Article first published as HOMELAND Review Season 3 on Seat42F.
Showtime’s HOMELAND returns with the season three premiere “Tin Man Is Down.” It’s not just the Tin Man, whoever he may be, that is down, though. Two months after the events of last spring’s shocking finale, all of our main characters are struggling. Let’s just hope they can rise back up again before too long.
Showtime’s HOMELAND returns with the season three premiere “Tin Man Is Down.” It’s not just the Tin Man, whoever he may be, that is down, though. Two months after the events of last spring’s shocking finale, all of our main characters are struggling. Let’s just hope they can rise back up again before too long.
I am going to write in vague
generalizations to avoid spoilers. Still, if you’d rather not know
anything, bookmark this article and check back after the episode airs.
The CIA is facing a serious inquiry,
with Congress hauling Carrie (Claire Danes), Saul (Mandy Patinkin), and
others before them. This is something easy enough to see coming, as
someone must answer for such a glaring gap in national security that
allowed an attack to kill over two hundred people, including agents and
leadership. Let’s just say that those running the panel, especially
Senator Andrew Lockhart (Tracy Letts, Killer Joe), will not be stopping
with their investigation until they get restitution for the American
people.
What would make up for the attack to the
public? Finding out who is to blame for not stopping it and seeing
their lives ruined? The CIA suffered the worst of the blows, losing men,
property, and face. It’s not quite understood why Lockhart and his
colleague want to make someone else pay more, but they definitely are
angry and are letting that anger out.
The question is, how will this showdown
between Congress and the clandestine agency end? Can Saul protect the
organization he is now running, as we saw in last year’s season finale?
Can he shield the individuals who bear some of the responsibility? Will
he be able to control the flow of information so that he has influence
over the end result?
Saul is a great character, with a strong
moral compass and oodles of intelligence. But “Tin Man Is Down” does
not make things easy for him, as information gets to Congress that he’d
rather keep from them. I won’t tell you what the information is or if
Saul manages to figure out where the leak is coming from, but this is
definitely some great drama for him to deal with, while also trying to
find the terrorists responsible for the mess in the first place. Plus,
we get to see him interact with both Dar Adal (F. Murray Abraham) and
Mira (Sarita Choudhury), two relationships that are intriguing.
Not that “Tin Man Is Down” is all
conversations and slow burn. There is some movement on the action front,
too, especially involving Peter Quinn (Rupert Friend, now a series
regular). But that’s all I can say at this time, not wanting to give
anything away, since Quinn’s is such a gripping subplot. I think we’re
going to get some terrific stuff for him this season.
Carrie also has her own issues, both
from the hearing and on another front. Let’s just say that she thinks
she has it together, but does she ever really? It’s not exactly clear
what Carrie is up to these days right away, however she still has some
hanging threads left from the Brody (Damian Lewis) incident, and that
will surely get resolution sooner rather than later.
As the discerning viewer may have
predicted, the Brody family bears a horrendous fall out from their
patriarch’s actions. We’re talking dark trouble on a couple of different
fronts. It’s got to be incredibly hard to cope with learning one’s
husband or father is a terrorist, or at least the media is reporting
that he is one. Each member of the clan reacts in a different way.
“Tin Man Is Down” gives most of its
Brody family focus to Dana (Morgan Saylor). Considering the conversation
she has with her father last year, not too long before the bomb goes
off, she feels particularly betrayed, and perhaps goes to the most
extreme measures. I don’t know that the path she’s going down will be an
improvement over her story arc last year, which fans either loved or
hated, mostly the latter, but HOMELAND is definitely resolved to keep
giving the young girl screen time, for better or for worse.
Jessica (Morena Baccarin) is perhaps
less affected because she already has a rocky relationship with Brody
throughout seasons one and two. She doesn’t view him through the hero
googles that her children do or did. She’s also a strong survivor,
though, having gotten through believing Brody was dead prior to the
show’s start, and she’ll overcome the challenges she faces now. Perhaps
her season three plot will center on her being the single mother who can
support her family, stepping up even more when she must.
There are multiple main characters who
do not appear in “Tin Man Is Down,” though I won’t get into which ones.
This is a set up episode that does not give us everything we’ve been
waiting for, but does get a lot of things going again.
Suffice it to say, HOMELAND remains a
big-picture show, continuing the stories of last year while also telling
new ones, but never at a quick pace. When season two began, I wondered
if the show had lost something, not seeing right away how it could
continue past the amazing stuff from the first year. I feel the same
this fall, not sold on where the writing is going yet, but if last year
is any indication, that will probably change relatively early in the
run. There are some interesting things in this installment, but there is
also a lot left unexplained and not going well. Whether it can take off
and soar remains to be seen, but my guess is that it probably will.
HOMELAND returns Sunday, September 29th on Showtime.
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