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Homeland - There's Something Else Going On - Review: "Too late?"

Nov 24, 2014

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Homeland keeps getting better with every week passing. “There’s Something Else Going On” had me on the edge of my seat, with my heart clenched. The episode was tense, emotional, beautiful and surprising all at once. And what an ending that was!

Last week, Carrie had a heart-rending decision to make, choosing between Saul’s life and his trust. She betrayed her friend, her mentor, breaking her promise to save his life, and Saul’s becoming what he despises, what he fears, a pawn in Haqqani’s grand scheme of things. He doesn’t want the prisoners exchanged, doesn’t want the war they’ve been fighting to take a step back on his account, and this week again, Mandy Patinkin was incredible in his portrayal of Saul.

The episode takes place during the hours leading to the prisoner exchange, Saul’s wife, who we haven’t hear from or about for a while now, season premier if I’m not mistaken, calls Carrie. She wants to make sure Carrie is on board with the task at hand, getting Saul back, alive. She wants to be sure Saul isn’t expendable in Carrie’s eyes. It’s nice to continue seeing the more human, less robot, mission oriented Carrie. Things are harder when you don’t see things in black and white, but in different shades of grey. It must be hard for Carrie to slowly understand how she’s being perceived, because she thought Mira would be relieved to learn Lockhart wasn’t the one to be orchestrating the exchange, but she wasn’t. Mira was afraid of what Carrie would do, wanted to make sure Carrie remembered the person Saul is, before the job, before the CIA, that he shouldn't be expendable.

“I’m talking about you. Carrie you’re so good. You’ve become so good, so professional. I know it make’s Saul proud, but before the CIA, I am asking you to remember just normal life, and that I love him, Saul, my husband, and I believe you do too. I’m begging you, don’t let him die.” – Mira

When finally, it’s time for the exchange, Carrie has her usual hunch that they’re missing something, that it doesn’t feel right. In a tense, where I almost stopped breathing moment, Saul is brought to the exchange rendezvous and hauled out of the car, along with a boy wearing a suicide vest.

Saul’s still in the same state of mine, he doesn’t want the exchange to happen, not on his watch, not if he can do anything with it. When he sees the five men in the orange jumpsuits start to march, he panics and as his breathing quickened, so did mine. He sits downs, him an the man with the detonator are both playing chicken, only Saul’s not bluffing, he’s not giving a f*ck as to what will happen to him, not caring the bomb will blow up, not caring he dies, that the boy dies, anyone dies.

Carrie’s the only one who has the possibility of getting through to Saul, so she goes to him, in a last effort to keep him alive, to keep the boy alive. And I seriously thought he was going to tell her to f*ck off, but when so much emotions are flying around, there’s not much place for grudges. He’s still mad, but Carrie can get through to him.

“And that makes it okay? Do you know who you sound like? Them. 14 years of war and this is what it’s come to? Asking a child to blow you up and bring you to kingdom come, and for what? For fucking what? This is not who we are, this is not who you are. Please. Please. Please, Saul. Just get up. Get up. God dammit get up. God dammit get up. Please. Please. No more dying.” - Carrie

Carrie’s not leaving without him, she already has too many deaths on her conscience, one more just might send her over the edge. This was possibly the best scene of the episode, emotion-filled, heart-breaking, and it brought tears in my eyes, I can’t be the only one! It’s finally Carrie’s “I want to go home” that does for Saul, and he gets up, puts one foot in front of the other and marches, with Carrie back to his people.

Another major bomb last week was Aasar Khan’s revelation to Carrie that he Dennis Boyd was the mole and as it seems tonight is the episode where it all falls together. They know it’s him, everyone does, even the Ambassador. They’re trying to break him one step at a time, because the ISI is planning something big, something of National proportion, something relating to National security. But he denies it, blow after blow until the explosion. I don’t understand why he got in bed with those people in the first place. They keep telling that it’s because Sandy and him were friends, and convinced him it was for the war effort, but it seems thin. Obviously, now he’s just in way over his head, and just wants to save his own *ss, but why did he join their forces to begin with?

“What the f*ck? What the f*cking f*ck?” - Lockhart

This ending shocked me completely, I wasn't expecting any of that. It was… wow, rendered me speechless. Saul, Carrie and the convoy bringing them back to the embassy is bombed. All the cars seem completely toast, how are they going to get out of this? Killing Brody was bold, but killing off Carrie AND Saul, that’s suicide. The American military is sent to the site.

Carrie has had a theory about Haqqani and his greater plan, that it all started way before Saul got kidnapped, that it involves Sandy, the wedding, the drone strikes in some way. She knows there’s something they’re missing. Is that why they wanted her out in the first place, poisoned her so she would lose her credibility? Because she’s good, sees things other people don’t and that would threaten their ultimate plan? I’m still unclear as to how everything from the first episodes connect with this, but with this episode, Haqqani’s bigger agenda is revealed. The prisoner exchange, it was a distraction, a red herring. With the military out of the embassy, out to help the convoy, he’s going to overturn it, take back control, through the tunnels. Did Dennis’ confession come in too late?

“Now, by the grace of God, we will strike the heaviest blow at the crusaders who occupy our country. How long have they flown over our homes, bombed our weddings and funerals, murdered our women and children? We will drive them from our skies. We will show their crimes to the world. This man, Saul Berenson, chief of the CIA, he, by the grace of God, will bring us back our brothers. They will march with us to Kabul, and raise the flag of God over our country again.” - Haqqani



Sorry for the lack of dialoging last week. I’d love to hear you thoughts about the episode!
Am I the only one that would like a little more of Quinn?

20 comments:

  1. Yeah great review and awesome episode!


    I'm hoping Quinn pulls a "Harrow" from Boardwalk Empire on the terrorists and locks down the building in style.

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  2. Thank you, it was such an awesome episode!
    Please enlighten me as to this Boardwalk Empire reference, I haven't seen the show! (Should I?)

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  3. Saul and Carrie's car looked pretty freaking messed up. I think she made an attempt at getting out of the car before they were hit....at least I'm assuming they were as they can't kill the star of the show!! Damn tense episode...

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  4. What did Saul actually say on the phone just before the cars blew up...was it "it's me" or "it's ready"? Was it really Mira on the phone?

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  5. Heart-stopping episode. And, beneath the tension of Terrorists carrying out an attack, the writers are weaving a very important morality tail: with Carrie (of all people) being the voice of Sanity. While Saul is showing how, in the heat of battling evil, you can quickly lose your moral compass.


    Bottom line: this season of Homeland has achieved the impossible--a complete change of direction. And it's clearly in John Le Carre territory. And doing it quite well.

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  6. I'm not sure what Saul said--we'll probably get a repeat of the scene next week. And, my best guess is that it was not his wife on the phone--it was a Terrorist using the pone connection to pinpoint the Saul was indeed in the car.

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  7. That was a great episode, one of the best I've seen in a long time from homeland.

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  8. If you haven't seen the show, the context is tricky. But he's a bad-ass assassin/ex-Military dude who completely pwns an entire house of "bad guys." The entire show kinda built up his persona in a similar way as Homeland has with Quinn so the parallel popped out at me.

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  9. Yeah, they can't kill Carrie off.
    Good thing neither of them was wearing their seat belt. I hope both got out, but that's a little ambitious, isn't it?

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  10. He said "It's me," Saul would never get involved in a plan like that. I agree with @Derek117 it probably wasn't even Mira on the phone, because if it really was, that's one hell of a coincidence!

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  11. Carrie becoming the voice of Sanity is as weird as it is welcome. It's a really interesting development for her character and it's a lot easier to care for and root for human Carrie. Saul loosing his true north, was heart-breaking. I can't yet believe their journey together is over, they both survived, right?


    Completely agree, Homeland's done an incredible job with the change of direction!

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  12. It was, and I've keep thinking that for the past few episodes, hopefully it continues on that path for next few!

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  13. I would love to have Quinn, the bad*ss back, and be a bigger presence in the next few episodes! But I kind of thought he'd be the first to rush to Carrie, was he in the command room with Lockhart at the end of the episode?


    Maybe I'll give it a try, there aren't many shows where the series finale left me satisfied (No, haven't watched Breaking Bad, yet! I've heard the finale is a must see.)

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  14. Harrow was my favorite BE character. Ironically, he was the moral center of that series.

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  15. Great review!

    Lockhart pretty much summed it up. The worst part of this episode was finding out that there's not a new episode for another two weeks ahah! There was so much tension built around the prisoner exchange. When they got into the vans, I'd finally let out a sigh of relief. Then they all got hit. I'm stunned.

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  16. It's veering way too close to 24 territory for my liking (going so far as to steal from season 7's White House break in).

    I seriously hope they don't go with the ultimate cliche of somebody sacrificing themselves for the greater good.

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  17. That was a different car with the doors opening. People in that car are toast for sure.

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  18. You think they're all dead? I mean seeing the state of the cars, it's possible, but how could the show possibly go on with all the leads, dead?

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  19. Thank you!
    I agree the deceiving part of the episode was knowing we had to wait two weeks to see the conclusion of this major cliffhanger. Lockhart's lines have been brief yet incredibly accurate for the part few episodes, they're is no better way to put it!

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  20. I'm pretty sure Homeland has already done the sacrificing himself for the greater good bit. Wasn't this what Brody's action were about in season three's finale? Although he was pushed by the need for redemption also.

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