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Tue
Oct 28 2008 11:09am
Heroes Eris Quod Sum episode review

Eris Quod Sum, “You will be what I am.” A quick Google search tells me that this phrase was part of a Horace maxim that was popular on Puritan gravestones as a way to provoke self-examination through the lens of mortality. There wasn’t much death in tonight’s episode, aside from the looming end-of-the-world threat, but there were a lot of characters looking closely at their alliances. And the title could work on another level, with Arthur Petrelli’s (Robert Foster) theft of several abilities, in addition to the treasure trove of abilities he took from Peter last week.

I enjoyed tonight’s episode. The pacing seemed on-point and even Peter’s scenes didn't bore me. What role will he play in the coming showdown between Pinehearst and Primatech, without his arsenal of cool tricks? Everyone seems to be working for the greater good, but good and evil are subjective terms. Sylar seemed to pick a side: as much as Arthur tried to woo him over to Pinehearst, he did save Peter from a fatal fall. Was it a sole act of kindness before Sylar murders Peter in the halls of Level 5, as Angela dreamt in the season opener? Either way, it was satisfying seeing Peter get tossed out a window.

My favorite scenes tonight were probably Claire and Elle’s (guest star Kristen Bell) journey to Pinehearst to regain control of their powers. This season, Heroes is really into buddy cop tropes. Elle, her electric powers on the fritz, is even more of an anxious flier than me. That near-plane crash was pretty damn scary and well-staged. Too bad Elle decided to stay at Pinehearst. The two blondes made the back-and-forth banter fun and Bell is especially good at portraying morally-conflicted characters.

Matt’s scenes didn’t make my eyes glaze over either. His conviction that he and Daphne have a future together was less stalker-ish this week and more sweet. You could see he’s winning Daphne over, even after her clever double cross. I also thought Matt was a bit creepy when he channeled some of his father and threatened Knox with his own fear. What would scare a man who feeds off of fear anyway?

Another potentially exciting development happened tonight. I was pissed that Maya wasn’t dead, but after Mohinder took her to Pinehearst and Arthur absorbed her lame power, I’m hopeful that when we saw her with her suitcase, she was packed for a permanent vacation from the show. Or at least for the remainder of this volume. Mohinder seems to have accepted that he will become a monster and agrees to continue his work on the formula and gain new test subjects.

There are still too many characters on this show. Nathan and Tracy are just kind of spinning their wheels. Tracy takes a consulting fee from Pinehearst and can reunite Nathan with his father, when the time is right—my guess is November sweeps. And Hiro and Ando are in Africa where Usutu (he has a name now!) is preparing the geeks for a less risky form of time travel through a spirit walk. Only Hiro has a bad reaction and it is revealed that Usutu has forced Hiro to travel to the past and stop the Villains before they can do harm. And now we have two weeks to wait for the next episode. It wasn’t quite an oh-my-god-I-can’t-wait cliffhanger, but the previews for the concluding part, and the flashes of cool guest stars (Eric Roberts, for one) have me excited.

Heroes airs Mondays at 9 P.M. EST on NBC.

8 comments
Sean Fagan
1. sef
Unless it was done so in the previews -- which I don't watch -- it was NOT "revealed Usutu has forced Hiro to travel to the past." His eyes went white, just like Mystery Sock and Usutu -- and Matt's.
Jason Pitzl-Waters
2. jasonpitzl
"Too bad Elle decided to stay at Pinehearst."

It made Elle seem completely mental. Oh look, someone just got thrown out a window and he's warning of great danger, guess I'll go in anyway. What?! Even if you don't care about this guy almost dying, surely anyone with some semblance of good sense would hesitate and rethink a bit, no?

It is a symptom of the bigger problem of this season. Everyone keeps changing their minds (and allegiances) on a dime. I'm good! No, I'm evil! But wait, really I'm good! I don't mind hidden motivations and double-crosses so long as they seem organic to the story and to the character, but this season just seems like the writers don't care about continuity (or logic) so long as everyone is lined up correctly for the mid-season break.
Theresa DeLucci
3. theresa_delucci
Usutu said he "chose Hiro's path for him." The paths discussed in the opening scene were Hiro's dilemma about going into the past or not. That's at least what I took out of it. Maybe it's a spiritual time travel thing. Who knows with this show anymore!
Melissa Ann Singer
4. masinger
I really hated the plane trip. It was a stupid thing that neither one of those young women thought about what untamed electricity might do to an airplane.

It felt like "writing for the sake of being able to do cool special effects," which I personally consider the kiss of death for this sort of tv show/movie.
Lena Vogelmann
5. kalafudra
It really was one of the better episodes - I hardly cursed myself for continuing to watch...

A man who feeds off fear is probably most afraid of either a world without fear (hence also the bad guy mode he's stuck in) or feeling fear himself as he had to kind of devoure himself. Or something... It would have been interesting to see that.

And why doesn't Matt listen to Daphne's thoughts? I mean, it's not like he's so sensitive about other people's thoughts at other times, is he? [Maybe he doesn't want to hear...]

I'm still waiting for the third Ali Larter sister - Barbara. [Plus, wasn't Jessica Niki's twin? So, there were four sisters, right?]

What struck me as odd was Usutu suddenly painting all these different people. Didn't he say in the first/second episode (right at the beginning anyway) that he only saw Matt's future? And suddenly there's Mohinder and Hiro and so on... Doesn't make sense...
Sol Foster
6. colomon
This episode was a let down for me. Part of it was what masinger points out -- it was amazingly stupid to take Elle on the plane. (And hey, how the hell did she get out to the Bennett's house, anyway?) And part of it was what Jason says -- I got sick of the shifting allegiances thing last season. The show as gone out of its way to make clear that both companies are evil, so which one you support seems pretty pointless in the big picture.

I guess my big complaint is that the episode really felt like the writers were just shuffling the pieces around to get them in place for whatever comes next. The only bit of storytelling that really felt to me like it was following the flow of the plot of the previous episodes was Matt's story. Everything else felt like "And then we came up with an arbitrary reason to move character A to location B."
David Lev
7. davidlev
I must have missed the revelation of the African's name, because I was planning on letting out a bit of a rant on how him being called the African and where he lived being "somewhere in Africa". Africa is the second biggest continent, people! Can't Tim Kring just pick a fucking country that Usutu comes from (I'm guessing South Africa, from what his accent sounds like to me, but perhaps someone from the region would be a better guesser than I).

I actually quite liked the plane ride, if only because finally it demonstrates how the fuck these characters are going from one side of the country to another in no time at all. I mean, didn't it take Hiro and Ando an entire season to get from Las Vegas to New York?

And I'm really liking Hiro, Ando, and Usutu's chemistry with one another. I could easily enjoy a show consisting of those three and Daphne and maybe Matt.

Finally, it ws pointed out to me last night that an enormous amount of female characters on the show are Blondes. Claire, Elle, Claire's mom, Daphne (altho her hair is really platinum), Meredith, Tracy, and probably one or two others. Maybe Tim Kring just has a thing for blondes?
- -
8. heresiarch
Jasonpitzel @ 2: "It is a symptom of the bigger problem of this season. Everyone keeps changing their minds (and allegiances) on a dime. I'm good! No, I'm evil! But wait, really I'm good!"

I know! Peter gets Sylar's power and he's going to be all evil...until he gets his powers sucked out by his dad. What a tease! Couldn't they bring themselves to having Peter cut open someone's head? I'm starting to think that Arthur must have some kind of super-persuasive ability, to get Sylar to join him. Come on--one story about how Angela really hated him, after all the love and care she's shown him, and he's convinced? He'd better be faking it.

I think the big mystery at this point is who caught Peter when he fell? Arthur or Sylar? Or are Peter's powers coming back a little?

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