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Dollhouse season 2 episode 7 review

Billy Grifter


Billy senses a shift in the direction that Dollhouse wants to take…

Published on Dec 20, 2009


2.7 Meet Jane Doe

Generally, I've liked where Dollhouse has gone this year much more than I did with its choices in the first season. It's almost like the knowledge that it's cancelled has allowed a creative freedom the scrabble for ratings suppressed.

However, on occasion they still do annoying things that rub this reviewer the wrong way. The early part of this story has a prime example, which starts where the previous one left off with Echo wandering lonely as a hobo with ninja skills.

The ‘doll state' she's in doesn't actually give her enough understanding of the world around her to actually survive, as she doesn't understand that food must be paid for.

She ends up robbing a store to help an immigrant, who then gets caught by a nasty local sheriff played by Glenn Morshower, ex-presidential secret service agent from 24. Echo escapes because when she's cornered she accesses one of her more violent personalities and disables the pursuing deputy.

This begged a simple question: if she reacted to being physically attacked by finding the right personality, why didn't starving trigger a suitable response?

Then, without any explanation we see Echo working as a medical orderly in a hospital. What they failed to convey at this point was that three months had passed, and Echo is now changing personalities like lip balm. Although, the downside is that this does have the side effect of migraine-like attacks.

The nursing persona is actually to get access to the poor woman she accidentally landed in jail, so she can break her out using her Super-Doll powers. In some respects this is the show I feared Dollhouse might become, where she flicks from rocket scientist to gynaecologist in the blink of an eye. There's even a cute Matrix reference when she sees a motorbike and her immigrant friend asks if she can ride it, and she says "I can now"...like she's just been uploaded with the knowledge.

Meanwhile, back at the Dollhouse, Matthew Harding has relegated Adelle to serving beverages, and she's none too pleased at these and other changes.

With things so obviously fractured between those that run the LA Dollhouse and the Rossum people, you'd think that Adelle would want to align herself with those around her, but as the story progresses she does the complete opposite by shopping the revolutionary work that Topher has to Harding. This work, the implications of which were seen in the DVD special episode Epitaph One, allows any person to be imprinted without Dollhouse architecture in their brains, a very scary prospect, indeed.

We then find out that Ballard and Boyd are working together, with the intention of returning Echo to the Dollhouse when she's ready to Super-Doll Rossum on their big fat corporate backsides. And her return to the Dollhouse, and Ballard with her, is where the story ends.

I'm not really sure making Adelle the enemy has legs, even if we know she can be ruthless on occasion, but it's a choice the writers made.

This adventure seemed something of a holding pattern, but next story seems much more appetising, as it promises the return of Alan Tudyk as the psychotic Alpha.

Though with Fox churning through Dollhouse at two a week, this season and show will soon be over.

Read our review of episodes 5 and 6 here.

 

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Re: Dollhouse season 2 episode 7 review
Posted By toresimonsen 1 December 20, 2009 09:18:52 PM

I am trying to save Dollhouse. http://toresimonsen.wordpress.com

Re: Dollhouse season 2 episode 7 review
Posted By GoldbergV 1 December 20, 2009 11:46:13 PM

"What they failed to convey at this point was that three months had passed" didn't it appear at the bottom of the screen? I'm pretty sure it did. Seems to me like we're getting a few seasons of story here in the last episodes. The fast pace does make character motivations suffer, but considering they've got 5 episodes to get to Epitaph One in terms of story, I'm just enjoying them for what it is and this episdode (and the next one) were great. I've got faith that Mr Whedon will deliver something spectacular for the end of Dollhouse.

Re: Dollhouse season 2 episode 7 review
Posted By p.corrigan12@gmail.com 1 December 21, 2009 01:24:07 AM

Uh, yeah, "Three Months Later" was fairly obviously displayed on the screen.

Re: Dollhouse season 2 episode 7 review
Posted By geekygirlUK 1 December 21, 2009 03:22:09 PM

I won't call you out on the 'three months later' thing cos others already did, but the Adelle volte face was entirely in character. As GoldbergV said, they've had to concertina it all in to fit it all into the next few eps which will cause some disconnects between what you expect a character to do, and what they do. Ultimately, Adelle is a survivor. She thinks there is no way that she can beat Rossum if she opposes them, so the only route she has is to fall into line.

Re: Dollhouse season 2 episode 7 review
Posted By cordas2 1 December 21, 2009 10:00:29 PM

I am in two minds about this episode (and the preceding couple) on the one hand it seems Joss wants to tell a season arc in every episode or 2 and I am annoyed that we aren't getting to see the full 5-7 (or whatever) seasons he has envisaged; and on the other hand I just wish he had junked half of it and told a finishing story that could be well told in his remaining episode allocation and given us a better show. Oh and poor Eliza this is really asking more from her an episode than she can comfortably give.....

Re: Dollhouse season 2 episode 7 review
Posted By EpitathN1 1 December 22, 2009 07:54:21 PM

i loved this episode i loved the fact that they threw the viewer into 3 months later, the position where the show should have been from the beginning. if season 1 was extended and there was more episodes from the beginning, then season 1 should have ended with echo leaving the dollhouse in dollstate, as this would have built more suspense then what "Omega" - although the original plan was to have Epitath One as the finale. It so cool that Echo is a person, and its even more interesting in "A Love Supreme", when a hilarious moment between echo and topher happens before she imprints herself. Dewitt was such an incredible bitch, in a way that makes you love Olivia Williams acting skills - although im not to happy about the stereotypical british villainous role, she has somewhat taken on. Another funny moment is when sierra and victor start randomly making out, and topher has to quickly wipe them with his wipegun before Harding sees. The end was interestingly twisted when Dewitt decided to put echo through mental isolation, leaving the words "... good to have you back, love" to burn the audiences brain. overall, a great episode, that i will continue to rewatch. there needs to be a season 3. Fox is giving us chocolate, and snatching it away before we even touch the surfuce
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Dollhouse: Meet Jane Doe

Dollhouse: Meet Jane Doe

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