that electrifying cliffhanger prior to making us wait for a week to see it unfold.

It starts with Villanelle missing the mark and Eve driving away in a rush. Villanelle continues to shoot as she runs after the car. Then, in a seemingly foolish move, Eve stops the car a hundred meters later and informs a horrified Frank and Elena that she wants to “talk to her.”

Frank, the ultimate scaredy cat concerned only with himself, has a far more tenable reaction: “Are you insane? She has been trying to kill me!”

Elena concurs: “Wake up Eve!”; “Stop being a dick!”

As an audience member of the show, I exclaim: Excuse me?

Never mind that Eve is endangering the lives of two other people in the car. Her inconceivable decision to engage in a chat with the assassin who just took not one, not two, not three, but a total of eight shots straight at her and the car she is driving, not only pushes the boundaries of plausibility but defies them. Furthermore, we know that Villanelle will not kill her anyway, although Eve walks right in front of her so that she can take that ninth fatal shot, because we know that Eve cannot die in the beginning of the fifth episode of an eight-episode-long season, in a show that carries her name in the title – killing” is not pertinent at this point, obviously.

Sandra Oh and Jodie Comer perform well in the scene – we have come to expect nothing less – as they stare at each other. Villanelle toys with Eve for a few seconds, feigning to shoot herself, laughing, and then shooting at the ground by Eve’s feet, before she disappears. Yet, the acting alone is not enough to save a defectively formulated sequence with no apparent endgame. If the idea was to put on display a stare-into-each-other’s-eye moment, we saw plenty of that later in the episode in the most terrific face-to-face scene of the season. So why push the envelope so far – too far – to have one here? Eve is a psycho in her own way as I have noted before, but she is definitely not an idiot. Unfortunately, this scene goes to great lengths to make her appear as one.

Eve and Elena eventually take Frank the buffoon to a safe house where Carolyn Martens awaits them in a stance that only Fiona Shaw can make look that bland and imposing at the same time – kudos to director Jon East for the shot. Frank is not forthcoming with information at first – he claims to be hyperventilating, too weak to talk – but Martens has a remedy: “I know exactly what he needs,” she says to Eve. She hugs Frank to comfort him and the infantile head of MI5 begins to spill it all out with his head nestled on her shoulder and neck.

Time for me to go on a tangent. Thank heavens, we are done with Frank! I questioned more than once how a clown like him ever came to helm such a high-profiled intelligence agency and feared that he would be reduced to Killing Eve’s comic-relief pill. It happened just as I feared, and I found myself almost cheering for Villanelle as she was getting ready to eliminate him forever. Darren Boyd portrayed him formidably – just see how he delivers the line “Priorities!” – but by the fifteenth minute of this episode, it was clear that Frank the buffoon has long outlived his usefulness and was becoming a distraction for the team, as well as a nuisance to the show’s narrative.

Eve and Carolyn learn that the people behind Villanelle call themselves “The Twelve.” These well-connected people knew everything about the condition of Frank’s wife and used it to lure him into their web. Frank’s contact agent is Russian and he refers to them as “Russians,” but he cannot be certain that they are indeed Russians. “They are interested in the big picture,” he says. They are also proud of Villanelle, and Frank adds that there is “a pattern to these kills. They’re destabilizing from the ground up” – whatever that entails.

Eventually Eve leaves the safehouse to go home, not before she breaks the glass at a bus stop for no apparent reason other than being annoyed by a crack on it. Oh’s powerhouse performance elevates the enigma of this solo scene, hinting at the existence of a space hidden deep within her psyche in which a yearning for bliss through violence is brewing.

Dispersed within these initial twenty minutes are wonderful lines dropped here and there, pointing to other developments. Kenny is particularly – and affectionately – concerned about Elena who, for her part, is concerned with Carolyn’s perception of her. As she is leaving the safehouse, she specifically turns to face Carolyn and say with a bitter tone, “Other than that, Carolyn, I had an amazing day.” She turns back on her heels and leaves as Carolyn and Eve, both stupefied, stare at each other. We know Elena is infatuated with Carolyn, but is there something more than that here?

Carolyn, meanwhile, seems to be overly preoccupied with Kenny’s well-being. Eve is confused by that but she reassures Carolyn that she will keep an eye out for him. Little we know, at that moment, that Kenny is her son. We, along with Eve, discover that fact later, after she walks into Carolyn’s house and finds Kenny eating dinner with the family.

In an important background development for Villanelle, we learn that her real name is Oksana Astonkova – I’ll continue referring to her as Villanelle, thank you very much –, that she is either Russian or Ukrainian (not clear), that she was born in 1993 and supposedly died in 2014, and that she was at the time serving a prison sentence because “she chopped [some guy’s] knob off,” all courtesy of the resident tech wiz Kenny who manages to dig up her records somewhere in the depths of Russian and Ukrainian data files.

We finally understand how Konstantin knew instantly what the team was up to when Frank the buffoon tells Carolyn and Eve that he told the Russians about it because he suspected it. For once, Frank’s intuition was correct. It’s a solid pay-off to the nagging mystery of them’s instant awareness of the existence of Eve’s operation since the second episode, one that would have turned into a major plot hole had it gone unexplained (see my reviews of episodes two and three). It would not have even worked if Frank revealed that he simply told them, because he did not know for sure that it existed. By inserting Frank’s line “I thought you were still investigating after you interrogated me,” the writers are making it clear that Frank was simply speculating about the existence of Eve’s team (although he was right) when he told the Russian agent, thus bringing this lingering question to a close, Their attention to detail should not go unnoticed. Well done, writing room!

Apparently, police found only one body where Villanelle seemed to have killed her two assassin-colleagues in the last episode. We will find out later, from Konstantin, that Nadia somehow survived Villanelle’s rolling of the jeep over her twice.

All these tidbits of information are well-paced in their delivery and help overcome the hangover lasting from the baffling opening scene, before the episode peaks with the extraordinary face-off segment between Eve and Villanelle.

This powerhouse scene featuring tour-de-force performances by Comer and Oh deserves to be seen, several times, rather than read in a review. Therefore, too fearful of not doing it justice by a detailed recap, I will simply say that it starts with a petrifying chase scene within the house that finishes in the bathtub, continues with a witty dialogue by the dinner table followed by a stare-down, touchy-feely, knife-to-the-trachae stand off by the refrigerator (not to mention the evocative score), and ends with Villanelle meeting the rest of Eve’s family as she leaves the house. Trust me folks, my summary is only ten percent of all the meaningful messages conveyed in this thrilling 12-minute-long sequence. No wonder why the promos for the show have repeatedly included parts of this scene since they began airing before the show even started.

Remember the following one?

Eve: “Are you a psychopath?”

Villanelle: “You should never tell a psychopath they are a psychopath. It upsets them.”

Eve: “Are you upset?”

[Villanelle purses her lips and nods]

Yes, that one. It’s there. Get to it.

The last third of the episode largely tackles Frank’s doomed fate. Villanelle toys with him for a while before finally, you guessed it, “chopping his knob off.” The special-ops team naturally arrives too late to save Frank who lies dead on the bed with Villanelle’s dress spread on top of his body, the same one that Eve wore earlier, before Villanelle busted into her house.

The hour ends with Villanelle having a conversation with Konstantin. The name Anna, that we heard back in “I’ll Deal with Him Later,” comes up again. She is surprised to hear that Nadia survived but that is nothing compared to the shock that she delivers to Konstantin’s system when she asks him what number he is out of The Twelve. Apparently, they were unknown to her too. Konstantin can only respond with “Oh dear,” as one last shot focuses on Villanelle looking menacingly straight into his eyes. She is a threat to anyone and everyone, and that appears to include Konstantin.

What better way to finish the review than with one of Killing Eve‘s strengths? Here is yet another brilliant one-liner:

Carolyn informs a bewildered Eve that Kenny is her son and adds:

“We have no time for you to react to that, so don’t feel that you have to.”

Until next episode…   

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‘Instinct’ (CBS) – Season 1, Episode 7 Review

Owned” – aired on May 6, 2018
Written by: Jill Abbinanti
Directed by: Doug Aarniokoski
Grade: 4 out of 5

Notice: All episode reviews contain spoilers

“Owned” is a refreshing episode in terms of its narrative structure when compared to previous episodes of Instinct. We still have a central crime to solve and two B stories that center on developing our leading duo’s characters. The difference comes in the form of two extended-flashback scenes in the episode’s first act, and of other previously recorded public clips of the victim dispersed throughout the hour. Writer Jill Abbinanti and director Doug Aarniokoski – both members of Instinct’s production team – make use of these tools to show developments in the past that are relevant to the rest of the episode.

The first 12 minutes of “Owned” unloads a large amount of information at a frantic pace. Not only do we get introduced – visually or by name – to almost every character of importance to the hour including the victim, but we also meet Lt. Gooden’s fiancé David Wu (Stephen Sable) and a potential love-story candidate for Lizzie named Steve (Charlie Semine), a mechanic from Jiffy Lube. We also discover that Dylan is completely clueless about sports and the concept of fandom, as opposed to Andy who is a genuine sports fan.

The victim’s name is Abby Wright (Kate Arrington). She dies when car flies off the bridge and lands on the road below. As we begin to piece together the elaborate backstory leading to her death, we learn that she was the owner of a professional basketball team named the New York Hudsons and that our Lt. Gooden knew her and her husband Russell (Peter Hermann). In fact, Abby and Jasmine were close, long-time friends. Abby used to be an outgoing, successful, confident woman who felt at ease around people, until the last few years during which she slowly began to develop anxiety in public situations and became withdrawn. The numerous death threats and hate mail coming her way, because she is moving the team to Las Vegas, only served to exacerbate the situation. Jasmine also informs Lizzie and Dylan that Abby had stopped communicating with her during her decline.

Aarniokoski’s first-rate directorial skills come in handy in the beginning of the episode, as we get a glimpse of possible suspects in the long “earlier in the afternoon” flashback scene that takes place during an annual charity auction party held for Abby.

In the crowd, there is “Tomahawk” Sarkeysian (Rodney Richardson), an attention-seeking, controversial podcaster who, by his own admission, sneaked into the party with a waiter’s uniform. Jasmine also spots a suspicious looking man carrying a gun but loses sight of him. He turns out to be a P.I. named Yuri Minkus (Lev Gorn). Russell hired him to “protect” Abby but did not tell her because she had rejected the idea of having bodyguards.

IMDB has Lev Gorn’s character listed as Uri Marshak but Dylan and Lizzie pronounce his last name Minkus, the same as how it appears in the subtitles. In his profile screen momentarily shown in the precinct, his name is Yuri Minkus. If I am looking for accuracy, I am going with the police records, never mind the fictional nature of this precinct. The actor Lev Gorn also plays one of the most compelling and salient recurring characters on TV, The Americans’ Arkady Ivanovich. Instinctcontinues to impress with its ability to attract quality actors to appear in guest-starring roles.

The cleverly edited first ten minutes of “Owned” oscillates between Abby’s flashback scene and the one centering on the sports-related dialogues that Dylan and Andy had earlier in the day. This is helpful for the viewer because of their distinct natures. The “earlier that afternoon” flashback from Abby’s party bombards us with faces and sentences pertinent to the crime portion of the hour. Thus, the low-keyed, character-growth-oriented nature of the Dylan-Andy dialogue allows us to cool down and properly absorb the narrative.

There is also the present, where Dylan, Lizzie, and Lt. Gooden are examining the crashed car and trying to make sense of Abby’s death. The moment of the car flying off the bridge and crashing is brought to screen in a very brief, but terrific sequence, making me wonder why Instinct and other procedurals shows do not engage more often in brief glimpses of action shots. Nothing like a one-second shot of a car flying off the bridge and crashing to get your adrenaline going, especially if it’s as well-shot as this one.

By the time we get to meet Steve, the Jiffy Lube mechanic, twelve minutes have gone by and nothing felt rushed despite the fairly complex nature of the central crime. It is possibly one of the best starts to any episode of Instinct, and I add “possibly” only because I clearly remember the delightful conversations between Whoopi Goldberg’s Joan and Alan Cumming’s Dylan in the early moments of the first two episodes.

Steve and Lizzie, at Jiffy Lube, appear to be interested in each other from the first moment they meet and Dylan, of course, notices the reciprocal attraction and forms a smart-ass smile on his face. When Steve momentarily goes away, he tries to talk Lizzie into going on a date with him. Lizzie, not deviating from what we know of her character so far, pulls the “still grieving” card in a failed attempt to hide her interest. Dylan ain’t buyin’ it.

When Steve comes back, Dylan decides to “grease the wheels” as he calls it. He literally asks Steve, in front of Lizzie, and if he is single, specifying that he is “asking for a friend.” Apparently what Dylan calls “greasing the wheel” is actually one of the most pre-pre-teenager-ish, let-me-set-you-two-up moves in the history of corny fix-ups. It works, of course, even though the average age of the three people involved in the scene must at least be around late 30s, because we are in the arena of procedural TV shows and we need this B story to continue so that it can be used for character development.

Lizzie’s date with Steve fails because she worries about work and behaves awkwardly. The “hot mechanic” – as Dylan calls him – is ready to leave before they even finish their food. The plotline leads to some intimate conversations between Dylan and Lizzie during which the former shows that he genuinely cares for the well-being for his partner. In case you have not read my reviews of previous episodes, I have consistently maintained that the synergy between Lizzie and Dylan is the most notable asset of this show. Cumming and Novakovic once again shine in the scenes involving just the two of them.

The other star deserving of high praise is Daniel Ings who portrays Dylan’s husband Andy. Outside of the two leads, Andy has benefited from character development more than any other character so that may also help Ings’s cause. I cannot say the same for Naveen Andrews and Sharon Leal who continue to be underused. Julian was not in this episode, which would be fine if it were not for the fact that he has not appeared in three episodes so far, and in the four that he has, it has largely been in limited roles and closed-spaces, except perhaps in “Flat Line.”

While Cumming and Ings light their scenes up, the premise of the disaccord between Dylan and Andy in this episode pushes the boundaries of plausibility. It took until now for Dylan to initiate a meaningful dialogue with Andy on his confusion about his husband’s love of sports? They have been married for a year and the extreme gap that exists between the two men with regard to interest in sports has never come up as a discussion topic?

Furthermore, how could Dylan, whose lifetime passion is the science of human behavior, never cared to investigate the behavior of sports fans? He says some story that about needing to believe that sports were “a waste of time” when he was growing up, but none of it explains the utter unfamiliarity of the adult Dr. Reinhart, who has written a best seller about abnormal behavior, with the disposition of a group consisting of millions and millions of people. And his husband Andy, the emblematic sports fan, did not trigger an interest either? Oh-kay!

Perhaps, people in the writing room thought that it would come across brilliant to have Dylan solve the murder through one of his blue-hued epiphanies while observing a brawl between sports fans about whom he is otherwise clueless. Maybe, they wanted to increase the irony factor… or something.

Speaking of the blue-hued epiphany, it was possibly the most ambitious – and outrageous – one in the seven-episode history of Instinct. It featured some never-before-seen professor – played by Philip Hoffman who has guest-starred elsewhere on TV – lecturing about the effects of hypoxia on patients. It lasted 16 seconds and that is all Dylan needed to solve the cause of Abby’s death, after the investigation had resulted in nothing but dead ends and the team stood basically where they began, as Jasmine attested halfway into the episode.

Only a couple of minutes later, Dylan would have another epiphany (non-blue-hued this time) to mysteriously uncover bunch of key information and figure out that Russell had been choking Abby for years. We need not ask how Dylan put it all together in the same way that we need not ask Star Trek characters to explain their technobabble. We just know that he is Dylan, and he can. It’s just that what started out as a very promising, well-planned crime plot got reduced to a quick, ham-fisted resolution at the end. 

The last scene is another wonderful Reinhart-Needham dialogue, except that this time, for a change, it is our detective that takes our resident genius by surprise. He urges Lizzie to contact the “hot mechanic” again, apologize for her behavior during their first date, and ask him for another chance. Much to his shock, he finds out that Lizzie is a step ahead of him and her “Mm-hmm” followed by “Not so uptight” in a birdy voice is one of the “Lizzie highlights” of the episode.

Last-minute thoughts:

– Tomahawk suffers no consequences for his irresponsible podcasts bordering on hate speech?

– Abby’s car coincidentally scraping Tomahawk’s parked car out of hundreds of cars parked in the streets of New York surely qualifies as an advanced case of contrivance within the realm of TV-show scripts.

– I have not talked about Yuri much in my review, but any show could use more of Lev Gorn. Chalk one up for Instinct’s writers for leaving the door open for a possible Yuri comeback in a future episode.

– Nice scenes of interpersonal dynamics in the precinct = Effective world-building tool for an episodic crime show.

– Lizzie puts Russell under arrest by herself. Isn’t she supposed to be accompanied by another officer at least? No, Dylan does not count!

Until next episode…

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‘Killing Eve’ (BBC America) – Season 1, Episode 4 Review

Sorry Baby” – aired on April 29, 2018
Writer: George Kay
Director: Jon East
Grade: 4.5 out of 5

Notice: All episode reviews contain spoilers

The narrative is moving with deliberate speed in Killing Eve. With only four episodes into the season, a beloved character and several other victims have been savagely executed, an investigation has turned into a pursuit because the assassin’s identity had been revealed, detailed profiles of the main characters have been sketched, and now, by the end of “Sorry Baby,” the face-off between Eve and Villanelle has been announced.

Yet, nothing has felt rushed, contrived, or forced. Showrunner Phoebe Waller-Bridge, the writing room, and the two directors featured so far, Harry Bradbeer (episodes one and two) and Jon East (episode three and four), deserve high praises for putting on screen one of the most original shows of the year. Now comes the next challenge. Can the Eve-vs-Villanelle duel, by itself, carry the last four episodes? The question is valid because the set-up for the next one sure feels like a season finale for a detective-assassin show. Yet, judging from what I have witnessed so far, I cannot help but trust that Waller-Bridge will find creative ways to keep the audience preoccupied, and thoroughly entertained, through a ride filled with unconventional loops and revelations.

“Sorry Baby” stays in line with the trend set by previous episodes with regard to plot advancement. It takes unexpected turns, delivers provocative dialogues, and complements the plot with quirky character introductions while building on the emotional frame of the existing ones.

It starts with yet another zoom-in shot on Eve’s face. That is now four out of four episodes that Killing Eve made use on that particular method. I call it a method because I don’t blame the writers for repeatedly turning to one of the show’s most imposing assets, Sandra Oh’s recognizable face that can manage to stir anyone’s emotions on a whim. The scene takes place in a church during the commemoration ceremony for Bill, in the aftermath of his death at the hands of Villanelle.

Eve is deeply anguished over the loss of her trusted colleague and friend. Her grief turns to anger when Frank the buffoon makes a maligned speech in Bill’s memory. She storms out of the church, leaving behind a bewildered Niko. Next, her anger transforms into a desire for revenge as she tells Elena, “I want to kill her with my bare hands.” Oh is simply magnificent in conveying all these distinct emotions in a matter of minutes.

Speaking of Frank, I expressed my concern in my review of episode two about his characterization as a comic-relief figure. I wondered how realistic it is that a buffoon like him could have managed to be in a position to lead an intelligence organization that requires high-IQ above all else from its key employees. My question remains valid, because Frank is not only a clown, but also an idiot, a loser, a degenerate coward, and an asshole, not to mention that he “looks most like rodent,” as Martens cleverly notes.

The big revelation of this episode is that he also happens to be the mole. Thanks to him, Konstantin knew instantly the who, when, and how of our team’s pursuit of Villanelle. Add “traitor” to the list of adjectives for Frank. I am still not completely clear on how he got hold of the information in such a timely fashion. I thought the team that Martens put together, helmed by Eve, was secret, thus unknown to anyone outside the five of them. Did Martens inform Frank of the activity just to appease some unwritten rule of ethics between intelligence leaders? I wish a line or two would be inserted somewhere to explain this discrepancy. Or did I miss something?

Villanelle, in the meantime, is having a ball. This woman possesses an impressive ability to get entertained by mundane scenes and useless banter. We already know she gets pleasure from killing, but her eyes also seem to light up with glee whenever Nadia (Olivia Ross) physically assaults her or tries to, at least. She finds amusement in sitting on the couch at the house of Frank’s mother, eating her hot fruitcake, or in dancing around a wooden Konstantin, dressed up as him. She also drips with mock-sympathy as she brings up her awareness of Konstantin’s daughter in a clear indication of threat to her handler. Villanelle is a thrill-seeker in the fullest sense of the term and Jodie Comer eats the role up.

Speaking of Nadia, she is one of the two doomed guest characters in this episode, the other being Diego (Edward Akrout). Villanelle is ordered to team up with them for the next job which happens to target Frank in the small town of Bletcham where his mother lives.

Representations of Diego and Nadia dangerously border on corniness. They are not only shallow, but highly inept at their job. Nadia cluelessly stares around in the mother’s house, not detecting Franks’ hidden presence – Villanelle naturally does – and amateurishly runs after Frank’s car as he drives away to escape the assassins. She lets Diego treat her condescendingly and swallows every lie fed to her by Villanelle. The frequent-pisser Diego, for his part, supposedly leads the trio, but makes one arrogant decision after another, ultimately leading to his demise. Lowering your weapon under the naïve assumption that Nadia would shoot Villanelle? Really, Diego?

I am fairly certain that writer George Kay and director East meant to make them appear silly – Diego’s overuse of pet names for Nadia is one proof of that –, which then begs the question, how in the world did two such ungainly operatives like Nadia and Diego survive until now in the organization for which Konstantin works? Their lack of IQ glares through the screen as Villanelle toys with them like puppets on a string. We are willing to let that question pass because the scenes involving Villanelle and her companions are donned with fascinating dialogues and dexterous acting.

It is, for example, nothing short of brilliant how the little said between Villanelle and Nadia hints at so much history between the two. Nadia is extremely bitter and keeps on physically charging Villanelle. We learn little by little, through subtle phrases dropped here and there, that they were lovers in the past and that Nadia feels somehow screwed over by Villanelle. Ross and Comer excel in these scenes. The former aptly depicts Nadia’s volatility and the latter plays the collected and calculated Villanelle to perfection.

Other meaningful moments are disseminated throughout the episode. Niko’s patience is wearing thin and we see glimpses of a marriage on the verge of collapse as Eve yells at him, in one scene, to “get out” when she realizes that Villanelle stole her suitcase and returned it filled with expensive clothes, and tersely lets him know, in another, how annoyed she is with the fact that his love for her is all that he has in his life. Ouch!

There are splendid, substantial dialogues such as the one between Eve and Martens in the grocery store and the one between Eve and Elena in the car as they make humorous remarks about Martens and Kenny.

And there is something sublime about the choice of the setting for “Sorry Baby.” For three episodes, scenes filmed in large cities charmed our senses. Eve and Villanelle’s cat-and-mouse game played out in the hustle-and-bustle of night clubs, cafés, subway stations, and avenues in renowned locations like Paris, Berlin, and London, among others. This episode, by contrast, largely takes place in a country-side setting in England and moves to empty fields as it approaches its climax. While looking for each other in London and Paris, Eve and Villanelle ironically find themselves in a face-off at an empty field in the middle of nowhere.  

And what a climactic moment it is! We are almost tempted to cheer for Frank as he is desperately running away from Villanelle in the fields, in an attempt to reach Eve and Elena – I should add “terrible athlete” to the list of Frank-related adjectives. But his character is, in reality, only a vehicle in the closing seconds. The directorial skills of East dazzles in the last 30 seconds as Frank makes it to the car, throws himself in Elena’s arms, Eve and Villanelle establish eye-to-eye contact, Villanelle takes a shot, and the screen turns dark, in one of the fiercest cliffhangers in the recent history of TV shows.

Endnote:

Eve: “Frank, are you running, or are you crying?”

Frank: “Running and crying.”

Until next episode…  

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‘Instinct’ (CBS) – Season 1, Episode 6 Review

Flat Line” – aired on April 29, 2018
Written by: Tanya Barfield
Directed by: Laura Belsey
Grade: 2,5 out of 5

Notice: All episode reviews contain spoilers

Before I delve into “Flat Line,” I need to get something off my chest. I have previously expressed some concern in my episode 4 review on the dangers of Instinct turning a “Cumming/Reinhart show” and relegating Novakovic/Needham to a secondary role, or even to a sidekick to the male detective. Having said that, I also did not neglect to praise, in that same review, the showrunners for not having fallen into that trap yet.

Well, I feel a bit differently now.

First, the promo for this episode basically announced throughout the week that Reinhart is the leading uno of the duo. It largely promoted Reinhart’s high-IQ, which is fine, and then, connected the show’s title with Reinhart, which is not so fine: “To solve murders, they’ll need to trust his instincts.” It may have as well added on a line such as “and we are along for the ride along with Detective Needham to admire Dr. Reinhart and drool over his one-man show.”

Second, there is the intro monologue that begins every episode since “Pilot,” the one that points to Reinhart’s superior importance to what we are about to watch over that of Needham. It lasts thirty seconds during twenty-six of which Reinhart describes how versatile and accomplished he is, adding that his best-seller is so “successful, a serial killer used it as clues for his murders.” But no worries, because that is “when the NYPD reached out” to Reinhart and he lets you know with a firm tone that he caught the killer.

The intro ends with a four-second-long, token mention of Needham: “So now I’m working with this woman, Detective Lizzie Needham of the homicide division, catching killers.” That’s it! Four seconds for the female co-lead in the intro monologue after the male co-lead talks for 26 seconds about him. Even Needham’s sentence-question that ends the intro is about Reinhart: “Don’t they call you Professor Psychopath?”

Look, I get it, Dr. Reinhart is a genius and Cumming delights all of us with his representation as the witty professor-writer-ex-CIA-operative Dylan. I am even fine with the portrayal of Dylan being the brain of the team. That should not, however, translate into having yet another male co-lead dominate every problem-solving and clue-finding sequences while the female co-lead, supposedly a skilled detective herself, watches him wondrously and has numerous “a-ha” reactions. It’s a tiresome trope that has been utilized by a plethora of past TV procedurals that have male and female co-leads.

Unfortunately, this issue does not end with the promo and intro this week. The episode itself also echoes a “Cumming-Reinhart show.” Dylan asks the pertinent questions, obtains the crucial info, works his contact for paramount information, advances the investigation, feeds the exact words to say to Lizzie through an ear piece in a key scene, and even gets to dress up as a hospital employee.

In contrast, Lizzie briefly hangs out with Pete the stalker (Jay Klaitz) and gets a ham-fisted B storyline involving a weasel named Jeff. Heck, Dylan steals the show even when Lizzie attempts to be relevant, trying to calm the perpetrator down in the climax of the hour. He takes over the “calm-the-perpetrator” speech from Lizzie and succeeds where she did not a few seconds earlier. In short, Dylan gets it done, Lizzie doesn’t, no ifs, ands, or buts.

Leaving my renting and raving aside on the unequal relevancies of male and female co-leads, “Flat Line” comes across an uneven, nondescript hour of Instinct, with a fitting title. There is indeed a lot that flatlines in this episode and the few bright spots that provide temporary glimmers of hope fizzle out in a narrative filled with ham-fisted contrivances.

For example, the episode’s beginning shows promise. It avoids the usual discovery of a body followed by crime-scene dialogues. We join Dylan and Lizzie already in pursuit of a suspect named Theo. They catch up with him at an investments firm. Dylan distracts him with his comfort talk, enough for the woman he is holding to shake free. He gets injured and hospitalized in the process. When our protagonists want to question Theo, he panics and dies somewhat inexplicably after the nurse injects him with “two milligrams of lorazepam” to calm him down. Dylan is visibly shaken by the events which hints at a personal connection to the scene. In the meantime, we meet Nurse Albany – played wonderfully by Dena Tyler – who is curt with Dylan and Lizzie, and rough on the edge with patients. An encouraging start indeed.

Except that by the end of the episode, the only pay-off we get from that start is some character development for Dylan – he has painful memories of his mother being treated in a hospital. Nurse Albany’s storyline loses credibility as she is transformed in the blink of an eye somewhere in the middle of the episode from a jerk to a compassionate, fight-for-the-cause hero. Tyler does her best with the script she is given, but even with a talented actress like her, the unrealistic change the character goes through within a matter of minutes defies logic. Nurse Albany’s purpose mainly turns out to be a vehicle for Dylan’s character development – he remembers the nurse of his mother. Both Albany and Dr. James Walters (Brian Hutchison) become irrelevant less than half an hour into the episode.  

As for crime solving, the writers apparently needed Dylan to save the day one more time with his comfort talk in a dangerous moment, just to initiate the episode’s actual murder mystery. Would the minutes wasted on this pointless scene not have been put to better use if they served to expand the investigation? It sure needed them.

So, instead, we get a rushed, compromised investigation narrative. When Lizzie and Dylan talk to the hospital administrator, we get a conveniently disturbing intrusion by a Dr. Walters who drops hints of “irregularities,” much to the dismay of the administrator, and names a nurse who is under review. Lo and behold, it’s Nurse Albany. It’s all done so artificially, just so that our two heroes can pick up on the obvious cues and pace through the mystery labyrinth with ease.

Later, when they arrive at the hospital to talk to the nurse – and I do mean, right as they arrive – they catch a glimpse of Nurse Albany being given a note by Dr. Walters. They follow her naturally, only to find the two of them engaged in coitus in a room. I cringed, not at the laughable, fully-clothed-missionary coitus on a desk in the back room of a hospital, but at how fruitless the whole sequence was. It appeared as nothing more than an effort to insert a corny je-ne-sais-quoi moment in the scene and to make the story zoom from point to A to B as fast as possible.

Even Julian’s role suffers through the rushed sequences. Dylan wants him to dig some hard-to-get information as usual and it takes Julian less than forty-five seconds to go into the computer and spit out a name, while warning Dylan that he is “going to need some time.” The name is Rebecca Dunmar (Tracee Chimo) and yes, she will turn out to be, well, the “angel of death.” Chimo puts forth her best effort to make her character appear conflicted despite the hasty narrative.

Drowning in the artificial plot advancement is another shining performance by Naveen Andrews when Julian infiltrates the hospital with Dylan. The two even get to dress up as hospital employees. It’s a fun scene, the best of the episode, and the Cumming-Andrews duo milk it for all its worth.

What is Lizzie up to during all this? She gets the privilege of being the star of the B story line – Yay! It involves a scam artist named Jeff (David A. Gregory) who poses as a personal trainer and tricks Lizzie into injuring him while making it appear as a benign exercising accident. Later, he sues her and that causes, thankfully, Andy to enter this aimless B story as Lizzie’s legal helper and render it half-way bearable. She also gets a visit Pete the stalker from “Heartless” who makes an encore appearance for comic relief. He requests Lizzie to write a letter of recommendation for him. It is outrageously dumb, yet Novakovic and Klaitz somehow make it work, in a hilarious way. It is also refreshing to see a nod to continuity in a procedural drama.

In other news, Lizzie casually accuses all businessmen of being potential murderers. Dylan literally scoffs at her observation and if I didn’t know any better, I would have trouble discerning if it is Dylan the character doing that or Cumming the actor reacting to the superficiality of the writing.

The emotionally charged scenes come in the form of Dylan’s conversations with another couple victimized by the hospital administration – the wife had a left-brain stroke – and of Dylan’s revelation to Lizzie about his mother spending time in a cancer ward when he was in sixth grade. It is a heart-breaking memory and Dylan’s sharing of it with Lizzie reminds us once again that the synergy between Cumming and Novakovic is still the best asset of this show.  

After having its best outing with last week’s “Heartless,” Instinct dipped into mediocrity with “Flat Line.” I don’t know what the future holds for the series – it’s apparently on the bubble as I write this review – but this may be a good time to air some more episodes written by the showrunner Michael Rauch who has inked the most notable ones so far.

Until next episode…

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‘Instinct’ (CBS) – Season 1, Episode 5 Review

Heartless” – aired on April 22, 2018
Written by: Michael Rauch
Directed by: Don Scardino
Grade: 4,5 out of 5

Notice: All episode reviews contain spoilers

At last, Instinct delivers the type of episode that I have been waiting for since day one. On the one hand, “Heartless” falls just short of being perfect due to the lack of cohesion in one of its B plots. On the other hand, for the first time ever, it manages to bring all the show’s strengths together to produce a convincing narrative that works without compromising its Rauch-style, character-driven entertainment factor.

If you have followed my reviews for Instinct, you probably know that I have been critical of its crime-solving portion. In “Heartless,” showrunner-writer Michael Rauch and seasoned director Don Scardino collaborate to create the first compelling case of the show. It features a plausible narrative that remains, for the most part, free of clichés found in procedurals.

Another first is the efficient use of the supporting cast without short-changing any of the talent available. After two episodes of token, inside-closed-chambers appearances by Julian Cousins (Naveen Andrews), followed by two non-appearances, we finally have him back for this episode. He plays a substantial role in the solving of the crime while appearing in more than one scene outside of his screen-filled “computer cell.” He also gets some much-needed character growth: he is an independent contractor, “unallied” and “liberated.”

Andrews as Julian energizes all three scenes in which he appears. The relationship between Reinhart and Cousins indeed has the necessary ingredients to create some fascinating story lines for future episodes. Julian is the only character who seems to be on par with Dylan in terms of pure intelligence. Whether the writers will exploit that tremendous potential or not is not clear. But, it is there without a doubt, because only Julian can stupefy a genius like Dylan by saying cool and nerdy things such as “I’ll use the print to reconstruct the victim’s actual fingerprint, and hack into her cell phone provider’s biometric cloud of cryptographic hash signatures. With a dactylogram match, I can data-dump the contents of her phone onto any computer desktop.” What is Dylan’s reply to that? “Totally.” Yep, Dylan does look totally lost at that moment.

The third dialogue between Dylan and Julian hints at a storyline that could become a major plot as Instinct moves forward. It turns out that Charlie’s death – Lizzie’s ex-fiancé and partner – may carry larger implications than Dylan was initially led to believe. He was apparently a person of interest in an international smuggling case shortly before he died. Julian expresses concern about who might be involved. Dylan takes offense at Julian’s suggestion that Lizzie may be involved. How far the writers decide to pursue this narrative remains to be seen, but it promises endless possibilities.

Rauch throws more bones in our direction by having Whoopi Goldberg make another appearance as Joan, Dylan’s editor. As was the case in the first and second episodes, the dialogue between Dylan and Joan is stellar. After three of those in five episodes, I seriously believe that I could be a fly on the wall for hours listening to Joan and Dylan engage in refined badinage and never get bored. I suspect that being the case even if it were Alan and Whoopi doing so in real life.

Andy and Jasmine are also present in the episode, with the former playing a bigger role since Dylan’s ability to maintain equal balance between his work and private life comes into question. And what a spouse Andy is! He is understanding, caring, and always sporting a genuine smile. He is almost too good to be true, but after five episodes, the line between “too-good-to-be-true” and “for-real-true” is getting blurrier. If we ever get an episode that puts Andy’s life in danger, I will be the first to declare the villain of that episode public enemy number one.  

Let’s get back to the crime-solving part, easily the biggest factor in setting this episode in a class by itself compared to the four previous. A young woman is killed in a case of mistaken identity. More precisely, her heart is removed. Dylan and Lizzie ponder on the clues and painstakingly carry their investigation as they hit one road block after another. At first, they do not even know that the woman was not the intended target. Once past that, they don’t understand why anyone would kill “Jane Doe,” let alone “steal her heart.”

Dylan is especially frustrated because he is used to working the super-human brain of his, having his blue-hued-epiphany moment or two, and “poof,” having the answers – hey, don’t blame me, that has been the pattern, has it not? But this time, it’s different. As shocking as it sounds, he even experiences an “incomplete” blue-hued moment – i.e., minus the epiphany.

He begins to worry that his obsession with the case may lead him down a dangerous path, one in which solving crimes becomes his primary focus and his loved ones fall into secondary roles. Andy reminds him that he gets “consumed by these things” and “can’t turn it off.” Dylan confesses to Joan that he is feeling like he is “being pulled in so many different directions.” He retired from the CIA precisely because he wanted to leave that type of life behind. Daniel Ings continues to impress as Andy and Andy continues to impress as the dream spouse of which we all dream at some point in our lives.

Lizzie and Dylan tackle more clues and question more suspects before Dylan finally has his successful epiphany to figure out the “why” of the murder. Unlike in previous episodes, this blue-hued-epiphany moment is tenable because the earlier conversations between Lizzie and Dylan show us in a cogent manner how Dylan got to the point where he could put the two and two together. The denouement is genuinely poignant, and it also avoids the usual good-n-evil dichotomy that underscores most concluding scenes of episodic procedurals.

The only significant flaw of the episode strangely emerges from what is usually its strongest asset. Even when all else fails, you can always count on the synergy between Dylan and Lizzie to save the day. In an episode where almost all else works well, it is the interaction between our two main leads that misses the mark. For the first 20 minutes, we listen to Lizzie and Dylan ponder on how the victim is killed. They also pick on each other in ways that are no different than what we have seen in the previous episodes. Lizzie finds some of Dylan’s habits quirky, lets him know about it. Dylan, in return, picks on Lizzie for driving fast and being bossy. We have seen it before, and we like it.

So then, why does this one awkward conversation between Dylan and Lizzie take place around the 20-minute mark by the coffee machine? Lizzie makes a comment that alludes to things not needing to be “complicated” which triggers an apprehensive reaction by Dylan: “Oh, we’re not talking about coffee anymore.” Lizzie takes a serious tone. She understands that he is “not a cop” but reminds him firmly that “there is a way we do things around here.” She adds, “you need to respect that.” She goes further by stating that he is free to have his “authority issues,” “mommy issues,” and “social issues,” but in the precinct, “the only issue that matters is the case.”

Wait, what is going on here? Why is Lizzie suddenly scolding Dylan? What did I miss in the first 20 minutes that was different – and warranted Lizzie’s reaction – than the many conversations that the two held in previous episodes?  More overkill comes when Lizzie affirms to Dylan, “I’ve been doing just fine on my own.” Dylan never said otherwise, so what is the purpose of Lizzie’s statement?

The entire sequence comes across as unnecessary and awkward. I have no problem if the writers prefer to inject some tension into the relationship between the main characters, but this one feels clunky, because Lizzie’s reaction is not warranted by anything seen in the episode. Luckily, the two have further conversations to get past that awkward one by the coffee machine and we return quickly to the Reinhart-Needham duo that we prefer.

Last-minute thoughts:

– Do sharks really have their livers and hearts “removed by the whales with almost surgical precision”? Can any human being really detect a “faint whiff of rhodinol and sour milk” and match that with roses and baby’s breath flowers? Someone please say “no” to one of these so I can stop feeling so stupid listening to the living encyclopedia named Dylan Reinhart.

– Nit-picking time: “Onishi! Two more Onishi rolls for my friends here,” yells Frank Fallon to the sushi chef early in the episode. So, the chef’s name is Onishi and the rolls are named after him? Then why does IMDB have the character named as Akira Sato? Something seems off.

– The flower guy runs away from Lizzie and Dylan for about five meters (?!?) before grabbing his knees form exhaustion. I do not even know how to comment on that absurdity.

– Andrew Polk is hilarious as Doug the medical examiner. After three appearances in five episodes, can I assume that he is a recurring character? I hope so.

– Precinct banter between detectives is entertaining, as well as the jokes they pull on each other’s motorcycles. Lizzie gets the last laugh in that game.

– Julian says to Dylan that it will only be a “matter of time” before Dylan gets back in the “Acronym.” What is this Acronym? Let me just say that it is another good reason for which Julian should be more involved in the show.

– Over-the-top moment that should have been edited out: Dylan riding his motorcycle away on its back wheel. It was unrealistic and corny.

Until next episode…

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‘Killing Eve’ (BBC America) – Season 1, Episode 3 Review

Don’t I Know You?” – aired on April 22, 2018
Writer: Vicky Jones
Director: Jon East
Grade: 4,5 out of 5

Notice: All episode reviews contain spoilers

If any individual in the TV-show business theorized that the opening and closing scenes of an episode were paramount to its success, “Don’t I Know You?” would be tucked away in their vault as the defining proof of their theory.

The close-up panning shot of Sandra Oh’s face to kickstart the hour, as Eve describes Villanelle’s physical features, and the brutal elimination of one of the show’s beloved characters to end it, work together to transform the otherwise plot-advancement-oriented episode into a pivotal one for the show.

I have already said it more than once; with Oh playing one of the two leads, the showrunner Phoebe Waller-Bridge has at her disposition one of the most recognizable faces in the TV-show arena. What better way to make use of that asset than to pan the camera slowly from Eve’s left to her right while she gives details of Villanelle’s appearance based on their fleeting encounter in the bathroom from the pilot episode. Not surprisingly, Oh is up to the task.

Throughout the 58-second-long shot during which Eve says that Villanelle’s “hair was dark blonde, maybe honey,” that “her eyes are sort of cat-like, her lips are full,” and that “she is totally focused, yet almost entirely inaccessible,” it’s difficult to tell if she is simply digging deep within her memory to provide an accurate description, or if she is swooning as she visually reproduces Villanelle in her mind. Her expression oscillates between admiration, fear, curiosity, and obsession. In any case, the director Jon East must have had a field day filming this remarkable sequence that ends with an unintentionally hilarious question by the sketch artist that leaves Eve bewildered – yes, that face again – and makes Bill smile.  

It does not take long to catch up with Villanelle who is in Berlin, ready for her next victim. She poses as a dominatrix specializing in medical-oriented fetishes to “treat” a Chinese client (Simon Chin) who yearns, obviously, to be the patient. Little does he know that his testicles are about to be “clamped,” and that his designated safe word frühstück (“breakfast” in German) will not change his doomed fate.

Thankfully, this murder is not just another one along the string of obscene killings designed to serve no purpose other than putting on display Villanelle’s deranged nature – reference: see my episode-two review. The victim is General Zhang Wu, a hacker working for the Chinese military. The probing into the case eventually leads Eve to meet a Chinese attaché named Jin (Lobo Chan). Unlike in the previous murders, Wu’s death plays a significant role in the episode’s narrative.

Martens and the investigating team are left behind in London as Eve and Bill leave for Berlin where most of the action takes place. Konstantin’s role in this episode is also diminished. He appears once to inform Villanelle, again, of Eve’s presence in Berlin. This is a storyline that could prove to be problematic, unless it is explained in a satisfactory manner in the upcoming episodes.

How does Konstantin know almost instantly, and down to the details, where Eve is and what she is doing? I already posed a similar question last week, when he immediately knew in episode two that there was a small team formed to pursue Villanelle and that it was helmed by “Eve Polastri.” Nobody outside our investigative team knew of either development. Is there a mole inside Eve’s team?** A scene in the later episodes needs to bring a meaningful explanation to this riddle, or else this storyline risks falling into the confines of arbitrary plot devices.   

** If so, I nominate Kenny.

The story is almost entirely focalized around the Bill-Eve duo’s pursuit of Villanelle. On the upside, the dialogues are entertaining and there is substantial character development for Bill, the one delightful male in the show. Perhaps, that played into what Waller-Bridge and the writer of the episode Vicky Jones intended to do during this hour. They aimed to augment Bill’s “lovable” factor and lure viewers into forming a deep bond with the character, only to amplify the gut-wrenching impact of his brutal assassination by Villanelle in the closing scene. Perhaps, it was also meant to eradicate any shred of admiration held for Villanelle by the audience, in case some still lingered on.

On the downside, I am not sure how much of those two goals were reached, although I would venture to say that it worked 100% for the latter. Villanelle is, at this moment, officially despised by the show’s followers. As to the impact of Bill’s death, I am not so certain. Not because Bill’s character growth was anything less than phenomenal throughout the first three episodes, but rather because there were too many signals screaming his character’s write-off during the episode, as well as prior to its start.

First, I have reservations about the wisdom of tweeting, via the show’s official account, that “we’re saying bye-bye” to someone “this week” and adding an emoji of a knife to it, several hours before airtime. It does not take a genius to figure out that Bill is facing his last minute alive as Villanelle stares at him at the night club and pulls a knife out of her pocket. That is, of course, if you hadn’t already figured it out when Bill jokingly said “Daddy is going to die” to his cute infant daughter before his departure to Berlin. We are further cued of his doom as the storyline centers on him and he emerges as the first to notice Villanelle. The alarm bells are ringing loud and clear by the time he begins to pursue her with no back-up, naturally.

It’s a risky move to eliminate a treasured – and multi-faceted – character so early in the season.  The writing fails if the character’s elimination does not mean much to the audience. Jones and Waller-Bridge, however, succeed on all cylinders, despite the above-noted signals sent prior to Bill’s death. The murder is carried out so efficiently – and barbarically – by Villanelle that watching the ending sequence, as Eve pushes the dancing crowd apart in an attempt to reach him as he expires, perfectly conveys the sense of helplessness that invades her.

This event takes us past the point of a simple cat-and-mouse game between an assassin and her pursuer. The duel between the two women has now conclusively become personal and the terms of the shift in dynamics were dictated by Villanelle. She stalked Eve and Bill, tricked Bill into following her alone, and by killing him, struck Eve where it hurts the most. I should underline “most” in the previous sentence because Bill appeared to be, by all accounts, the person for whom Eve cared more than any other, including her ever-confused husband.

Villanelle’s risk-taking, though, is out of control. At this point, I am inclined to believe that her official job has become a nuisance to her – Konstantin is increasingly worried – and that her addiction to toying with Eve has taken over that of the pleasure she used to derive from the simple act of killing. As is the case with all addicts, she is willing to take tremendous risks in order to get that next “hit” which consists of devastating Eve via tease-and-denial (another form of fetish, not mentioned in the show, yet).

The middle portion of the episode is filled with brilliant dialogues, especially between Bill and Eve. Their conversation after meeting with Jin – “he wants to fondle you,” says Bill with a wry smile – and the one in the hotel-room scene during which Bill reveals his sexual preferences through a delightful combination of metaphors, are simply magical. We are going to miss Bill.

Last-minute thoughts:

– Nit-picking time: how does Villanelle get to cut the line and enter the night club? The doorman who stops her at first did not know her. If the implication is that she is eventually allowed in because she is a single woman, why was the one in the front of the line required to wait? She was not the only one either.

– Villanelle gets to view the Skype conversation between Niko and Eve. I am declaring at this point that MI5, MI6, CIA, FBI, and SVR have nothing on Konstantin and Villanelle in terms of surveillance skills!

– The subway sequence is splendid from start to finish. The acting, directing, and score combine to form the most haunting scene of the episode, undeniably announcing the beginning of the end for Bill.

– The characterizations of General Wu and attaché Jin were not meant to box Chinese men into a certain stereotype, I am assuming…  ​ 

Until next episode…

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‘Killing Eve’ (BBC America) – Season 1, Episode 2 Review

I’ll Deal with Him Later” – aired on April 15, 2018
Writer: Phoebe Waller-Bridge
Director: Harry Bradbeer
Grade: 4 out of 5

Notice: All episode reviews contain spoilers

In the series premiere “Nice Face,” Killing Eve’s showrunner Phoebe Waller-Bridge painted a fascinating portrait of the two leads, Eve and Villanelle, and complemented them with a few other singular characters, thus building the internationally flavored ensemble that is bound to take us on a thrilling ride for the remainder of the season. Last night’s episode, “I’ll Deal with Him Later,” focused more on plot-advancement, getting us to the point where the duel is staged, and the participants are ready for combat.

We sensed from the pre-season promos that Eve and Villanelle were going to become aware of each other’s identities and come face-to-face early in the series. The latter took place in the pilot episode, the former in the second one. It’s a gusty call by Waller-Bridge, and a refreshing one. Unlike in most other crime-driven serializations, Killing Eve is not centered on one major crime and features no mysterious killer(s) to identify through tedious evidence-searching sequences.

The primary theme seems to lie less in the who or the why than the how. More specifically, how quickly can Eve stop Villanelle? Because our assassin’s killing spree switches to high gear, adding three more victims to the ranks of the fallen.

Before I delve into the details, may I pause for a moment and underline the stellar performance by Jodie Comer in this episode? A sociopath, a psychopath, a maniac, a skilled nutcase, a deranged killer, an infantile lunatic, you pick one, and Jodie Comer makes sure you see that Villanelle on your screen. She is terrifying, yet charming. How is that possible? you might ask. Her first and second victims in the episode could tell you, if only they were still alive – one did not even care to talk to her at first. In their dying moments, both victims stare directly into the eyes of their killer who is either shivering with pleasure or smiling at them with a wondrous look.

At least, Sebastian (Charlie Hamblett), Villanelle’s newfound boy-toy, gets to expire without ever discovering the horrifying side of the woman by whom he was smitten.

Konstantin, Villanelle’s handler, and alive for now, could also tell you all about it. “I’ll Deal with Him Later” builds on the rapport between the two and it is not as chirpy and harmonious as it appeared to be in “Nice Face.” She easily tricks him with a hug to pick a card out of his pocket. She also does not hesitate to put a knife on his throat while acting as playfully – yet menacingly – as Villanelle only can. Konstantin, you see, is expendable, as Villanelle calmly reminds him.  

Konstantin, for his part, is leery of Villanelle’s mental condition – I am glad someone is – to the point of requiring her to get “assessed” by a psychological evaluator. This brings us to the most petrifying scene of the hour. It is not so because there is any violence in it – although there are a few morbid images on which Villanelle is asked to comment. It is not so because the dialogue between the three characters reveal any shocking secrets either.

It is petrifying because Comer as Villanelle nails the part, and because the director Harry Bradbeer makes sure the camera angle oscillates at the right moments between the faces of Konstantin and Villanelle, and the larger shot of the three talking. The presence of the masked anxiety dominating the interview is skillfully conveyed to the viewers.

Having observed Villanelle laugh at her own cynical joke about the picture of a dead dog hung by the throat, the evaluator concludes that “she is fine” at first. We are not completely sure if the evaluator means that she is stable enough or that she is indeed a bonified psycho. Her behavior during the interview points more to the latter, not to mention the dress she chose to wear for the occasion.

Konstantin, however, is not convinced. He says “wait” and takes out one last image from his pocket. The evaluator hands it to her and asks, “do you still have dreams about Anna?” Villanelle appears to take it lightly, but the evaluator has now changed his mind: “I won’t sign you off.” The closing shot of Villanelle’s face shows that she is not pleased.

We do not know who Anna is for now. I certainly hope that future episodes will add context to that name and not leave it there because, for all the excellent acting done by Comer in this episode, Villanelle’s character-growth flirted a little too close for comfort with that of a comic-book villain. I understand that we are not supposed to focus too much on how the victims are chosen – at least that is what the first two episodes seem to encourage us to do – but if the murder scenes settle into the pattern of existing solely for the purpose of putting on display the twisted mind of Villanelle, Comer is facing an uphill battle.

She has already shown us more than once – wonderfully I might add – Villanelle’s idiosyncratic behavior in action. The opening scene in Bulgaria and the later murder of Carla De Mann are executed to perfection by the showrunners and the actors, but we have no idea why these people are picked by the organization employing Villanelle. Comer’s performance and good directorial skills can only carry so many of these murders, if they only continue to exist as procedural expositions.

Speaking of dangerous paths for characters, I am also a bit concerned with Frank’s growth as one. We find out that the boss at MI5, who fired Eve and Bill at the end of the first episode, had recently lost his wife. Bill and Eve feign running into Frank and Elena at a bar. It was actually set up by the three of them so that they could probe the boss for information. The scene is absolutely hilarious. Frank, who naively thought that Elena asked him out because she felt sympathy for him – Elena clarifies that she did not ask him “out out” – eventually catches on the ruse and murmurs, “God! I’m a knob.”

In his ensuing anger, Frank reveals that he never saw the CCTV for a previous murder because there was not any, and furthermore, that he did it because he was sick of Eve “piping up” her theories “any time there was a sniff of conspiracy in the air.” He calls her a “tiresome think-bucket.”

Kudos to Waller-Bridge for squeezing numerous droll-mockery quotes into each episode. Other than the ones in the above scene and those in the earlier scene between Eve and Martens, “dick-swab” and “monkey-dick,” also deserve honorable mentions, just to mention a couple.

Unfortunately, the scene also makes one wonder how a buffoon like Frank came to helm an organization that demands a high-degree of intelligence and acumen from its employees. It certainly makes me wonder if he is the right character on which the spotlight should shine for comic relief. I truly hope that this particular characterization for Frank is unique to this episode and not the beginning of a pattern.

In the meantime, Martens, probably the smartest and the most composed character in the show, recruits Eve and forms a small, secret team around her, composed of Bill, Elena, and a certified computer geek in Kenny (Sean Delaney). Just like that, Eve is fired by MI5 and hired by MI6. Fiona Shaw is at the top of her game as Martens. The way she dryly engages Eve in a dialogue at the café is something to behold.

Both Eve and Villanelle experience their a-ha moments to discover each other’s identity. Eve’s moment is telegraphed a minute or so in advance as it arrives at the heels of her discussing with the team the possibility of a blond woman’s presence in the previous murder scenes. At that moment, she needs to go to the bathroom. And of course, as she lets her hair loose and looks at herself in the mirror, she suddenly remembers the blond “nurse” she met in the bathroom at the hospital while doing the same thing in the previous episode. Villanelle did, after all, advise her to keep her hair down.

Somehow, Konstantin knows immediately that not only “a woman in London is leading a department just to find” Villanelle, but he even knows her name. Enough for Villanelle to get on the internet and find a picture of Eve and have her own a-ha moment.

The impact of this closing sequence, with the back-and-forth focus on Eve and Villanelle as they become aware of each other, is played magnificently by the two women. It does, however, come across as a time-saving plot device, unless the show explores it further in the future. To our knowledge, the team of four, led by Martens, are the only ones aware of their existence since less than 24 hours ago.

How did Konstantin get a hold of this information so quickly? Could Elena, Bill, or Kenny be a mole? At this point, this possibility seems far-fetched. Then what? Even if one of them were the mole and supplied the information, it sure traveled at warp-speed through the grapevine to reach Konstantin, and finally Villanelle. For whom does Konstantin work anyway? Bill wonders that too, but Eve is fixated on Villanelle. “I’ll Deal with Him Later” poses these questions but leaves the answers to the later episodes.

Last-minute thoughts:

– Sebastian says to Villanelle after sex, while affectionately rubbing the bruise on her eye, “I’m never going to hurt you.” Oh, my dear Sebastian!

– As Eve is fumbling one word after another in the café, Martens waves her right left and right and speaks: “Say it!” Brilliant!

– Martens saying “You seem to know a lot about female assassins” to Eve is the understatement of the year. Eve stutters in response, eventually justifying it with the following sentence, the only complete one among her utterances: “I am a fan.” Sandra Oh rocks!

– Whenever Villanelle faces a sticky situation or a pointed question, her go-to-phrase relates to menstruation. Well played Madame Assassin!

– The reaction of the woman in the bus when she notices the brutal scene in progress in the window of the building in Bulgaria is peculiar. I would love to know what Bulgarians thought of that scene.

– Elena glancing at Bill with an accusatory look after Eve leaves the room and Bill feigning innocence with a “what?” should make you chuckle.   

Until next episode…

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