Den of Geek

V episode 4 review

Ron Hogan


The last episode of V until March. And there's a heck of a cliffhanger...

Published on Nov 26, 2009


4. It's Only The Beginning

Given that V is going on hiatus for a soul-crushing three months, you'd think there would be something put out on screen to grab the viewer and make them want to return once the Winter Olympics are over.

While V's cold opening this week was a great one, and while there are several really good special effects shots in this week's episode, I was denied the great, gory kind of shock shot I was really hoping for (unless you count a very distant show of naked Anna's booty). While there was a big reveal, and a HUGE cliffhanger, there wasn't what I expected.

Of course, that's my fault for expecting something I knew I wouldn't get. There's always the real season finale, though!

This week's show is very heavy on Fifth Column action, as it's time for Father Jack - Action Priest!, Erica, Georgie, and Ryan to get their hands dirty. What causes the Fifth Column to start planning real action? Well, a new development from the V Healing Centers, of course.

Chad Decker's show has become must-watch viewing for anyone interested in V life, as he's the only newsman who seems to get any kind of access to V technology and the V's themselves. That's all due to his quid pro quo relationship with Anna and the other Visitors. They give him exclusives, he gives the V party line out on the air. It's a nice, neat little relationship, at least as far as the Visitors are concerned.

When Anna reveals during Decker's show that the V Healing Centers are expanding their services to include preventative medicine, it's not a huge surprise. However, what is surprising is the V announcement that they've developed a "vitamin shot" designed to fight off cancer, retard the aging process, and be a general wonder drug. (As a sports fan, the use of the phrase "super vitamin shot" makes me think the Visitors are going to start giving us all steroids and Human Growth Hormone, both of which would definitely slow aging and make us feel worlds better.)

Of course, since you can't get humans to trust vaccines given by Earth doctors, how are you going to make them trust V doctor vaccines? Time to call on Anna's pet journalist, Chad!

Some of the comments have suggested that I'm a little hard on Scott Wolf's character because I'm not a big Scott Wolf fan, and maybe that's true. I described Decker as sleazy on more than one occasion, because I see him bending over backwards to do whatever he can to get further ratings for his show (and greater access to Anna). To me, that's kind of sleazy to engage in that sort of propaganda-style interview just to keep getting V approval, but to the show's credit, Decker is starting to get more and more irritated with the conditions placed on his access, and his constant shadowing by Anna's second in command.

Of course, as Decker shows more signs of pulling away from his V puppet masters, they're smart enough to keep tightening the strings, as a demonstration scanning from a V medical technician filmed for the show reveals that Decker needs a little bit of that magical V medicine. Now he's got motivations other than celebrity to kowtow to the V line of thinking, in spite of himself.

Speaking of V medicine, Ryan's fiancée, the mostly-neglected therapist Dr. Valerie, gets significant screen time this week, if only because she's Tyler's therapist. Through him, she gets bumped to the head of the line at the V medical clinic for a quick medicine adjustment and a trip through the V scanomometer. She and Ryan are going to be the Willie and Robin of this new V, apparently. Which I figured would be the case, if it wasn't going to be Lisa and Tyler.

Meanwhile, while all this is going on, we've got a lot of Fifth Column action. Given the announcement of any sort of mass inoculation is met with skepticism, the announcement of V injections sends the Fifth Column into a frenzy to try and find out what the real motivation is. This gives the four members of the group, Ryan, Georgie, Erica, and Jack, a chance to get to know one another and the chance to start working together as a unit.

It also provides some fractioning in the group, as Georgie's first response to any V plot is to start making with the violence. Apparently, he's as unhinged as the first episode made him look, and then some.

Ryan, Erica, and Father Jack work well together as a team. That's going to be crucial for the resistance, and crucial for the success of a show. There's a lot of good chemistry between the three of them, and I think that the Fifth Column is really shaping up very nicely. Now that they've got some experience in working together, and how their various skill sets are meshing up, I think we've got a core that can take on the much bigger challenges that lay ahead of them.

There's also a lot of Fifth Column action on board the V ship, as we see just how far Joshua and the other anti-Anna Visitors will go to protect their movement.

We also get to see just how Draconian Anna is willing to be, which again provides a nice counterpoint to the sweetness she displays to Tyler when he finally gets introduced to his new girlfriend Lisa's momma. We knew she had evil intentions, but now we can see just why her fellow space lizards would risk everything to stand up against her. While the Fifth Column work together, Anna is definitely an old-style brutal dictator (dictatress?), having traitors flayed alive.

Given that this is essentially a half-season finale, I expected the show to throw in a cliffhanger, and they threw in a really big one. They also threw in a lot of eye-candy special effects, a secondary reveal of the pregnancy, and a lot of call backs to the old V series (the cancer cure, the suicide pills). It wasn't the best episode of the series so far, but it wasn't from lack of trying.

There was a lot of ground to cover and not much time to do it in, lots of stories had to start intersecting, and they had to build in enough hooks to ensure everyone would come back after the Winter Olympics.

I think they did a really good job at doing what they needed to do to try and hold onto viewers, and now I'm mad at ABC for splitting the series in half and making me wait to find out what's happening next.

The final shot of the episode should be enough to make any sci-fi fan salivate at the idea of what's yet to come when the show returns in March 2010.

Read our review of the episode 3 here.

Peace Ambassador... err, US correspondent Ron Hogan has totally not been compromised by V propaganda. All hail Anna!  Um, I mean, find more by Ron at his blog, Subtle Bluntness, and daily at Shaktronics and PopFi.

 

Tags

Users Comments

Re: V episode 4 review
Posted By etoh76 1 November 26, 2009 10:33:19 AM

I actually thought this episode showed that the series had run out of steam, hence the need for the hiatus. The opening felt like a bit of a cheat by generating a false moment of suspense, and when you watch the rest of the episode you see that it was superfluous. The murder investigation on board the NY mothership was a bit silly, for example why did the Fifth Columnist doctor (Joshua) not try and make it look like an accident or something else in the first place, instead of attracting attention thereby provoking an investigation, and jeopardizing the whole movement? And why did the other doctor sacrifice himself on behalf of Joshua (who's demonstrated thus far that he's stupid, but not as to why he's so uniquely important) and the FBI woman as if she were some kind of Chosen One (which frankly, to date I haven't even been sold on her FBI credentials, which soley involve looking at everyone as if they were a piece of shit - let alone that she's the saviour of humanity). I dont like lazy coincidences in sci-fi, so when her perfectly preened son with whom she has absolutely no on-screen chemistry turned up to speak with a psychiatrist (for the classic "my mummy doesn't understand me, woo, I'm so misunderstood and hard done by" speech) who just happened to be the almost-fiance of Ryan the V, my patience got creased a little bit thinner (oh, and of course, its another opportunity for a perfectly lined up visitor jacket to do a bit of spying - I hate those jackets). So judging by the composition of "La Resistance" to date - an inept Fed, A "V" who's greatest foe is his own acting, a lying crazy, and a perpetualy confused priest - god/science help humanity. And I'm sorry, that ending? Maybe 15-20 years ago shots of fleets of starships got me hot under the collar, but when its a not altogether brilliant copy and paste job, thats a different matter, and which ultimately only led me to think that if they have a force that big, then why the f*&k are they dicking around with all this contrived cloak and dagger stuff, just get it over and done with...

Re: V episode 4 review
Posted By stuxmusic 1 November 26, 2009 11:16:09 AM

What he said. ^

Re: V episode 4 review
Posted By cordas 1 November 26, 2009 03:54:51 PM

I half agree with etoh76, all of his/her points are valid but I think that some of them are maybe a lil harsh. Its possible to pick holes in any TV show if you start to dig.

Re: V episode 4 review
Posted By cordas 1 November 26, 2009 03:56:16 PM

I thought the episode was a bit weak and didn't really demand that I watch it when ABC picks up the show again next year (although it hasn't been bad enough to stop me either).

Re: V episode 4 review
Posted By etoh76 1 November 26, 2009 04:01:32 PM

He's a he. And frankly, if the holes are blatantly there, then dig away as far as I'm concerned. There's loads of quality tv thats out there or that has been done before that's taken care of matters on the plot front, I dont think this is one of them, and I cant hide the fact that for a project that's so high profile (a remake of V has been looked forward to for over a decade) this is disappointing.

Re: V episode 4 review
Posted By cordas 1 November 26, 2009 05:23:44 PM

I just wonder how much things got messed around by ABC deciding to show 4 episodes and then take a break till March... Surely it will have affected the script and the plotting of the show.

Re: V episode 4 review
Posted By etoh76 1 November 26, 2009 05:39:57 PM

It's possible, though that could imply the integrity of the story was doomed from the outset. I think if you have a solid enough script, plotting, and characterisation, people will want more regardless. However, if you have a reactionary production team involved that changes details along the lines of what they think people want to see, at the last moment, you end up with something akin to Heroes Seasons 2-4, and I know I'm not alone in thinking they were awful. Of course, I had issues with the pilot of V too that I commented on at the time, which I dont think ABC necessarily deserves the rap for.

Re: V episode 4 review
Posted By cordas 1 November 26, 2009 06:20:52 PM

I dunno, I just think that there aren't enough creative types / producers with the balls and or muscle to get their vision carried out the way they want... At the end of the day the TV company holds the cheque book and they set the rules. To many potentially great TV shows have been wrecked by 'creative input' from the studio, and to many other shows have never even stood a chance because of lack of commitment/ poor scheduling / desire for instant hits from those same studios.
Post a Comment
 
V: It's Only The Beginning

V: It's Only The Beginning

Follow Den of Geek on

Related Articles

SEARCH

Broadband

Mobile Broadband

Compare over 100 mobile broadband & broadband deals online!

Mobile Phones

LG ArenaHTC Magic

Compare over 250 mobile phones &
52,000 deals!