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- Review-- Heroes: Once Upon a Time in Texas
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- Review-- Heroes: Once Upon a Time in Texas
Review-- Heroes: Once Upon a Time in Texas
- By barbara mountjoy
- Published 11/3/2009
- Television
- Unrated
barbara mountjoy
Author of the book "101 Little Instructions for Surviving Your Divorce," Barbara has also published dozens of articles and short stories in collections like the "Cup of Comfort" series and other publications. She has a day job as a family law attorney, night job as parent to three children with special needs, and is always working on some novel manuscript or other. Find out more at http://awalkabout.wordpress.com
View all articles by barbara mountjoyThe writers of Heroes this season have a knack for opening with a punch, pouring in 40 minutes of "Say what?" and closing with a chilly bang.
Hence this episode, which revisits the day of Season One's date between Sylar and the cheerleader. Hiro returns to Texas to save his one true love, Charlie the waitress, who was originally killed by Sylar for her ability, the gift of remembering anything and everything she reads. This is part of his bucket-list campaign to right all the wrongs he's committed in his life, which overall, is a commendable task, but as HE HIMSELF SAID a couple of episodes ago to "Butterfly Man"--aka Samuel the carnie--you can't just go around changing the past because it screws things up.
Hiro arrives in Texas in his hospital gown and is soon sweetly outfitted with a white cowboy hat. Oh, no! The man in the black hat--say it with me, The Bad Guy-- appears soon after, and of course it's Sylar, hunting breakfast before he whacks the cheerleader. But Samuel is there, too, sucking the remaining life from his carnie time traveler to arrive in time to coach the inept Hiro through all the moves he has to make to save his best girl and not change history too much.
(P.S. Sticking Sylar duct-taped to a cargo dolly in the luggage compartment of a Greyhound bus? Not so likely to maintain history as it happened.)
So Hiro saves Charlie from Sylar.
Meanwhile homecoming is coming, and Claire and her dad have some tender moments, but the rest of HRG's storyline is a complete waste of script. History apparently continues on.
Although history isn't continuing on, apparently, for Nathan Petrelli, as a round of announcements revealed this week that Adrian Pasdar's character is not returning to the series. Worse, he only found out by reading the script. Bad
form, NBC! Tina Fey can snark all she wants about talk shows costing the Big Four networks less to make than episodic shows, but if writer's strikes and lousy treatment of talent continues, maybe actors will move on to places more favorable and cozy.
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