Identity Lines are drawn between the Old and the New
An excellent episode with two very well integrated plot arcs. The
Connors are robbed and spend the episode searching for their
identities. Cromartie gets ever closer to the Connors. While Ellison,
he's more and more entangled in the future and the past. (spoilers)
First off, I just have to say that the teaser for "Brothers of Nablus"
was on par with the long ago ST:NG blow up the Enterprise episode
teaser. With nary a thought of review, I rewound just to watch it again
because it was that was mind-boggling.
We continue with our trend of the porous future. Skynet knows who
Ellison is and has sent a machine back to become him. Since it seems
redundant for that to involve searching for the Connors, I do wonder at
his role as the future unfolds. It seems more and more clear that
Catherine Weaver's plans may not be the same as Skynet's plans.
While Cromartie continued on his journey to becoming an individual.
Consider the sheer contrast between how he interacts with Ellison and
how he interacts with Jody and Riley later in the episode. When Ellison
asks Cromartie a question, why he saved him, Cromartie actually
replies. "Skynet does not believe in you like I do. You will lead me to
the Connors." Consider that killing John Connor is Cromartie's reason
for existence given to him by his creator, Skynet, and yet he opposes
the will of Skynet in order to achieve that purpose. The idea of a
machine having faith in anything is somewhat mind boggling. Also
Cromartie kills another machine because of that faith. That's a lot of
attention on one man, who isn’t about to save the world. Skynet,
Weaver, and Cromartie are all interested in Ellison, which leaves the
viewer to speculate as to why.
Meanwhile at the Connor residence, they've been robbed of money and
IDs, although presumably not the guns in the walls. The blame is placed
on Riley, who John gave the security code. There a particular emphasis
here in the danger of their identities falling into the wrong hands.
It's the first of many moments in the episode that plays on the nature
and danger of identity.
Also I'm inclined to wonder if the blame is misplaced. The introduction
of Jessie last week puts yet one more agenda in the storyline. Thus
far, only Skynet and Future-John have sent characters back. They each
have specific and defined agendas. Kill humanity. Save humanity. Jessie
is a wild card, who is on one hand intimate with Derek. On the other
hand, she's hiding her surveillance of the Connors. Given her dealings
with Moishe, I wonder if she set the thieves in that direction in the
first place.
Even more troubling is that when Sarah calls Derek, he hides Jessie's
presence from the Connors and conversely he hides the presence of the
Connors from Jesse. It isn't a good thing to be caught between
loyalties. Derek tells Jessie that he needs to return to real life.
When she remarks on a quip, he makes the amusing comment that the first
thing that people notice about him is that he's "Funny Derek." It's
both an amusing line, which inverts what people might actually notice,
in this case his palimpsest of scars and tattoos, and again it plays
into that concept of how people identify and characterize each other
visually.
After all, what sets Cromartie ever closer on the trail of the Connors
is a scan of Cameron's picture that was taken at the shelter from
"Allison from Palmdale." He recognizes Cameron and visits the shelter.
As he questions the woman at the counter and identifies himself as
Cameron's uncle, the woman responds that she is Angelina Jolie. Like
Funny Derek, it is humor at the inversion of identity.
However, Jody recognizes the picture. Cromartie again plays at being an
uncle, someone connected by blood, but denies her identification of him
as a cop, someone representing the law. Oddly, Cromartie actually is
related to Cameron after a fashion, a sort of sibling. However Jody
tells him about Cameron's brother, John Baum, and with a word,
Cromartie has John's other identity.
Ellison, as when the episode opens, gets a knock on the door. He
attempts to confirm the identity of the people outside by asking a
sports question. Presuming, I suppose, that machines don't follow
sports. He doesn't know yet about their Bible reading ways. Ellison is
arrested for a murder that his future-doppelganger committed. He is
placed in a line up, where he is positively identified. The reason he
was picked up was the witness remembered his face from the t.v. report
about the FBI deaths. This is identity theft in the most extreme
degree. What was stolen from him was not credit cards or his social
security serial number, but his face.
In our other plot thread, the Connor's go to Moishe, a diamond fence,
and encounter the other thematic plot arc of the episode, and in a way
the series. Moishe pontificates on the violation of their home and
quotes conflicting religious concepts. He starts with the admonition
not to seek vengeance which he balances against the idea of "an eye for
an eye" and a reference to the story of the Brothers of Nablus, the
episode title.
Cameron's odd mercy in "Allison from Palmdale" in not killing Jody has
led to Cromartie getting closer on their trail. While conversely in
that episode her murder of Allison, the first person whose identity she
once stole, short circuits her memories. Cameron is the same as the
Terminator who attempted to kill Ellison. In one case, Cameron has
replaced and subsumed Allison. In the other case, Ellison was spared by
the faith of someone stage left. Someone who also stolen the face and
identity of a person, Lazlo.
Moishe tells the Connors to go after a man named Walter. He tells them
that he’s providing this information because of Jessie. When Sarah asks
about Jessie, Derek lies to her and says that "Jesse" was a fellow
resistance fighter, who was killed last season. Jessie's name is
ambiguous enough that it can be a man or a woman's name, depending on
the addition of an "i", which can be seen, but not heard. His/her
identity is a matter of perception and how much truth is revealed.
This is further emphasized in the subsequent scene where Cromartie and
Jody, odd couple that they are, discuss who Cromartie is. Jody runs
through the options of not uncle, not cop, which leaves "some guy."
Like Ellison at the beginning of the episode, she asks the "why" for
his motivations. The difference is Jody doesn't wait for a response.
She fills it in herself that he's out for revenge. His reply, which is
some form of the truth, doesn’t get at the full answer.
Plot lines converge as Cromartie, Jody, John, and Riley all end up at
the supermarket where Cameron had her melt down. It's a wonderfully
tense scene with un-knowing characters gliding down well stocked aisles
and never see each other. The truth of the matter can be blocked by
flimsy towers of food.
While the action end of the team discover that Moishe has led them off
track. He lied to them about the identity of the thieves and has sent
them to frighten someone who owes him money. Sarah and Derek argue over
why they have been led off track. Derek's angry concern that John is
becoming more "John Baum" and less "John Connor" is fascinating in
context with thinking about identity and becoming an adult. John is
becoming the person that he will be. John Baum is the normal kid, who
makes mistakes with girls. John Connor will save humanity. In a way,
he’s both. So much story telling has been built up around “John Connor”
that no person could ever live up to being him. Superman must be Clark
Kent and bumble with the rest of us.
Sarah and Derek then argue about the others ability to comprehend the
experience of another. Here Sarah is a mother-lion concerned about John
following his killing of Sarkasian. While Derek is that war scarred
soldier, who has seen the world die.
The second confrontation with Moishe goes somewhat better and leads
Sarah and Cameron off to search for the thieves trail. While Derek goes
off to confront Jessie about Moishe. He finds her soaking in the sun by
a pool. These war hardened people are surrounded by laughing sunlit
innocence and Jessie reasserts her desire to experience every moment of
this innocent time. This only served to further remind me of Jessie's
ulterior motives, because Derek's charms aside, if avoiding the
apocalypse were her objective, she'd have gone back far enough not to
care.
Cromartie begins a door to door search in a one mile radius out from
the market, because an employee recognized the Connors as repeat
customers. Again pictures rather than names identify. Jody continues to
criticize Cromartie's mechanical search technique and in one of the
odder moments of the episode, demands to be let out of the car.
Cromartie actually slows down and shoves her out. That is to say, he
doesn't snap her neck. It bears repeating, he even slows down. Given
that I doubt he has "faith" in her, in a way it’s an even odder action
that saving Ellison.
Cromartie makes it as far as still-very pregnant Kacy's house. He
identifies Cameron as his niece. Kacy, like the witness who recognized
Ellison earlier, recognizes Cromartie's face. Unlike the witness, she
doesn't remember where she remembers him.
At the compound, Riley pretends to live in the house, while John grabs
a gun in a game of avoid the wandering Terminator. There's a sort of
parallelism in Riley and Cromartie’s claims. Cromartie's not an uncle.
She doesn't live there. Also, in an episode where Cromartie has been
holding up various pictures as a way of identifying people and Ellison
was identified in a line up, Cromartie looks at the photo's on the
refrigerator and recognizes that Riley is not in them. She rather
cleverly responds that it is because she's the one taking them. In a
way, she is defining herself as the one who defines others, not as the
identified. This makes sense because while John may not realize it, up
until this point in the plot she represents his desire to be John Baum.
Meanwhile Sarah and Cameron question the parents of their thief.
Pictures of him line the mantelpiece and his life's ambition is to make
films. It's a contrast to both the lack of photos of Riley on the
refrigerator and the lack of pictures of the Connors. Their only
"family" pictures are the photos that Cromartie uses to track and kill
them. For the Connor's even their secret identities are a liability.
Later in the car with John, Riley jokes that her middle name is Lucky
and then messes up and calls herself Lucky Riley Dawson. Her primary
characteristic here, unlike funny Derek, is luck. She has no idea how
lucky she has been.
In a parallel car scene, Cameron tells Sarah the story of the Brothers
of Nablus from the Bible. It bears considering that the story Cameron
tells is the story of bloody revenge. An individual is injured and the
entire town is smited. Sarah characterizes the story as Cameron's kind
of story, which she accepts. Stories can also be used to identify
people. Future-John is entirely defined by the story of his life.
In yet another form of identification, the thieves use one of the
stolen credit cards in a bowling alley. Here identity is attached to a
number, which, being tied to a network, allows both Sarah and Cameron,
and Cromartie right to them.
It’s questionable that they are lucky that Sarah and Cameron gets there
first. As Sarah goes to find one of the thieves, Cameron shoots the
other three in an extremely prejudicial manner. This isn't swift
vengeance. It's protection. While Sarah, as the New Testament
character, spares the life of the baby faced fourth thief.
On the Ellison front, Catherine first visits Ellison in prison. What's
interesting here is that he hasn't told her about his encounter with
Cromartie. He first makes his freedom a requirement before he'll tell
her anything. He's ultimately sprung because the testimony of the
witness isn't credible. The "detective" pulls out a full description of
what the witness saw, naked Ellison, time travel bubble and all. Since
the truth is “clearly” crazy, Ellison is free to go. It comes as no
surprise to see the detective become Catherine. This implies that
somewhere there's a dead detective.
It was a surprise that even out of prison, Ellison doesn't tell
Catherine everything of what happened at the episodes beginning. He
visits his ex-wife to once again gaze on the familiar of his home, but
that home is gone. He goes to Catherine and tells her that he saw his
doppelganger and that he doesn't know where he is, which implies that
there's another Ellison wandering around. Instead of telling her that
Cromartie actively saved him, he tells her that he thinks he's being
tested. Terminators, ever Old Testament, Catherine compares Ellison to
Job, who was tested by God by having everything taken from him and
spared because he had faith. The difficulty here is which machines have
faith in Ellison and which won’t.
While it seems that Derek and Jessie are equally Old Testament. They
both arrive at Moishe’s. Jessie got there first and has killed him,
perhaps to prevent him from telling what he knows. She asks Derek what
he was planning on doing there, and once again we get the line "Funny
Derek” before they clean out Moishe’s diamonds. Based on their actions,
the line blurs between resistance fighters and common thieves.
After all the threads come to their end, Sarah dictums that John cannot
bring anyone to their safe/unsafe house again, which serves as yet one
more step in the attempt to hermeticism John's life. It's doomed to
fail. Something that John takes Sarah to task on. She tells him that
she'll keep him safe, but she cannot. She couldn't keep him from having
to kill Sarkasian. She's not going to be able to protect him from
having to be John Connor. The scene layers on yet more secrets, because
John does not tell either Cameron or Sarah that Cromartie was there. As
with last season, where they didn't tell Sarah that Cromartie visited
his school, John is struggling to hold on to being John Baum.
The story closes with Cromartie questioning the baby faced thief. Sarah
may have cause to regret sparing the boy as Cromartie works to pry what
he knows about the Connors out of him.
This begs the question within the series which philosophy will win out.
Cameron’s caution where she killed three of the thieves is paralleled
with the smiting of Nablus. At the same time, it can be paralleled with
Skynet’s pre-emptive smiting of the world because it was afraid.
Ellison may eventually have cause to regret Cromartie's mercy. Just as
Sarah may have cause to regret her mercy to the youngest thief. It is
equally possible she may continue to regard it as an essential
component of her humanity. Hopefully, as the year plays out we'll get
to see what identities everyone grows into.