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Sunday, October 26, 2014

Sleepy Hollow Episode 2.4: Ichabod Enchants Abbie, and the Rest is History



You know, Sara, some of us would gladly spend a night in
the Pied Piper's lair if it meant we got to be carried around
in Ichabod Crane's arms afterwards. 
 Thank you writer Damian Kindler and director Doug Aarniokoski for giving us Sleepyheads another reason to get out of bed in the evening. "Go Where I Send Thee," the fourth installment of Sleepy Hollow's Season 2, while at times uneven, was an overall delight, and many times absolutely wonderful.


Following on the heels of last week's exceptional "Root of All Evil," Episode  2.4 had a lot to live up to, and it largely delivered. As ever, the heart of Sleepy Hollow is the relationship between Ichabod Crane (played by the insanely talented and even more insanely handsome Tom Mison) and police Lt. Abbie Mills (played by the equally talented and drop-dead,-forget-how-to-speak-English gorgeous Nicole Beharie). Both Kindler and Aarniokoski, Sleepy vets from Season 1, understand this and understand that Sleepy fans will tolerate pretty much any dumbass plot, any ludicrous phlebotinum you throw at us, as long as that heart beats steadily, passionately, and with a healthy dose of laughter throughout the episode. Balancing serious and tender moments of mutual defense and concern with the hilarious and near-perfectly executed bookend scenes of "Ichabod drives" and "Ichabod discovers cappuccino," the episode played like a love letter to the fans, while still serving the needs of story arc, season arc, and character development admirably.

"Go Where I Send Thee," which might have been more aptly titled, "Come Where I Lure Thee," opens with a young girl we've not met before being lured by a haunting flute melody down the stairs, out the door, and across the lawn of her gargantuan colonial-era house, to a creature standing in the woods. Before we can meet this creature, cut to Ichabod Crane passionately reminding us of his most pertinent recent history concerning encounters with dangerous creatures on horseback from behind the wheel of Abbie's 300-horsepower SUV.
As the camera moves to include Abbie, we see that she is finally teaching her two-hundred-and-sumpen-sumpen year-old partner to drive. Crane seems fearful, then defensive when she informs him she knows he's been taking lessons secretly from her sister, Jenny ("Jenny teaches Crane to drive" on the DVD, please!). But, as he seductively starts quoting Japanese proverbs to Abbiein Japanesewe get our first hint that, like many things in Sleepy Hollow, the situation is not what it seems.
Ichabod, it turns out, has not only been practicing with "Miss Jenny," he's become something of an amazing driver. Combining humor, action, major unresolved sexual tension and fabulous word-free insight into Crane's character, Mison and Beharie take a wild, flirtatious-glance-and-laughter-filled ride through a parking lot, ending with Abbie deducing she's been played and ordering Crane out of her car.
What follows, continuing the secondary purpose served by Mison's horsey pre-drive soliloquy, is an impressively decent version of what I have come to call The Irritating Recap for Those of You Who Just Tuned In (or The Irritating Recap, for short). This is the scene, in every episode's first act, in which we are re-introduced to Ichabod, Abbie, their relationship as the two Witnesses foretold in the Book of Revelation, and the plight they face in trying to defeat the demon Moloch. In the same way that Tom Mison is waiting to see which writer will finally break him elocution-wise with the tongue-twisting speeches they write for Ichabod, I wait anxiously each week to see which writer is finally broken by the network's need to service its new viewers in this annoying manner.
Damian Kindler did not break.
Neither did Mison and Beharie, executing the tender scene which combined luscious Ichabbie feels ("it is not our fate for one of us to bury the other") with the (supposedly required) exposition. These two deserve an entire mantle of Emmys for managing to make this tiresome ritual sound almost-fresh each week.
The Irritating Recap blessedly concluded, they got back to flirting, which Mison and Beharie do so very well. Abbie: "That's not driving. That's unsafe operation of a motor vehicle without a license. I should arrest your ass for it." Ichabod: "Perhaps. If you could catch me." As my husband said, oh just get a room already, you two!
That said, I do take issue with one thing in that scene, namely its first transition, from humorous driving scene, to serious, heavy-emotion-filled scene. Scene transitions are, as I wrote last week, usually one of Sleepy's strengths. This one was not. Out of seemingly nowhere, Ichabod informs Abbie that she can "drop the facade," that he knows she is teaching him skills like driving to increase his independence, so that if anything happens to her, he can continue the struggle alone.
Using the word "independence" in this scene was a mistake, in my opinion, because it immediately harkens back to Episode 2.3, wherein Ichabod complains, fairly--lacking both cash and a government-issued ID--about having fought a war for independence but having none himself. That episode ended, sweetly, with Nick Hawley giving Crane a fake passport so that he can at least have a beer in a pub now and again (something Hawley rightly intuited that Englishmen consider their birthright).
Now, here we are, with Abbie giving her partner yet another tool of independence, and his response is to accuse her of trying to empower him to fight without her. That didn't work for me, Sleepy writers. But then, I tuned in last week. And the week before that.
More gorgeous flirtation between our heroes, then we transition back to our A story, also known as the plot. The little girl we met in the first scene, Sara Lancaster, has been declared missing, and Abbie (naturally) knows the girl's family. Our dynamic duo rushes to the scene to try to help (because apparently they're doing regular police work now as well as the supernatural kind?). While Abbie does some actually believable detective work questioning the girl's parents, Ichabod is relegated (by the new sheriff's orders against his involvement in same) to lurking in the bushes. Literally. But before we can hilariously reunite an irritated Ichabod with an even more irritated Abbie, we learn An Important Fact which, thankfully, pretends to be Unimportant: that the little girl's mother "forgot" to set their security alarm the night before.

We're also treated to more of Abbie's backstory as we learn that the elder Ms. Lancaster, the missing girl's mother, is Abbie's former case worker, from when she and her sister were placed in foster care. The two actors work together beautifully, and the scene is given the time it needs to land, and no more, thank God, because, despite their fine performances and the excellent direction, it's boring and we already knew Abbie must have had a caseworker. One can only conclude that this information, or this character, will be heard from again and prove most pertinent in an episode down the road. At least I hope so.

Soon enough we are back with our heroes blissfully bickering through a closed window. Abbie: "What are you doing?!" Crane (still in the bushes): "Helping!" Off they trudge together into the woods in search of missing "Miss Sara." Alas, the field trip into the woods also re-introduces us to the character I'll call "Stage Crane," whom we first encountered in the Season 2 premiere. Our heroes easily pick up Sara's trail, and then Crane goes all Prince Humperdinck on us and starts describing everything that happened based on a few broken twigs and some blood spatter. Abbie shows us that she learned all that stuff at police detective school too, thanks, and takes the lead back from him before finding a bone.

"That's no bone," Crane tells her ominously. "It's a space station."

Sorry. Wrong Episode IV. I meant a flute, an ancient Chinese flute to be precise, which this week's supernatural criminal mastermind thoughtfully dropped where it could be easily found by our heroes. Crane, who earlier showed off his knowledge of Japanese in relation to horseback riding, now shows off his knowledge of Chinese in relation to ancient instrumentation, before beginning to play the flute like he's had that specific instrument in his back pocket for years. (As someone who actually played the flute at one time, and knows how hard it is to get a decent sound out of one's own instrument, let alone an instrument one just picked up off the ground, I would resent this if I didn't so enjoy watching Tom Mison play, his execution of perfect omberture, and the gorgeous poetry of the flute-related scenes that follow).

The scene which follows is both haunting, as our beloved leftenant becomes hypnotized and wanders into a bog, and hilarious as Crane is so absorbed in his new toy he fails, at first, to notice her predicament. But below the surface there is another story being told, which becomes more apparent on their second adventure in the woods.

In the kind of swift stroke of genius that only Sleepy writers can get away with, Crane declares he knows exactly how the missing girl went missing. The act ends with Stage Crane making Big, Worried Eyes at Abbie, after announcing the flute belonged to a pied piper.

Let me explain about Stage Crane. Stage Crane is TV Crane's alter ego, who does and says everything bigger than is appropriate for the small screen, but in a manner which would work marvelously well on stage. I don't know if Stage Crane is the product of Stage Tom Mison, desperately missing that particular expression of his talent, or the Sleepy Hollow directors occasionally forgetting that while the show can get the joke, the characters never, ever can. Directors, writers, beloved Mr. Misonplease rein in the hand-porn and the blazing sapphire blues. I know we're meant to see a sharp contrast between Mills and Crane, with Abbie being our Sensible, Grounded Witness, and Crane being Reckless, Impassioned Witness. But between the differences in accent and language use, clothing, height, and gender, not to mention Mison's ethereal posture, the contrast between these two is ever-present to the watchful eye. I find nothing more attractive than a passionate man, but the expression of emotion in a character requires restraint to be effective; an American should not have to explain this to a Brit. Mison is most believable and most affecting when playing his part more naturally, especially in scenes of humorous flirtation or tender concern for Beharie. Yes, we know Ichabod is supposed to be the comic relief, but he's not a cartoon. He's a real person.

We begin the second act with lovely teasing between our two leads, but why is our Ichy suddenly so cold regarding his former flame, Betsy Ross? I so hope we find out in a later episode.

Given how exposition-heavy this entire episode is, the conflict between Crane's quick deduction that the Piper who lured an entire garrison of British soldiers to their deaths in his day must be the fellow who abducted Sara, and Abbie's "not-so-fast-Sherlock," "the modus operandi does not fit" is a welcome breath of fresh air. Nevertheless, it's their best lead. And so they concoct a plan for locating the Piper, and, presumably, Sara. Crane will record himself playing a short, haunting melody on the bone flute. Abbie will put it on a "30-second-loop" on her phone, and, as before, she will be drawn in her enchantment to the Piper, taking Ichabod with her.
Ichabod's chivalry takes a turn for the weird in this scene. When Abbie offered to stay behind in purgatory, Ichabod's pain was palpable when he vowed, "that is out of the question." But Mison plays this scene like the director told him Ichabod really does want to use Abbie as bait, and he's just supposed to give lip service to resisting the idea. This didn't ring true to me at all, given that the one thing Ichabod Crane is in his bones is chivalrous.
And now a question for the make-up department. Is the color on Tom Mison's face his natural tan, or does he have an unfortunate amount of foundation on? Because, especially in this scenegiven the lighting--the color of his face doesn't remotely match the color of his neck and chest, and yes, we fangirls notice these things, thank you.
Back in the woods, we move into the most gorgeously poetic scene of the season thus far. But not before finally addressing the height difference between our leads in a charming manner. Abbie worries that Ichabod might lose sight of her in the woods. "A gillygaupus like me?" he responds with adorable self-deprecation. "I can see for miles at my height."


"And I suggest you retire that nickname right here and now," replies Abbie without missing a beat.


Perfection, Beharie, Mison, Kindler and Aarniokoski. That would be what it looks like.


Crane does a much better job of balancing his respect for Abbie's strength and capacity, the need to endanger her in order to find Sara, and his bone-deep need to protect her in this scene. He promises Abbie that, during her enchantment from the recording, "I will be with you at every moment." We see the woods from her point of view, as though enchanted. Then we pull out from her point of view to see Crane determined to protect her from the spell hewith her consentput her under.

Let's just sit with this for a moment, shall we? In this season's second episode, Abbie worries aloud that her greatest weakness is her faith in Crane. In this scene, Abbie literally puts her life in Crane's hands. And he does not let her down. Crane walks with Abbie, wherever she leads, his primary responsibility throughout to protect her from how he has enchanted her. And her only comment on all this, as she comes under the spell of his music, is "so beautiful." It's really a sensually, gorgeously executed metaphor for the emotional aspect of their relationship, I think.


Unfortunately, in his effort to convey fear and concern for Beharie's Abbie, Mison again goes a bit over-the-top in his expressions. This gets worse when they encounter Nick Hawley, just spending the day hanging out in the woods, despite having been seriously injured by the Piper the night before. Stage Crane's exasperated "unbelievable" is just that. His Big Eyes in response to Hawley's claim that there's still time to save the girl also smacks unfortunately of melodrama.


After the second act break, we are treated to another round of one of the all-time great trios in story-telling: the brave, honorable hero, handy with a sword and willing to sacrifice himself for the good of all; the equally brave, strong, powerful (but short) woman with a big gun; the handsome, roguish privateer who's only in it for the money, but eventually becomes swayed by the cause. I loved this trio in 1977, when they were trying to save a galaxy far, far away, and I love them now, because they work.


So, we'll just pretend that it makes sense that experienced soldier of fortune Hawley hasn't bandaged up his knifed-up thigh yet, despite the fact that such an injury could be fatal, because it gives Abbie something to do while Hawley reveals, conveniently, almost all the answers our heroes seek. What he doesn't know, Crane easily deduces because he is always The Smartest Guy in the Forest. It seems that during the war, Ancestor Lancaster was forced to quarter an entire British garrison at his vast estate (where Sara now lives). The soldiers, not surprisingly, were lewd, rude and damned inappropriate to his daughters. Lancaster sought revenge on them by hiring the Piper, an assassin legendary for his speed, who proceeded to enchant and then dispatch the garrison in short order. Of course, to have such speed, Crane deduces, he must have been a demon, a man who sold his soul to Moloch, and therefore won't die (at least not until the Witnesses have at him). Crane also deduces that Lancaster must have tried to kill the assassin, betraying him after he'd completed his contracted work, and Hawley concludes that, in retribution, the demon takes one Lancaster daughter per year, at the age of ten, because at that age her bones are the perfect size to make his instruments of torture and mind-control.


The writers, director and actors make a valiant effort to transform this expository scene into an action scene via flashback, with slow-mo Guy Ritchie-esque sequences, as much violence and blood as they can get away with on network TV, and moves to make V from V for Vendetta jealous. As information dumps go, it's not the worst I've seen, but it's just way too long. At least it's followable, though, and sorta, kinda makes sense.


After we're all caught up on the history of our present conflict, Abbie tries to persuade Hawley to help them, much to Crane's chagrin, using the flute, as bait. She'll give it to Hawley, to sell to whomever, presumably, after they rescue Sara. If this doesn't sound like the Abbie you know, you've been paying attention. Crane's nervous, but trusts her. Smart lad.


Cut to Irving reading the Bible at Tarrytown Psych and we get this episode's second gorgeous piece of visual poetry, namely, a terrifying vision of who Irving might become as a servant of the Horseman of War: a demon/killer as skilled and vicious as the piper we just witnessed murder a British garrison a few scenes before.

Back in the forest, after using his smarts to complement Abbie's enchanted-homing-beacon technique and locate the entrance to the Piper's home, Crane's chivalry goes on holiday again. He and Hawley stare in terror at the entrance, as Abbie gamely leads them into the demon's lair, a cellar beneath a long-destroyed house. But this actually works, because it is entirely believable that fear would get the better of both Crane and Hawley in that moment, and it is entirely believable for the writers, and Crane, to let Abbie take the lead.


The lighting in the Piper's lair is very well done. It can't be easy balancing "terrifying" with "visible." Similarly, the sound work is very powerful. Walking with Abbie, we hear only her anxious breathing, which works wonderfully to build suspense. Once inside the cellar, we see the Piper's got a pretty macabre decorating sense, his walls covered in bones and dead, bloody animal carcasses. While the boys are busy checking out the Piper's instruments, Abbie stays on point and finds the girl chained in a chamber that resembles a well with a very helpful amount of sunshine coming in. She immediately sets to work picking the lock on Sara's foot, which looks like it's from Ichabod's era, because she's a Mills sister and apparently the lock hasn't been invented yet that they can't pick. (I guess we no longer have to imagine what delinquency she and Crane could perpetrate if they really set their minds to it).

Watching Matt Barr's Hawley come to grips with the existence of a very real monster, both in the moment and after the fact, is worth the price of admission itself. His and Crane's collaboration in and after the fight scene with the Piper gives their relationship a necessary fraternal beat, and Crane figuring out how to work a digitally timed explosive by just watching Hawley for a moment was--inexplicably--completely believable.

Crane's grabbing of the young Sara, then jumping to his feet to carry her away, is one of the most potent moments in the entire episode. So much is conveyed in his urgency, the manner in which he carries her, his primal need to protect her. Mison executes the scene absolutely perfectly. His performance took me back to "The Golem," and the passionate pain he felt for his son Jeremy, not knowing what had become of him, not having been able to protect him.


In the aftermath of Sara's rescue, Abbie and Crane confirm that they are mutually down with returning to the cellar to kill off the Piper, but Hawley's having none of it. He wants his payment for tactical support on Sara's rescuethe fluteand he wants a drink, not necessarily in that order. Abbie and Crane, apparently never having seen Episode IV: A New Hope, are shocked. They try to persuade the "privateer" to help them using silly arguments like the necessity of protecting the world from the apocalypse. Naturally, this goes nowhere. As Hawley's dramatic grandfather, Han Solo, once said, "What good is a reward if you ain't around to use it? Attacking that [fill in the blank with big, scary thing of your choice] ain't my idea of courage. It's more like suicide."

Barr is perfectly cast as Hawley. His terror is palpable but played with a healthy undercurrent of humor, his realization that the monster is real and likely to haunt him indefinitely rings true, as does his determination to remain consistent with the man he thinks himself to be. The contrast and juxtaposition between passionate Crane and reserved Abbie in this scene is also played to perfection.
Crane's proud, adoring smile in response to Abbie breaking the flute before letting Hawley have it will go down as a priceless moment/GIF in Ichabbie history. Fortunately, Hawley doesn't appear to hold Abbie's actions against Crane. His "good luck in the next round," to Crane seems as sincere as Grandpa Han's "may the Force be with you" to Luke, as the latter readied to confront the Death Star.
I wanted more, or at least better of Hawley this episode, but "he has to follow his own path; no one can choose it for him," as ole Princess Bagelhead used to say. More to the point, he has to redeem himself and earn our affection. For this trio to work as a story-telling tool, we can't dislike him indefinitely; I give Hawley one episode, two tops, before he flies the Millennium Falcon back to save Ichy's ass. (Just out of curiosity, how many synonyms does Ichabod know for "privateer" and can he express them with more sneering contempt?)

Abbie and Crane return Sara to her mother in a tender, dramatic slow-motion reunion scene, which suggested I should care about the Lancasters a great deal more than I do. The only one I really had any sympathy for in that scene was the young actress playing Sara, forced to release her grasp on Tom Mison's neck as she is pried from her cozy perch in his arms.

Lacking Hawley's support, but none of their determination, the Witnesses burst back into the Bat Cave (both through the front door this time, thank you; Sheriff Reyes' approbation be damned), to arm themselves for Round 2 with the Piper. And here at last we are treated to a scene in which Mison's Big Eyes not only work, but serve the scene beautifully. Abbie introduces Crane to noise-canceling earbuds, something she thinks will help protect them both since the Piper uses sound as a weapon. Crane's shift from skepticism to childlike wonder as he tries on the earbuds is gorgeous. Crane must be so focused and stressed out so much of the time that when he gets to discover something like this from the modern era, and react with marvel, it marks an ideal counterpoint to the rest of the show's tension. Mison again proves himself a wonder of the modern world.

Crane notices that something wasn't quite right about Sara's reunion with her mother. Apparently Sara's parents are either modern Quakers or hippies (redundant) since she has her mother's last name, Lancaster, rather than her father's. But that's not what bothers Crane. He notes and Abbie concurs that Sara's mom wasn't overjoyed to see her daughter. It's a painful, poignant momentlanded but not laboredwhen Crane says, "if someone rescued my child I'd be overjoyed, exuberant." Would you, now? Well, Ich, one could argue that's exactly what Moloch did when he resurrected Henry (ne Jeremy Crane, see also The Horseman of War). It's particularly pointed given that immediately after Crane says this, Abbie says--referring of course to the Piper--"our focus right now is to kill that thing before it comes looking for its prey." Nice subliminal nod to the season-long arc, Regarding Henry.

The importance of their object is underscored when Abbie and Crane realize through some computer digging--after Crane asks Abbie to "perform the log-in ceremony," the kind of thing that never fails to charm my socks off--the Lancasters really are cursed. Every generation a ten-year old girl is abducted by the Piper, and if one happens to get rescued, all the other children in her family die. What looks like the lower half of a noose comes foreground, out of focus, into the shot, as Abbie and Crane realize the Sophie's Choice that Sara's mom has had to makesacrifice her daughter, or lose all three of her sons. After their deduction, we need nothing more than Sara's mom looking at her sleeping, recently-returned daughter with tears in her eyes to know what's coming.

Abbie and Crane race to the Lancasters' home just in time to see their three boys being taken to the hospital with fever. Crane inexplicably deduces that they will be dead by nightfall unless he and Abbie succeed in breaking the curse. Sara and her mom, of course, are MIA, no doubt headed back to Piperville. This means Crane will need a good weapon for taking on the Piper, and happily, the Lancasters have what may be the best fighting cutlass ever made hanging on a wall in their house (the walls of Sleepy Hollow homes are literally littered with ancient, yet very sharp, swords).

The scene in which Crane busts the glass on the sword case and takes the sword is one of the sexiest thus far in the entire series. Mison exudes a confidence in his physical grace that is nothing short of breathtaking.

Abbie lets Crane drive so she can safely telephone Sara's mother, and Crane has a blast playing Niki Lauda again for about 20 seconds. Near the Piper's lair, Abbie and Crane find Sarah and her mom, and mom pulls a gun on Abbie. Beharie and the actress playing Sara's mother are both wondrous in this scene, and beautifully directed by Aarniokoski. Beharie in particular just goes all in and gives the scene a rich, emotional grounding. She continues to just sparkle and shine as Abbie, but I do hope she gets to do something other than talk down murderous women in the climax some day.


Despite all of Abbie's empathy and reasonable arguments, it takes Crane's tenderness and hand gestures to finally succeed in persuading Sara's mom to put down the gun. Enter the Piper, and Crane begins dueling with him immediately, but, again, balancing the Witnesses' contributions, it takes Abbie's gunshots to scare him off. As we already noted, Abbie has nothing if not faith in her fellow Witness. When she basically orders Crane to man-up, follow and kill the Piper, shouting"finish it!" it's an awfully sexy expression of her confidence in, and need for, him.


To show Crane's entrance into the Piper's lair from his auditory perspective, i.e., hearing only what he would hear with the noise-canceling earbuds--his breathing and the muffled sounds of his clash with the piper--was brave and brilliant. However, the constantly-moving camera in relation to the constantly-moving combatants really annoyed me. Remember the days of The Princess Bride and The Lord of the Rings, when the camera held (relatively) still and we actually got to see the fencing? Mison and his co-star and/or the stuntmen who play their characters in this scene appear to do a masterful job during their brief exchange, with Crane's swordplay even bringing to mind Ewan McGregor's climactic battle with Darth Maul (about the only decent thing in the first three so-called Star Wars' films). In fact, if that was Mison fencing and not a stunt man, I'd put this scene on the actor's audition reel for Episodes VIII and IX. But it would have been so much better if we could have watched it all without getting seasick.

Thank you for letting Ichabod do an excellent job of recovering and trying to defend himself, cutting off the Piper's hand, before Abbie comes to the rescue. That was beautifully directed and edited, although one of these days, I'd really like to see Ichabod actually win a duel. Mison's "I had him," Abbie's smile, and his smile in response, are perfect. Would that we could have seen the aftermath of Abbie and Ichabod in that moment, before cutting immediately to Tarrytown Psychiatric, but perhaps anything further would have undermined that beautiful moment.

It is a testament to the skill and power of both Orlando Jones' and John Noble's actingas well as the writing and direction--that, though both actors were in this episode only a brief time, their impact is heavily felt. When Irving confronts Henry Parrish about being the Biblical Horseman of War, Henry shrugs it off with "the signs were all there." Really? Like, what? Him being a lawyer?


Noble is glorious in this scene. He's so confident he can afford to be understated, and he's so much more compelling for it. His take on War is a slow-burn that builds and builds and builds. And the casual way in which Henry tells Irving, "the question is what can I do for you," since, after all, you've already given me your soul, is absolutely chilling. Jones matches him, beat for dramatic beat. The understatement with which Orlando Jones' Irving realizes he has inadvertently sold his soul is both weird and right, right, right.

As has been waxed poetically elsewhere, the cappuccino scene between Abbie and Crane is a delight, even with Mison hamming up his unexpected infatuation with the drink. Abbie reaching over to wipe the foam from his mustache is another priceless Ichabbie moment. But I have a bone to pick with the effects department. The green screen work and lighting in this scene do not work. Since Sleepy is filmed in Wilmington, NC, where there is a lovely oceanfront but no Hudson River, the producers and director got creative in combining an exterior shot of what I assume is the actual Hudson River front with a scene filmed indoors, lit for outdoors, and with green screen action behind it. But when we cut from the long view of Mison and Beharie to the close-up, the border between Mison's outline and the action behind him is so jarring it actually detracts from what is otherwise a very charming scene.

I love how in the final scene with Henry we're led to believe that he's angry about the flute being broken, and then we see it was the flute broken down into powder he wanted all along. Why do I have the terrible feeling Irving will be drinking Flute-on-the-Rocks some time very soon?

Now, about the season as a whole...I was talking to a dear friend last night, and she had just watched the entirety of Season 1 in a single sitting. She said the season reminded of her Beethoven's 9th symphony, which is composed of seemingly unconnected movements which all come together in the end. I thought that a very apt comparison, and it brought another to mind.

To me, the finale of the last season was operatic in nature. In contrast, the premiere of this season crossed the line from opera into cartoon. It's a tough, tough boundary to navigate. But the episodes since then have shown the same potential for symphonic composing, for building to an ecstatic finale which brings everything together in a manner which works.

There are pieces of the puzzle introduced, and left hanging, but in a believable way: Franklinstein's monster, the Judas coin, and now the powdered flute. We are given hints and foreshadowing in conversations, themes, and entire scenes, of the season's direction. And yet, I still can't tell you what will happen, who will prove true and who will prove false on Team Apocalypse, and I LOVE THAT!
I wish the writers and the entire Sleepy Team the best of luck with landing both their mid-season semi-finale, and the finale itself. So far, things look very, very promising indeed.

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