
Courtesy of Netflix
Our ongoing coverage of Netflix’s women-in-prison drama continues as issues of contraband, babies and solitary confinement take center stage.
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The curated portfolio of film journalist Joe Lipsett
by Joe Lipsett
Courtesy of Netflix
Our ongoing coverage of Netflix’s women-in-prison drama continues as issues of contraband, babies and solitary confinement take center stage.
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by Joe Lipsett
Courtesy of FX
The Bridge continues to expand beyond its genre trappings as its fifth installment provides few serial killer clues, but several strange developments.
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by Joe Lipsett
Courtesy of BBC America
BBC America’s latest import finally makes its way across the pond. Former Doctor Who actor David Tennant (gosh he must hate being described that way) is a troubled detective charged with identifying a child murderer in the small town of Broadchurch, UK, where – naturally – everyone has a secret.
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by Joe Lipsett
Courtesy of CBS
The Dome initiates a pregnancy and then, to balance the scales, effectively murders someone else as we cross the halfway point of the first season
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by Joe Lipsett
Courtesy of MTV
Everyone congregates on the Beacon Hills hospital as Teen Wolf prepares its mid-season end game. Unfortunately what we gain in exposition, we lose in pacing.
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by Joe Lipsett
Courtesy of Showtime
Zzzzzzzzzzzzz…huh, what? Was that meant to be a new episode of Dexter? Because it sure bore all of the hallmarks of a sleeping aid
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by Joe Lipsett
Courtesy of HBO
There’s a lot of talk about God in ‘Dead Meat’, but of all the religious references/expletives, only one involved murder with a high-heel shoe. Oh Sarah Newlin (Anna Camp), how you make my week.
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by Joe Lipsett
Courtesy of Showcase / Syfy
Kiera (Rachel Nichols) becomes judge, jury and executioner when Julian (Richard Harmon) is released from prison as Continuum revisits the same themes as last week.
Let’s bitch it out…In ‘Second Listen’ Garza (Luvia Petersen) nearly killed Alec (Erik Knudsen) because she believed his future was predetermined. She held off only because Alec pleaded that he could change and avoid becoming the monster she knew from the future. ‘Seconds’ replicates this argument, only it transplants the question of free will and destiny onto Alec’s brother, Julian, and swaps Kiera for Garza.
It’s a little surprising that Continuum explores such similar ideas in such a short period of time. Obviously we’re meant to draw similarities between the two inquisitions, as Kiera stands up for Alec one week, but nearly kills Julian the following. There’s been a great deal of chatter about Kiera’s black and white perspective when it comes to the future and how concerned she is something will affect “her” timeline. In recent weeks this has translated into increased focus on the stepbrothers and their roles in what is to come.
For me, the two flashforwards that bracket ‘Seconds’ are the most significant aspect of the episode. Kiera’s struggle with the “time travel and kill Hitler” paradox is well-executed, but it was highly unlikely that she would actually follow-through with her plan to execute Julian. Even when she shut Alec out and pulled her gun on the future Theseus, there was a sliver of uncertainty (I actually spent a majority of the episode trying to determine whether she might simply be acting in order to rescue him).
The flashforwards are the key. The opening is the first time we’ve seen the future without Kiera (she informs us via voice-over that it is before she was born). The event is clearly a historical milestone and serves to anchor Kiera’s emotional reaction to Julian’s moniker. The second flashforward is subject to interpretation and is therefore more interesting. One way of viewing Julian’s decision to murder thousands is that Julian does not change his ways and he goes on to become the revolutionary leader that everyone – Travis (Roger Cross), Sonya (Lexa Doig), Isaac (Omari Newton) and Kiera – believe him to be.
The other interpretation may be less obvious. What if what we’re seeing is not the confirmation that Julian decides to become Theseus, but is actually just a continuation of the opening scene? Consider this: the Theseus we see in the final scene is actually the Julian from Kiera’s original timeline. If the scene is viewed this way, Julian’s future is less certain and the role that Kiera has played in “creating a monster” remains unknown. I prefer this reading because it revels in the ambiguity that Continuum specializes in, rather than simply confirming that the interpretation of Julian that we’ve always had is the one we should have.
Courtesy of Showcase / Syfy
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Your turn: were you surprised that we revisited the same issue as last week with Kiera on the other side? Did you wonder if she was pretending? How do you interpret the second flashforward? And is Julian embracing his Theseus future? Speculate away below
Continuum airs Fridays at 10pm EST on Syfy
by Joe Lipsett
Courtesy of Netflix
Our ongoing coverage of Netflix’s Orange Is The New Black reaches the halfway point as Piper (Taylor Schilling) seeks out comforting relationships, unintentionally winds up in a position of power she doesn’t desire and uses the system to get some exercise.
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by Joe Lipsett
Courtesy of FX
A familiar hunt for a serial killer dominates ‘Maria Of The Desert’, but – as usual in this series – it’s the unconventional approach that makes the episode work.
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