Wednesday, July 18, 2012

A Homecoming of Sorts?


Falling Skies is now officially more than half way through it's second season and with it we get the episode, "Homecoming".  As I have often blogged before the test of family unity is often explored in Falling Skies and that theme is no different in this particular episode.  The title, "Homecoming" suggests an end of trials of sorts and a return to normalcy that one should get when one "comes home". 

Unfortunately, that is far from true for the 2nd Mass  and the word "normal" rarely applies. 


Let's start with the relationship between Tom and Anne.  (Above image courtesy of VaginaCon.com and is perfect for my discussion.)  It seems Tom and Anne's relationship has moved to the next level.  They have built a "home" of sorts despite the vagaries of war and find solace in each others company.  I'm all for this because I find nothing wrong with two mature people with common needs seeking the reassurance of love amidst the turmoil of war.  Sadly, this seems tenuous at best when the stress over how to treat the infected Capt. Weaver spills over and Tom reverts to his prior relationship and calls Anne, "Rebecca".  This shatters the illusion of this relationship and despite Tom's efforts to patch things up later and uneasy truce is settled upon.

Homecoming denied.


The most overt example of a "Homecoming" is the return of Karen to the fold.  In my previous blog post I wondered if the return of Rick as a "reborn" or Lazarus like figure was portentous of the return of the other children (Read A Skitter Call to Prayer.) and that seems to be the case as many of the harnessed children were found in the woods with Karen the only survivor. (Not much of a homecoming for those other children!)  Yet despite the obvious affection that Hal still has for Karen, we eventually find it all a ruse as Karen is linked to Ben instead and she not the person she used to be.  She's a Trojan Horse of sorts and her inclusion into the fold is also illusory and short lived.

Homecoming denied.




 The character of Ben has been a conflicted one ever since he returned to his family and the 2nd Mass.  The group as a whole is suspicious of him and their trust in him is at a pitiful low.  He's mostly reviled and insulted behind his back.  Even Ben is suspicious of himself and is well aware he is not the person he used to be.  His harnessed enhanced body sets him apart and he is uncomfortable in his own skin and with the others.  Even in within his own family.  When we learn of the connection between Ben and Karen and we, as the audience, become suspicious of Karen's motives we suspect Ben is a short timer in his familial surroundings.

Homecoming denied.


 Ironically, the most authentic homecoming belongs to the prodigal son Pope.  (Above image courtesy of Wormholeriders.net) At one time reviled and banished from the group, he returns with a crucial piece of information that the 2nd Mass has been duped by Karen and her Overlord masters.  Pope's return marks the most truthful part of the episode and instead of being illusory it exposes the facade that the 2nd Mass has been living behind in their stay in Richmond.  This is what Weaver may have been alluding to when he told Tom and the militia that they have become complacent and need to pull up stakes.  The illusion in that message turns out to be the very low stockpile of fuel.  Something that Weaver didn't confide in with Tom.

Homecoming realized with Pope but denied to Tom and the rest.

So once again we find the family unit tested and the sense of home broken.  Our hardy ban hits the road once more with none of the comforting solace they should find in their relationships, family or sense of roots.  The diaspora continues and the promised land is no where in sight.  What does the future hold?


3 comments:

  1. Hi Dave,

    Can you go home again in the Falling Skies world? Home is certainly no longer a physical place for the nomadic 2nd MA. Home as you say is being a trusted member of the group, the family. Anyone who returns to this group is eyed with suspicion, perhaps with the exception of Anthony. (I’m calling it, Anthony is the mole!) De-harnessed kids are forever changed. The spikes and their abilities are constant reminders that they cannot ever truly go home again.

    Tom has been somewhat accepted back into the fold. You have to wonder, especially after Anne’s comment about things getting back to normal, if there isn’t some other issue literally lurking in him from his missing time with the “fish heads”. I find Tom and Anne’s relationship refreshingly mature. They are both still grieving the loss of their previous ‘home’ life and that past is going to echo now and then as they struggle to establish a new home together. They may have had their first spat, but at least he didn’t call her Rebecca in bed.

    Karen, pre-invasion she might have been a homecoming queen. I liked that Ben was on to her from the start, but you have to fault the 2nd MA for not watching BOTH of them more closely. I want to believe that Ben still has his wits about him and went along with her to get her away from the 2nd MA. However, he sure did appear to fall under her glowy spike spell, just as he froze when Red eye found him. Getting back to the children being the future idea. Karen made a lot of fuss about being hungry. Is she pregnant?

    Pope seems to have been welcomed back, but you can argue he’s never truly been accepted as a member of the 2nd MA. Odd that the overlords would have told him about a skitter rebellion, but it served the plot to expose Karen.

    This is a bit off topic, but I’d be interested in your thoughts on Weaver’s bite. I vaguely remember that in S1 the theory was that the harness (or chemlock as Red eye/Ricky called it) delivered an opiate-like drug (maybe a toxin or infectious agent) that the kids had to be weened off of because they died if it was removed abruptly. Does the harness keep it in check, whereas it went systematic in Weaver without one? Does it simply affect adults differently and that is why only kids are amenable to harnessing? Did it affect Weaver’s decision making? Draining fuel to power the hospital doesn’t seem like something he’d do when their mission is to get to Charleston and he didn’t tell Tom about it. Curious.

    -Lynne (duckyislost)

    ReplyDelete
  2. I think we got our answer to the opiate like effect of the harness in the most recent episode, "Molon Labe". Karen was a little creepy about it. It seems to me that the hugger bite that Weaver got attacked him like some sort of viral infection. Maybe it has something to do with age. Maybe a child's constitution is more susceptible to the harness and can't fight it off. Whereas with an adult they are more able to fight off the opiate effect but succumb to infection. Don't harnessed kids turn into Skitters? I wonder what is holding up Karen's transformation? Maybe the Overlord is holding it at bay as long as she serves as a useful puppet.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Viral infection would work, and they couldn't have visualized it with routine lab equipment if it was novel. Yes, I've been wondering about Karen's transformation too. I guess we don't have a concrete feel for how long it takes, but she certainly doesn't have any creeping crud like some of the other kids we've seen. I really like seeing her character take a sinister turn, so much more interesting. I get the impression that we really haven't seen the *real* her since she was taken. All of this seems like the Overlords talking. -Lynne(duckyislost)

    ReplyDelete