Monday, February 21, 2011

2-7. Meet Jane Doe.

THE PLOT

It's been three months since Echo's escape from Rossum, and both she and Paul remain unaccounted for. At the Dollhouse, things have changed - and not for the better. Adelle is no longer in control of the house, Harding (Keith Carradine) having effectively taken over. Harding has given Topher a blank check for extensive research, with no real indication of what the research may be for. Meanwhile, Adelle continues to push Langton to find Echo, "even if it's in a ditch somewhere."

As for Echo, she and Paul have settled into a life on the run. Echo has taken a job as a nurse in a small town in Texas, using the knowledge of one of her old imprints to gain access to the county jail. The jail is run by a particularly cruel sherriff, who along with his guards are abusing Galena (Ana Claudia Talancon), a pretty Spanish-speaking inmate. Echo gains access in order to break the young woman out. But her plan may not take into account her own deteriorating mental state.

CHARACTERS

Echo: Her development now is fully even with the one clip from Epitaph One, with her a full partner with Paul but suffering increasing headaches as a result of the composite memories and personalities. In her confused post-escape state, she got Galena arrested, and now she is making freeing the girl her "training run" to go back into Rossum. The limpse Bennett gave her of Caroline has disturbed her, and she worries that her "real" self is not the person she hoped for.

The Ice Queen: In the wake of Echo's escape and Rossum's increasing ambitions, Adelle is left powerless - something we've never really seen from her before. She has lost control of her own house, and drifts around the halls almost like a ghost, all but flinching in Harding's presence. It's a shame we didn't get a chance to see what happened to take her from the confident Adelle of even the last episode to this cowed version, but I'd guess Harding probably stepped on her hard (metaphorically, if not literally).  erhaps that explains the choice she makes at the end, when she undertakes an act that seems to go against all of the more idealistic shades of the character.

The Security Chief: Langton urges Adelle to take back her house from Harding, and tries to boost her self-confidence to get her to take the chances necessary to do it. When she hesitates, he tells her that "the Adelle (he) knew wouldn't ask" how to do it - She would already know. Though it's a sure bet that Langton likes Adelle a great deal more than he likes Harding, he does a good job of concealing his feelings in Harding's presence, playing the good employee.

The Genius: With Harding elevating Topher to the inner circle and giving Topher anything and everything he needs to advance his research, Topher is the proverbial kid in the candy store. Or at least he seems to be. As we've seen before, Topher really does have more of a moral sense than his surface personality shows, and he's more than smart enough to figure out the shape of a puzzle from a handful of pieces... which leaves him in shock when he figures out the extent of Rossum's true ambitions.

The (Ex-) FBI Agent: Paul finally seems to have what he's been obsessing over. He is sharing an apartment with Echo, and has her complete trust. But while Paul has at times seemed creepily obsessive, he still has moral qualms about taking advantage even when Echo offers herself. To him, it would be wrong to sleep with Echo unless Caroline is present in that body to grant her consent. He sees Echo's deterioration, with the increasing headaches, and worries that if they don't move against Rossum soon, they will miss their chance.

THOUGHTS

I suspect this episode is one of the major points of the season in which the "back nine" not having been picked up becomes visible. I would tend to assume that, had the remaining nine episodes of a 22-episode season been greenlit, there would have been at least a couple of episodes filling in this three-month gap. The script does a good job of giving us the backstory, or at least enough of it for us to make some guesses about what happened in the meantime, but it would have been nice to have seen it. Still, I can suffer one bumpy mid-season transition for the sake of getting a proper ending to the tory - and this episode probably achieves this transition as well as would have been possible.

It's a good episode too, for the most part. Keith Carradine's coldly sinister Harding is always a welcome presence, and this time he gets more than a cameo appearance. Seeing the always collected Adelle reduced to flinching every time he so much as looks at her is very effective shorthand for demonstrating just how formidable he is (though, again - I really wish we could have seen how Harding reduced her to such a point). Really, the Dollhouse scenes are uniformly excellent, with the ending being both effectively shocking and likely representing the point of no return for the future seen in Epitaph One.

The standalone plot, with Echo breaking the girl out of jail, is reasonably entertaining too, and makes good use of both Echo's composite personality and of several of the imprints we've seen in past episodes. Notably referenced are the imprints from Ghost, Gray Hour, and Man on the Street. On the other hand, the sherriff and his deputies are cartoon characters, recycled wholesale from Macon County Jail, and as such are hard to fully take seriously. I can buy a corrupt sherriff. But this sherriff and his deputies have no shades of anything to their characterizations. They're evil, brutish, and stupid: Cartoon baddies designed to make us cheer when Echo unleashes her various imprints on them. The plot is interesting insofar as seeing Echo move through her imprints deliberately, and seeing Echo work on her own initiative toward a goal. But the bad guys make the child molester/kidnapper in Ghost look like a carefully-shaded characterization by comparison.

Still, the episode moves swiftly and represents major developments in the plot. The overall effectiveness is substantially raised by the outstanding scenes involving Harding, Topher, and Adelle. Despite some issues with the standalone plot, a strong episode with a genuinely chilling ending.


Rating: 8/10.

Previous Episode: The Left Hand
Next Episode: A Love Supreme


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