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The 100 - We Are Grounders Part 1 - Review: "Betrayal, killing and sacrifices"

9 Jun 2014

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The 100 is ending its freshman season with a two-part finale called "We Are Grounders", the first of which aired this past Wednesday while the second part is airing in two days.

Part 1 basically set things up for the finale, which I believe is going to be huge and which has been hyped as such. Honestly speaking, there was nothing spectacularly huge in this episode (e.g. explosions or deaths), and yet it was a very solid hour.

So what exactly happened? On the Ground, we pick up after the cliffhangers in episode 11. Bellamy and Raven have returned to camp, without Monty, Clarke and Finn. While we have to wait another week to find out what happened to the former one, we find Clarke recaptured by the Grounders. Anya is dethroned by Commander Tristan who came from somewhere else, and he orders Clarke's death. Fortunately, our heroine is saved by none other than Lincoln, who had also rescued Finn. The three start running from the rest of the Grounders as they have discovered Lincoln's betrayal.

Back at camp, Murphy continues his revenge by killing yet another guy (though I can't remember what he had to do with Murphy's hanging). An unfortunate Jasper witnesses this event, and Murphy takes him hostage and locks them up in the dropship. Bellamy offers to trade himself for Japser, as Bellamy knows Murphy wants revenge on him. As Murphy taunts Bellamy, Jasper and Raven work to free him. When the door of the ship finally opens, Murphy has hanged Bellamy and attempts to escape. The 100's leader is, of course, not dead as he gaspes for air. Murphy exits the ship by blowing a hole in it, thereby once again escaping death.

Meanwhile, Clarke, Finn and Lincoln run into a cave to get rid off their pursuers. As Clarke and Finn wonder why the Grounders don't want to follow them, Lincoln gives them the reason: Reapers. These people appear to be cannibals who eat other humans. Lincoln sacrifices himself so Clarke and Finn can make it back to camp. However, one Reaper has apparantly stayed behind, and he attacks Clarke. Finn has no choice but to kill him, making this his first official kill. They later talk about this, and Finn admits he loves Clarke. She rejects him and tells him it's too late. They eventually make it back to camp, and after they tell their story, Bellamy makes a speech about how they should fight because this is their ground now so they are Grounders. Clarke agrees, but tells them they should run if they want to survive. As the 100 get ready for war, an apparantly wounded Raven comes from the dropship.

Things are not much better on the Ark, which is running out of time as Jaha tells them they have 51 hours left to live. Our newfound hero Kane cannot accept this and desperately searches for a solution. Abby suffers a nervous breakdown as she operates on a patient who resembles Clarke, and Abby realizes she is gonna die with her daughter blaming her for her father's death. Jaha gets all sentimental by opening a bottle that was supposed to be opened on Earth and watching videos of a young Clarke and Wells. But suddenly, he gets an Eureka moment and tells the others his survival plan: using the Ark to get to Earth. While 95% of the Ark will be destroyed, the remaining 5% has a possibility to make it. Will they make it?

As I said there was nothing that really stood out in particular this episode besides the amazing performances (as always). Special credits go to Bob Morley and Richard Harmon for their intense standoff, and to Thomas McDonell and Eliza Taylor for their little romantic talk. And director Dean White, who has also directed the finale, made my heart pound with all these dark, scary and intense scenes.

By the way, did you all notice that the horse on which Clarke and Lincoln were riding, was a mutant? Personally, I did not see it but was made aware of that after a tweet by Jason Rothenberg. It is easy to forget that we have seen a mutant deer before. There is so much we still don't know about this planet and I'm hoping we will get to explore this more in season 2!

What did you think of this episode? Did you enjoy the performances I mentioned? What do you think is going to happen in the finale? Check here for a promo of the finale, and then tell me your opinions and predictions!



About the Author - Daniel
Daniel (Veer95) is a Dutch university student studying Psychology. On SpoilerTV he is a reviewer of NCIS, Crisis and The 100. He also likes to watch Arrow, The Tomorrow People, NCIS: LA, Nikita, The Blacklist, Under the Dome, Intelligence and Hostages.

9 comments:

  1. Am I the only one who thinks Finn had the worst timing ever? The love-admitting scene felt forced in that moment for me, specially given that they had to get to camp on time to warn the others.

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  2. No!! I think Finn has a terrible, bad timing through the whole season.

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  3. TheShiftyShadow10 June 2014 at 11:49

    I think maybe given what they'd just been through, being captured, nearly killed, chased through the mines, witnessing the Reapers' stockpile of humans he maybe saw this one brief moment of quiet as a good time? They were heading back to tell their friends they're all probably about to die and at best head off into the scary unknown so it's not looking good for finding a better time to do it.

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  4. Thank you! And I can't wait either! Only one and a half day or so before it airs!


    I agree that Finn needs another storyline besides the romance. He has got plenty of skills, let him use these.

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  5. EuphemiaWonderland10 June 2014 at 13:48

    I agree. It's probably one of the things that doesn't annoy me about his character.

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  6. Actually it was the only thing nearly shocked me in the episode. She was talking all about killing someone, Finn turned it into his feelings about Clarke. It sure could wait a little more when there were people they had to warn.

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  7. My thoughts exactly. It was a brief moment only but it took me out of what was happening and made me think about the writing, that's not a good thing in my opinion.

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  8. I think then he shouldn't have done it then, I'm not against Finn nor against couples but I believe it shouldn't be the most important thing in the show and if they followed that path there wouldn't really be a need for him to say that before danger, it didn't look like something that was going to affect the plot (maybe I'm wrong cause we still have an episode left) and took me by surprise, it felt a little unnecesary to me, but it was only a moment, I really like the episode but I just keep hoping they don't fall into temptation of going more CW-ish (all about the romance no importance to the plot besides that).

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  9. TheShiftyShadow10 June 2014 at 21:16

    To be fair I think they've actually been quite good with putting the romance on the back burner. Clarke and Finn haven't really interacted properly a lot since Raven arrived. They waited two episodes after Raven ended it with Finn for him to say anything to Clarke. I hate shows that put romances to the fore as much as anyone but it's not believable to ignore them completely either.
    As far as I can see this was the only opportunity for Finn to say something, the alternative being that he doesn't mention it at all again this season, which given how it's kind of been there throughout, even if only in very small doses, doesn't seem right either.
    You never know, it may have some impact on the last episode. We'll have to wait and see.

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