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Revolution – Episode 2.10 – Three Amigos – Review & Highlights

Jan 12, 2014

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Revolution returned from its winter break with a trip south, over the Texas border into Mexico. Apparently after the power went out, Mexico held up very well for a while and was the richest republic. This was one of the reasons Miles chose a Mexican town as the place to leave Monroe’s son, Connor, who is now about 25, while hiding him from Monroe. The Mexican town we visit has deteriorated some since Miles had last seen it, but more on that in a minute. The show also follows the Patriots, Tom, and Julia to Washington, and Aaron on a pilgrimage to Spring City, Oklahoma, to find the second largest ball of twine. Yeah, there’s more to Aaron’s trip than a ball of twine, but I like the idea of him following a ball of twine.

This episode focused heavily on Monroe (yay!), and did a nice job in subtly shaking loose the niggling thought that’s been tucked away in my mind for a while, but I haven’t wanted to admit because I enjoy watching Monroe interact with gang so much, and that is that Monroe doesn’t really belong there. He’s not good. He’s super twisted. And there’s some seriously bad history between him and the rest of the group.

We start this part of the story with Monroe helping Charlie to rescue Gene so that Gene can treat Miles, who has turned partially blue with a nasty arm infection. Is that what a really bad infection looks like? I’ve never seen one so advanced, so that’s good to know. After Gene treats Miles with leeches, Monroe demands that Miles tell him where his son is. Miles responds that he’ll do one better. He’ll bring him there. And he wants Rachel to come too. This was where the first thought started creeping in – that something’s not right here. Monroe was good to have around in a pinch, but they are now looking an extended campaign to fight the Patriots. Miles’s initial instincts from when Charlie first arrived with Monroe – that Monroe should stay far away from them – were probably right. Miles and Monroe have a toxic history, and is Miles starting to warm up to the idea of the two of them becoming Butch and Sundance again a little too much?

He tells Rachel that he wants Monroe there because they still need Monroe, and they need to bring him back, but she reminds him that Monroe killed her son. Thank you Rachel! We needed to be reminded of that, because poor Danny has already been forgotten.

The three head down to Mexico and find a decrepit town filled with prostitutes and thugs. The head thug is predictably enough Monroe’s son, who learns Emma is dead, and isn’t too happy to see dear Dad. I think I smell a whiff of a Monroe-Charlie-Connor triangle forming – and that’s the next thing to make me pause, especially in light of Rachel’s reminder that Monroe killed Danny. And this is where the big bombshell drops. Monroe wants to rebuild the Monroe Republic and have his son by his side. *sigh* I probably should have seen this coming. Miles and Rachel will not be pleased when they learn about this, and I was really enjoying Monroe being part of the gang.

Meanwhile Charlie is with Gene (and Aaron for a while before he gives them the slip), and Gene is a little freaked at how much of a cold-blooded killer Charlie has turned into. Perhaps Monroe’s influence is greater than I had realized, and this triangle I caught scent of earlier could be quite deadly.

The other two major developments are the Patriots putting drugs into the oranges – I think I’m supposed to care about this but I don’t yet – and Aaron finding that this town the nanites led him to has not only Grace, but Aaron’s wife – this one interests me a little bit more.

High Points

Rachel takes this category in this episode. Both she and Miles gang up on Monroe sitting around the campfire to remind him that he is to blame for his own problems. But Rachel has the best lines, and Elizabeth Mitchell’s delivery of a zinger that puts Monroe in his place was fantastic (see Best Quotes below).

Low Points 

Everything around Tom and Julia fit into this category, Low Points. This family has consistently been the least interesting to me from the start. I don’t care about their schemes, or their love. They had my attention for about two minutes when they reunited in the previous episode, but I’m past that already. And at this point, their story has few ties to the Mathesons, so I’m wondering why we’re still following them. I suppose you could argue that the story of Revolution is bigger than one family, but if we’re going to get scattered stories from other parts of this society, how about following someone like random oranges delivery guy for a while?

Hottest Action

Monroe stealing the cart from their "bosses" wins this category. Monroe did what we all wanted him to do, and that was to get the action moving. You really can’t beat a sociopath with impulse control issues.

Best Quotes

Rachel: “You scared the hell out of me.” Miles: “Oh, stop making this about you.”

Miles (to Charlie, Gene, and Aaron) : “Whatever you do, don’t go near any Patriots. Don’t be morons.”

Rachel: “I have to help you find your son, after you killed mine.”

Charlie: “I stopped yelling at old people. It wasn’t getting a damn thing done.”

Monroe: “This is on you, Miles. You brought an innocent kid down here and you dumped him. Look what he turned into. Some punk with delusions of grandeur.”
Rachel: “Must be like looking in a mirror. There’s nothing Miles could have done. Could have watched him, not watched him, put him on Mars, put him in a monastery. It doesn’t matter who raised him. Connor was always going to turn out, just like this, because he’s your son, he’s your blood.
Monroe: “By that logic, Charlie is going to grow up and end the world.”

Monroe: “You’re not aiming high enough. Thirty men. How about a thousand men? Ten thousand men?”

Tell me what you thought of the episode in the comments.

13 comments:

  1. I love this episode!

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  2. Enjoyed your review, despite my disagreement with most of it. I personally find Tom's story to be the second most interesting story, but even I would consider it a low point of the episode. That doesn't say much for the rest of the episode, which was highly uninteresting and annoying. The repetition of the need to save save someone is becoming boring now, as is Rachel's hatred towards Monroe. He may have killed Danny, but he has saved Charlie (to my recollection more than once) and has stayed to help them fight the patriots across the last few episodes. And helped to rescue Gene. The fact that Monroe wants to restart the militia almost made me throw something at my screen, and most certainly resulted in some expletives from me. The total and utter stupidity of Monroe here was beyond irritating, and I'd rather he be killed than restart the militia. The oranges story is the only actual interesting part, but as you say, why should I care? No one we know lives there anymore so it doesn't affect us. Until it does, I won't care. And Aaron finding Grace in this town that he has been sent to by the nanites? Really? Urgh.

    The only part of this episode I enjoyed was Monroe taking control of the cart (and "Go enjoy the Mexican dream") and the occasional other quote, such as the "What'd you do, buy him a
    hand job and an eight ball?" and the yelling at old people quote. Other than that I couldn't find much good about this episode.

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  3. Ha! It's fun to hear from people who had opposite reactions. Are you writing a review? I saw you mention in an earlier review that you really liked Tom's story, so I guess we're just going to be on opposite sides of that one. Also Rachel too, apparently. She's a little uneven, but I like her and would respect her a lot less if she had already gotten past Danny's death.


    I respect the show more for bringing Monroe back to his nature. People can change a little with proper motivation, but Monroe was really far gone, and the transition has been too great too soon. While I prefer watching this new Monroe, it hasn't completely rung true for me. But we can agree to disagree on that one too. :-)

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  4. Na, I don't review Revolution. I could certainly go on though. I did comment on Lisa's 2.09 review though, so maybe that's where you're thinking of.

    Tom's story is the most interesting of the main characters. His reason for going after these people has changed from avenging his wife's death to following what his not-dead wife wants, which is still a mystery. And it's Kim Raver as the wife so..

    I don't think Rachel should get past Danny's death, but she should stop being so hostile to Monroe, as without him this season Charlie, Miles and Gene would all be dead.

    Monroe was never going to change, but just the idea of the militia coming back just annoyed me. Monroe is the best character on the show but I really do not want the militia storyline back. And, to be fair, his thinking that it would actually gain ANY traction was so deluded I don't know where to start.

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  5. I'm sorry. I'm embarrassed. I was confusing you with Brandon. Agree that Monroe's thinking is deluded, but that seems to be more in character from where we started. ;-)

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  6. Oh I am intrique by the idea, that Miles asking Rachel to come with them could be a forbearing of Miles' old nature coming thru. I would love to see the show go there with Miles and him having to face his old deviles again. I think Miles is best when he has to struggle with this bad side of his and yet does the right thing. Let him be a hero but please make him interesting again.


    I admit, I never trusted Monroe, so his declaration to his son did not surprise me, but the timing (in the show) did surprise me. Again, I hope the writers will explore this more deeply and not just let it go as they have let go of other promising story lines (still want to know who was in the outhouse who was killed by Miles). The conflict between Monroe and Miles was wonderful to watch last season and I feel the show is struggling a bit this year because the conflict with the Patriots is really not a personal one (except for Tom but I couldn't care less about him).


    I agree with Bradley...Rachel needs to let go of the Danny argument. She obviously forgave Miles because he saved her and Charlie many times, so why can't she do the same thing with Monroe. I get it that she is in love with Miles (not a fan of this contrived love story), but Miles has done a lot of bad things to her as well, so harping on how awful Monroe is, while she is barely able to keep her hands of Miles doesn't make sense at all. Unless there is more going on between Rachel and Monroe (she was his prisoner for years after all and they did know each other before the blackout as well as mentioned in the first season), but if that is the case, the writers need to reveal it now before the Rachel/Monroe conflict becomes a caricature.

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  7. "Aaron’s trip than a ball of twine, but I like the idea of him following a ball of twine."


    I agree it's a nice metaphor for "unraveling a big mystery"!


    I disagree with your low point. Neville has provided a very nice subtext to what's happening with the other characters...In this episode I believe Jason finds another military reprogramming program, which most likely ties into "The Poisonous Fruit" aspect going in Texas (and ties back to a parallel with The Monroe Republic as they also experimented with psychotropic drugs. Theory: This might be why Miles thought Rachel was "dead")...Setting his jealousy (and seeing him finally really unnerved by something) aside, he's the one who's getting closer to The Patriot's President and potentially whom they really are. IMO Tom could end up being either one of the biggest Heros by seasons end, or one of the biggest villains, but I think with him we're always walking a dubious line of self righteousness...




    Really nice review, Chris! Really love this season!

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  8. It's always fun when the characters go a little dark, isn't it. ;) I'm guessing the show will flirt with the idea of Miles going a little dark, and he'll be drawn to it, but he won't do anything unredeemable. Charlie, however, looks like she's got some darkness ahead of her.


    I hope the show never goes in the direction of building more of a past between Rachel and Monroe. That would be jumping the shark territory. Building in a backstory with Miles when she was with his brother was one thing, but everyone can't be sleeping with everyone else. It gets to be too much at some point. Thanks for sharing your opinions.

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  9. When I wrote the twine line, I was thinking about Aaron being unhinged more so than a metaphor, but good point! That is a nice metaphor.


    I think we're going to have to agree to disagree about Neville and family. The show could present actions outside of the range of the main characters if they wanted without the Nevilles. They apparently have some plans for them though. I just find them a little too evil villain/cartoonish. I like my characters to be a little more relatable. I also think there's a little bit of overacting going on there too. Thanks for commenting! I'm enjoying the season too.

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  10. Well I think they just haven't launched the Neville redemption arc...I think season 1 is Miles, the end of season 1 and into season 2 is Rachel's, and the beginning of season two (up until now) is Monroe's. I'm hoping that the end of season 2's and/or the beginning of season 3 (should we so lucky) might we see Neville turn around, unless he becomes The Patriots new President or something...


    The only characters that sleep around a lot are Julia (Tom has been loyal the whole time, which is why this Julia thing is eating him alive...I don't think she's trust worthy, especially since it now seems everything he's done in his middle aged life has been about "proving" himself to her and not the other way...) and Monroe (and probably Conner). Everybody else I think either really hasn't or has a legitimate reason to have slept with whomever they have (Love, youth)

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  11. I like the episode, but I don't like Monroe's son storyline, looks boring and I think the patriots on the White House, the patriots on Willoughby and the nanobots plot was so much better.

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  12. I expect Connor to be brought into Monroe/Mathesons storyline soon, so I'm not too worried about anything there dragging the show down. It will be good to have new blood, and the casting chose was good. Connor could hold his own against Monroe, which should make things fun. I'm also still finding the nanobots interesting.

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  13. I expect this too, I don't have nothing against Connor (btw I like your argument), but I really hope the story go back to the patriots and nanobots plots.

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