Dig - Catch You Later and Meet the Rosenbergs – Recap and Review
Mar 24, 2015
CD Dig ReviewsFirst, apologies for missing last week’s review. I’m going to combine this recap of the latest episode with some recapping of the previous episode - which I think works as both were mostly plot-development, building to what looks like some fun times ahead from what I can tell of the previews. Dig is a 10-episode mini-series on USA Network.
Recap - Catch You Later and Meet the Rosenbergs
With the various shows I review, I tend to experiment a little and eventually settle into a style that fits the particular show. I’m finding "Dig" so plot intensive that even after a couple of watches, I’m still having to refer a lot to my notes to keep track of the various moving parts, so I’m going to try structuring these write-ups with a recap first.
We started Catch You Later with a refreshing bit of truth – even if what passed for truth was still only partial truths. FBI agent Peter Connelly had been caught by Jerusalem police in the apartment of murder victim Emma Wilson after chasing escaped robbery and murder suspect Yussef Khalid there. Connelly is starting to put together that Wilson and Khalid were connected (as was I, I didn’t initially recognize the apartment as Wilson’s).
While Connelly is still initially hiding from police detective Golan Cohen that he was the man with Wilson in a street photo from shortly before she died (which Cohen already has figured out, even though he hasn’t told Connelly that he knows yet), he does tell Cohen that he believes Wilson and Khalid are connected, and that Khalid had stolen a stone from him (Wilson had dropped it into his pocket). Cohen figures out that it was from the high priest’s breast plate that Khalid had stolen.
And in a follow up conversation with FBI supervisor Lynn Monahan, Connelly discloses that he was the man in the photo with Wilson. I liked that at least this part was confessed early and not dragged out to create forced tension. He tells Lynn that he knows it’s only a matter of time before Cohen identifies him in the photo, but he doesn’t want to get pulled off the case. We know it’s especially personal for him because Wilson reminds him of his daughter. Cohen, aware that Connelly is lying about knowing Wilson but wanting to keep him close because he is a suspect, agrees to release Connelly and continue to work with him. This subterfuge is gradually worn down as Connelly later in the episode admits to Cohen to being with Wilson, and the two law enforcement agents begin to establish a more truthful partnership.
The two follow clues left behind in Wilson’s journal to the Jerusalem Heritage Center, a location already under surveillance by the Israeli secret police and seeming to be a central location for those integral to the conspiracy, including Rabbi Lev, who we saw was present for the birthing of the red calf. The center displays a bible open to the Old Testament's Numbers 19, the verse about the red heifer prophecy. We also learn that Emma was having some of the calf's blood secretly tested and seemed to recognize what it meant.
As the shenanigans between Connelly and Cohen play out, we learn a couple of personal details about Connelly. His daughter, Vicky, had committed suicide a year and a half earlier, and Connelly had at one point studied to become a priest, dropping out three days before he was due to get his collar.
Meanwhile, in the cultist compound in New Mexico, we have Pastor Billingham confronting Debbie about her role in letting the original Josh (I’ll call him Josh 1 and the second, Josh 2) outside. In the pilot, we had learned that Josh’s feet were never supposed to touch the ground before his 13th birthday or else he'd become unpure. Debbie, however, had let him outside on a rooftop, and this taste of freedom inspired him to try to escape the compound. His adventure ended badly, as he was hunted down in the desert and killed by Faye.
Billingham somewhat threateningly reminds Debbie that she had seen things she was never supposed to see (the Josh 2 clone), and wants her to reaffirm her commitment to the cause. Josh 2 (unlike the first Josh who had a soul), successfully survives to his 13th birthday, manipulates Debbie into staying at the compound by playing the innocent victim, and then pretty cold-bloodily kills a baby calf that is part of the customized Bar Mitzvah ceremony Billingham has set up for him.
Billingham later sends Debbie and Faye out with Josh 2 to do something fun for the boy – to get him used to the world. They take him to a diner with video games where Debbie plots an escape. We learn that Debbie has a drug-use history (which explains how she ended up at the cultish compound), and that she has some good fighting moves as she takes down Faye in the bathroom to escape with Josh with a police officer. Not too surprisingly, it is revealed to be a set up when Billingham arrives to pick them up. What’s more surprising is that we see that Josh was complicit in the test, telling Billingham that he had predicted Debbie would fail.
In another part of the world, a stone believed to the last missing piece of the breast plate is stolen by from a collector’s gorgeous estate by a man who is part of a conspiracy that also includes U.S. Ambassador Ruth Ridell, and Rabbi Lev. They discover that the stone is a fake, so the whereabouts of the final stone is still unknown.
Finally, we follow the journey of Hasadic Jew Avram, who is on a challenging mission to transport the red calf from Norway to its end destination, which is as of yet, unclear. This journey apparently is a dangerous one, as those working with him are murdered, leaving him to accomplish it on his own. It is unclear who is hunting them. We last see Avram on a boat, appropriately named Enigma, headed toward Croatia.
Final Thoughts
If you like puzzles, this is a well-done complex show with a lot of moving pieces. It might be a lot to take in at first, but the pieces are slowly starting to come together as the series progresses. The show has a strong cast, interesting locales, and is doing a good job of mixing end-of-world, biblical prophecy with modern characters, politics, and suspense. I’ll probably have more to comment as more of the story becomes apparent, but for now I’m enjoying watching the mystery gradually unfold.
Let me know what you think of it in the comments.
I am trying hard to stay with this series as it has all the story elements that I like. But one refrain has me puzzled - we have Connelly quite often having incestuous mind flashes with the dead girl/ringer for the daughter who committed suicide. Are we supposed to assume that their relationship is why the daughter committed suicide perhaps ? Curious what you think because our hero is very flawed and is he being tested in some way?
ReplyDeletethanks for the review, it really helps a lot with plot intensive shows like this.
ReplyDeletejust a few nitpicks that might help with this complex puzzle: the conspiracy center is actually called Jerusalem Heritage Center and the man who is seen murdering the guard and stealing the stone is actually Khalid who dyed his hair and shaved earlier in the episode to conceal his identity. also the location of the collector's estate-the crusader fort, is still in Israel-remember Khalid just escaped from the consulate.
Thanks, you're totally right about the name of the center. I had that correct in my notes. I don't know why I changed it in rewriting it. I just corrected that. Thanks for clarifying that it was Khalid who broke into the estate. I was having a little trouble following that sub-story. Too many new faces.
ReplyDeleteThe way they're sexualizing the Peter/Emma relationship is bothering me. I have no idea where that is going yet, especially considering my gut reaction to their initial meet was that Emma was purposefully mimicking his daughter as some kind of set up. That's an interesting idea that there could be more to his personal storyline with his daughter's suicide, and even the calls to his wife. I'd also tie in the detail about him dropping out days before he was to become a priest.
ReplyDeleteThus far they have kept the story fairly grounded in the warped reality of earth bound fanatics from both sides of the religious war for domination. But if in the end the writers choose to go with some sort of mystical intervention, then Connelly might be being tested now by non earth bound power- again, if they are going to go that route ( as you mentioned, we know at one time he was going to be a priest) for a role as a sort of sacrificial savior. Or it could simply ( though nothing is simple about this story) be he has been set up by people who know his past - Anne Heche's character comes to mind as possibly someone manipulating him - she had an interesting look on her face as she listened to his phone call with his wife. I have no idea if divine or unholy intervention will figure in or if they will keep it simply a story about extreme fanatical believers, with both side doing bad things in the name of their cause.
ReplyDeletethanks for the review and l am also trying to stay with this show as there are a lot of elements that I would like in a deep supernaturalish/historical mystery plot as well as the cast, but the very slow and deliberate pacing in revealing clues to the direction of the plot has been tough to deal with, not to mention the odd bits of the main character having/visualizing a sexually intimate relationship with a victim who resembles his daughter is kind of disturbing. I just hope that we get some satisfying reveals fairly soon or I might have to either drop the show or put it off for catch up during the summer
ReplyDeleteThanks for commenting. If you keep watching, come back to these reviews and let me know what you think.
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