Phone Guys: Did You



As the show has progressed, Morgan and Bess have gone from the troublemakers of the group to flawed people who are earnestly trying to help. It’s nice that, as we near the end of the show, they get a chance to shine one last time.
In this one Bess is exposed to mystical flower energy that is one part pollen, one part Ophiocordyceps, and one part super soldier serum. (Bess has made it clear that the fact she was raised on Earth means that she is better at wilderness than the rest, but it sure didn’t stop her from getting her face right in that dangerous plant.) This weird flower force triggers maternal feelings in Bess, making her want to protect it, gives her euphoric feelings and regenerates her wounds, and finally takes over her mind and impels her to hike to a volcano and jump in. During all this, Morgan is trying to protect his wife, but also notably trying to protect the rest of the group too. At one point their wedding vows had them forsake all others, but now Morgan is willing to hypospray Bess and keep her restrained in an attempt to protect the camp. But naturally when Bess escapes, Morgan tracks her down to protect her. And when he realizes the only way to help her is to get her to the volcano, he helps that and even takes in some flower force himself. The two of them would have died if they’d not been stopped by Julia and Alsonso from actually jumping in, but they do successfully deliver the flower force to where it needs to be. And somehow, this causes winter to end.
For the record, Danziger was also exposed to the pollen, but he wanted it out of him before it could really get into his head, so he mostly just spent the episode being sick in bed and allowing us to see what the illness could do to someone. We also see a Grendler who had been a carrier, but didn’t make it to the hole. And near the volcano we see a human skeleton, so presumable some penal colonist died long ago after being exposed. Flowers that force a living being to carry their life force to a volcano to instigate spring would seem like a pretty nonsensical way for an ecosystem to work, but it makes more sense than the space-folding subway system created by spiders, right?
Other thoughts: 1) We get Morgan with an eyepatch for a bit! That’s fun! 2) When most of the group want to force the flower force out of Bess and Bess wants to keep it, we get a debate among the cast and I like that sort of things. Morgan and Devon defend Bess’s bodily autonomy, but any actual comparison to debates like that about abortion are lessened by the fact that this one is an actual weird alien that intends to throw Bess into a volcano. That said, it had no ill intentions toward the rest of the group, which is what they were so worried about. 3) It’s worth noting that, before Julia knows what is actually going on, they think Bess is pregnant. Morgan is worried that their current living situation wouldn’t be ideal for a birth, though Julia points out that people during olden times on Earth gave birth with much less technology than they have access to. This is correct, but also G889 is throwing weird new supernatural threats at them every couple weeks, so it’s not exactly the same.
Now that I know to look for Cameron, he’s all over the crowd shots. In this one we get to see him smile at one point and later drive one of the vehicles. He’s having a perfectly nice time.
Our intrepid crew are still running low on supplies as the winter continues (this show has been like half winter at this point) and four of them volunteer to go out and get supplies from a pod that landed during the original crash landing. Unfortunately, it doesn’t turn out well, as the pod has been emptied, either during the crash or by Grendlers after. Now these four (Danziger, Julia, Alonso, and Morgan) don’t even have enough rations to make it back to camp, and seem to be doomed.
But then the episode surprised me and we have Yale showing up to save them. You’d think the rescue would have been the whole point of the episode, but no! Instead they get safely back to camp and we learn that something bad happened while they were out there. It’s doled out in mildly-Rashomon-style flashbacks. The stranded crew were starving and Danziger followed a Grendler to its stash hoping to find supplies, but it went bad, he panicked and shot the Grendler. Then, it wasn’t an easy decision for them, but they ate some of the Grendler’s corpse. This is the only thing that kept them alive long enough to get rescued by Yale.
Back in the “present” of the episode, another Grendler comes to camp and Danziger assumes it is seeking revenge and threatening True. Instead, we eventually learn, it only wanted an answer for why its friend (Friendler?) was killed. Danziger is often depicted as the rugged, common sense guy of the show, and his manliness can chafe against my tastes, so seeing him get a chance here to tearfully admit that he made a mistake and that the Grendler didn’t die in vain because it helped them live made him a lot more appealing in my eyes (Clancy Brown, of course, does a great job with it). And honestly, the fact that the show let one of its star characters actually kill an innocent in a moment of panic without reneging on it at the end impressed me.
Anyway, I don’t have many other thoughts for this one. It was a good episode. I feel like the show considers the Terrians the star aliens of the show, but I like the Grendlers. They’ve got more character. I wish Star Trek, decades after this show, could give us one alien species in Starfleet as neat as the Grendlers. I guess if I need one other thing I can point out that there was acidic water in the Grendler’s cave and I liked that because it called back to that time they encountered acidic water before. Consistency like that makes the planet feel more alive.
Anyway…
Though Baines, Walman, and Magus all get a bit of a role in this one, everyone’s favourite character, Cameron, doesn’t have much to do. When the rescued four are brought back to camp, Julia immediately starts giving Cameron orders. Maybe he’s been working as her assistant? That could be.
Somehow, even though they’ve been camped in the same spot for months now, the protagonists are still finding new stuff within walking distance. This time, they find a Terrian corpse that has been frozen for 300,000 years. Julia brings it back to camp for study, and unfortunately it brings an ancient evil with it. Creepy stuff happens around camp and then there’s a scene clearly inspired by The Thing in which they all have to find out which one of them is possessed by an ancient evil. It turns out it is Danziger, so Alonso has to fight the so-called demon in the dreamscape. The ancient evil is banished and everyone is happy.
ALIEN STUFF:
Other stuff: 1) When Devon wants to learn more about the evil entity attacking the camp, she heads back to the village of humans we met a couple episodes back. That’s a nice little bit of continuity I wasn’t expecting and do appreciate. 2) The minor characters like Baines and Magus and Walman (the latter two being the white woman and white guy I have identified in some previous post respectively) get more focus than usual in this one. It’s mostly so that there are more suspects for us to wonder about when we aren’t sure who is possessed, but I like seeing them fleshed out even a little bit more. Also, there’s some beardy guy named Cameron I’ve never noticed before. Let’s see if he will have time to do anything important before the show ends.
It’s Uly’s ninth birthday! It’s also sixteen years in the future! It’s Earth 2’s first time travel episode!
Because the planet G889 has the strange metaphysical connections to dreams that it does, Devon is able to receive dream messages from her son in the future. The future version of Ulysses needs her to send little Uly on a mission, alone, to hide some of his DNA in some Terrian tunnels. Devon has to grapple with sending her little boy on a dangerous mission, but she does and Uly does fine.
We spend a lot of time in the future in this one. They give the standard line about how it is a “possible future” but nothing in this episode does anything to convince me that this isn’t the actual timeline the show is building toward (and since the show was cancelled after this season, I doubt they ever do anything to say otherwise). In the future, Uly is indeed leading a faction of Terrian rebels who are fighting against oppression by the humans. It turns out that the colonization of New Pacifica worked and the planet is now home to humans who are expanding into Terrian territory. For some reason (racism?) a lot of the parents of sick kids, who came to this planet to be healed, refused the help of the Terrians and are living with synthetic treatments. The humans are trying to “civilize” the Terrians and Future Uly and his Terrians (and Future True is with them!) are working against the humans. But then Ulysses is captured and, though Future Devon (a politician who hasn’t spoken to her son in too long) is there to rescue him, the baddies successfully take away Uly’s Terrian abilities, but luckily, because he dreamed into the past and got little Uly to stash his DNA in a safe place, he is able to get the powers back.
Other stuff: 1) There’s a subplot about True finding a Koba (again) and enlisting Yale’s aid in caring for it. It doesn’t really contribute much to the episode, but it’s nice to know that True respects Yale much more than she did back when she hated him for trying to make her learn. 2) It’s established that Terrians won’t hurt Uly because he has Terrian DNA. This checks out, given that they wouldn’t hurt Gaal because he wore a necklace of Terrian bones and Uly’s DNA was caused by the Terrians. It does interest me that this tribe of Terrians actively (at first) dislikes that Uly is a connection between their kind and humanity. I like seeing that the different tribes of Terrians can have different opinions. It adds complexity to them, as a species. 3) It is also suggested that Ulysses can do the time-travelling dream because of the emotional connection between him and his mother, and Terrians don’t have such emotional connections, so they can’t do it. 4) In this episode Devon sneaks around and doesn’t tell anyone about her dream from the future or the mission she is sending Uly on. I don’t know why. Embarrassment? Probably would have been helpful to consult Yale or Alonso in situations like this.