The 100: Contents Under Pressure Review
This week's The 100 showcases the series' great ensemble talent in another strong episode...
Here we are, seven episodes into the 13-episode season of the CWās The 100, and I have become truly riveted by this show as it continues to come into its own. This is no longer just a high-concept idea about 100 juvenile delinquents being sent into a dystopian, post-apocalyptic wilderness. The show has evolved past this conceit (and its obvious early comparisons to Lord of the Flies) to explore deeper ideas about a society simultaneously on the brink of extinction and rebirth.Ā Indeed, tonightās episode, the aptly titled āContents Under Pressure,ā is by far the darkest and grittiest episode yet.Ā Be advised, if you have not watched tonightās episode (and I strongly recommend you do), there are definitely spoilers ahead.
The 100 prisoners were initially sent down to the surface as guinea pigsāis the planet safe? Is it inhabitable? But Project Exodus also represented a fresh attempt at utopia. As weāve seen throughout the season, though, this group of survivors does not see or understand the potential they represent for mankind to save itself. Actually, thatās not true. Wells understood what was at stake, as does Clarke. She continues to believe in the greater good of their group, and what their success means to those left on the Ark. Weāve known that Bellamy, a reluctant leader like Clarke, is willing to put aside his own humanity in pursuit of the remaining prisonersā survival. And, as we find out, that also includes torture.Ā But this time theyāre not attacking one of their own, as they did with Murphy when he was suspected of murdering Wells. This time, Bellamy has captured the grounder who imprisoned Octaviaāand he wants answers.
Initially, Clarke is against torturing the grounder, insisting itās not who they are, that they should be above violence. But Bellamy is single-minded, especially when it comes to his sisterās safety. The fact that the grounder stabbed Finn seems to outweigh Octaviaās insistence that the grounder actually saved her life. Before long, he is strung up and beaten, but to no avail. He is damned by his own silence, as far as Bellamy is concerned, and he is determined to use brutality to extract the truth. āIf he didnāt hate us before,ā says a horrified Clarke, āhe will now.ā Interesting, isnāt it, that this boils down to one prisoner interrogating another prisoner. Bellamy, the grounder, they have more in common than they realize. After all, arenāt the grounders just people who were left behind when the rest of humanity escaped into space?
Clarke, ever the reasonable, practical one, suddenly sees torture as a justifiable means to an end if it means saving Finn from the grounderās poisoned dagger. This, to me, is an important turning point, not only for the show, which has finally taken the gloves off, but for Clarke as well. Bellamy later tells her a simple truth: āWho we are, and who we need to be, are two very separate things.ā
This applies to the council members as wellāespecially Jaha and Kane.Ā They understand sacrifices must be made for the greater good. In this case, the greater good represents what is left of humanity, and these sorts of decisions cannot be made lightly. But in light of making contact with the 100, not only does the Ark learn the planet is inhabitable, but the loss of 320 people was apparently in vain. This forces the Chancellor to come clean about Project Exodus, but such transparency is too little, too late. The people are leery of the councilās actions and they no longer trust the Chancellor. Like so many others who lost loved ones in the Culling, Jaha has suffered a terrible loss as wellānamely his son. Itās a devastating, emotional moment driven home by Isaiah Washingtonās powerful performance.
Overall, the acting was great in this episode with kudos to Paige Turco and Eliza Taylor, whose tearful confrontation was truly heart-wrenching. Clarke is not ready to forgive her mother for her father being floated; she may never forgive her. As for Henry Ian Cusick, he really conveyed Kaneās inner conflict over what he views as the needless sacrifice of so many lives. Until tonight, I had trouble seeing Kane as anything more than a one-dimensional, mustache-twirling baddie, but no more. Iām truly invested in these characters in a way that has transformed this fledgling show into must-watch TV. The 100 seems to be at its best when its hands are the dirtiest.
Some closing thoughts:
The moral ambiguity in tonightās episode reminded me a lot of Ronald D. Mooreās Battlestar Galacticaāspecifically season oneās āFlesh and Bone.ā In that episode, Starbuck puts her own humanity on the line as she tortures a captured Cylon to save the fleet. This similarity was further driven home for me when Kate Vernon, who played Ellen Tigh on BSG, showed up as Diana, the former Chancellor (Alessandro Juliani, another BSG alum, is also part of The 100 cast).
The 100 establish radio contact with the Ark thanks to Raven. This is big news, and changes the trajectory of the rest of the season. The council now plans a mass exodus down to the planet, but they can only fit a third of the Arkās population on the next drop ship.
While this was probably obvious to a lot of people, the grounders speak English. This, too, greatly alters the showās trajectoryāor at least it should.