ONTD

11:42 pm - 12/04/2012

Homeland Round-Up: Vulture Review, A Video Montage of Chris Brody & Showtime Holiday Party



The first season of Homeland was a pristine ode to TV greatness. There was action and intrigue, plus a compelling romance. A crazy wall! A beard! America! Claire Danes and Damian Lewis won acting Emmys, the show won for Best Drama — there was no stopping it. Until "State of Independence," the second season's third episode, which found Brody enmeshed in a baffling scheme to kill the bomb-building tailor, which ended with him in the woods, talking to his wife on a cell phone while murdering an old man. It was a weird stumbling block for a show that had been so efficient and aggressive up to that point — but the following week's "New Car Smell" seemed to get everything back on track. All was forgiven; sometimes there's only one person who can go into the woods and kill an old man, maybe.

Until this week.

"Broken Hearts" doesn't seem to be anyone's favorite episode of Homeland. New York Magazine critic Matt Zoller Seitz found it unsatisfying but not deal-breakingly so ("I had misgivings about it, and about the episode as a whole — which isn’t the same thing as disapproving of it," he wrote). Others found it completely disastrous. But a lot of the outrage — or at least a lot of the bellyaching on Twitter — isn't just about Homeland.

It's about every show that ever disappointed us, particularly great ones. The shows we TV obsessives raved about, dissected — and then stuck with as they unraveled. "Give Homeland the benefit of the doubt," people say. But I can't, because I'm completely out of benefits of the doubt. I have distributed all of my get-out-of-plot-jail-free cards over the years, and I learned to regret it. I have seen Fire Walk With Me. I kept watching Prison Break after the first season. I stuck with 24 through way too many resurrections. I tried to invest in Agent Spender on The X-Files, and I really gave Nikki and Paulo a shot on Lost. I know better now, I think. Fool me once, television, shame on you. Fool me many times over the course of adolescence and adulthood, even though this is supposed to be an avenue for pleasure and entertainment? Shame on me for not having a more full life, I guess. But also, never again. (I mean, I'll still watch every episode with hope in my heart. But not as much hope and not as much heart.) When things seem like they're going south, they usually are.

"Broken Hearts" is only the show's 22nd episode; that's only one season's worth of network TV. It's way too soon for this show to start to suck. And to be fair, it doesn't suck suck. Carrie, Brody, and Saul are three of TV's more interesting characters, and Abu Nazir's slowly enunciated Nhee-koo-laaahs belongs in the TV-bad-guy hall of fame. But Homeland was supposed to aspire to more than not suck sucking. It was our Next Great Show, the one the Internet would devote itself to post–Breaking Bad, with the alluring action and violence Mad Men tends not to provide. It says something about America and the world! And then … this. It's season two of Twin Peaks all over again. The post-BOB part.

On top of "State of Independence" and Dana and Finn Walden's horrendously conceived hit-and-run story line, "Broken Hearts" is another surprising shortcoming in season two. But it's also a more important one, and a more damning one because it rejects the show's fundamental premise. Homeland is a show about surveillance more than it's a show about crime-fighting or terrorism or love, even. It's a show that explores what happens to us when we observe people, how surveilling Brody changed Carrie, say, or how Dana accidentally observing her father praying affected their relationship in ways neither would have predicted. It's a show that references constantly how much surveillance we're all under, on security cameras in stores, on the subway, at traffic lights, at hotels, and how there's an observer effect at play in modern American life. But "Broken Hearts" relied on a shocking lack of surveillance: Brody, a known former abettor of terrorists whom the CIA plans to kill, not only had his phone tap removed, but nobody followed him when he went to talk to the vice-president at his residence, which was shockingly unmonitored. The plot holes and leaps of logic drop the show's central conceit.

That's why this is not Tyra and Landry in the second season of Friday Night Lights, though that comparison has been floating around a bit. FNL was a show about manhood and maturity, about the social contracts under which we protect each other, about being a teenager and being a parent and being a family. As tonally off-base as the murder cover-up was, that didn't fundamentally violate the worldview of the show. (And I will say that the story line seems way, way less egregious upon repeated viewings of the series; a misstep, sure, but not a catastrophe.)

Plenty of great shows have off episodes, or episodes that seem pretty unrealistic. Take the train-heist episode on last season's Breaking Bad, "Dead Freight." Plausible? Jeez, not really. But BB has built up five seasons of impenetrable good will, and it's in its swan-song phase. "Freight" closed with Todd shooting a random child — shocking, yes, but totally in keeping with the show's through line that everyone you meet is both more evil and more complicated than you expect. Carrie running back into the warehouse at the end of "Broken Hearts" played into the through line that she's reckless to the point of stupidity. There's a certainty to where Breaking Bad is going, and there's far, far less certainty about where Homeland could be headed. Can you build a successfully suspenseful show that goes for years on end without either completely reinventing itself or completely dropping the ball at some point? Sure. But no one has yet.

It seemed for a minute there like Homeland was maybe going to be that show. And maybe it still will be, and this episode was just intentionally contrived and it's actually all part of the plan. I hope that's true! I hope there's something completely and shockingly redeeming on the horizon, and I hope Homeland gallops through its next few episodes on a golden beast of dramatic wonders. But what's that called when you do the same thing and expect different results? Oh right. Being a TV fan.

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Watch As Homeland’s Sad Chris Brody Is Always Asked to Leave the Room

While Homeland fans viciously debate the plausibility of recent plot events from this season and the likeability of world champion eye-roller Dana Brody, we've been paying attention to her little brother, Chris, a character with even less screen time than Max or Galvez. It seems that whenever Chris is in a scene, he is promptly asked to get out so that the grownups can talk about affairs, terrorism, the CIA, the dead person weighing on his sister's conscience ... you know, the usual. With all his exits laid end to end in this video, it's clear that Chris is the real victim on this show, not the vice-president.


Video won't embed so click the image above.

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How Abu Nazir Found Christmas


A scary thing happened at Showtime’s Holiday soiree up in the hills. After bingeing on turkey, I was enjoying a cup of hot cocoa (topped with little marshmallows, of course) when I spotted a good-looking gent by the pool. We made eye contact. I smiled, he smiled and we both nodded cordially to one another. Why did he look so familiar? I took a sip and then wiped the marshmallow fluff off the end of my nose. Sweet, fancy, moses. I got the goose bumps—and it wasn’t from the fake snow that was being pumped in from the trees.

I was face to face with Abu Nazir.

There was the terrorist leader who turned Sergeant Nicholas Brody into a would-be suicide bomber—the one the CIA was looking for—right there by the pool. And he was wearing … a Christmas sweater? If you watch Showtime’s Homeland, you know what I’m talking about. If you don’t, you should (boatloads of Emmys) because Navid Negahban (24, Lost) is superbly spooky in his role as terrorist mastermind Abu Nazir. Everyone at the to-do kept coming up to him and patting him on the back and someone hollered to no one in particular, “Nicest guy … ever!” Carrie, Brody, and Saul (Claire Danes, Damian Lewis and Mandy Patinkin) were no shows but Brody’s wife Jessica (Morena Baccarin) did show up for a mingle.

I look forward to Showtime’s party each year. It reminds me of (let’s get into the way back machine) the end of the 1985 movie Rustler’s Rhapsody (a parody of Westerns starring Tom Berenger and Sela Ward). At the end of the flick all the cowboys get together for a bbq, even the ones who have been shot and killed during the course of the movie. Like Rhapsody, most of the actors from each Showtime program are usually in attendance at their Holiday party, even the ones who have met their demise on their respective shows. So you find yourself eating bread pudding with Isaak (Ray Stevenson), who dramatically bled to death aboard Dexter’s boat this season. Also in attendance: Oliver Stone, William Macy, and Michael C. Hall. Thanks for the invite Showtime. Two more episodes of Homeland before the season ends. Now I just need to hang up and call the CIA and inform them that Nazir was last spotted at a home in Beverly Hills drinking cider.



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kerrence 5th-Dec-2012 05:24 am (UTC)
I still love Homeland but Chris is there to say HI DAD and that's about it
deftonedpiano 5th-Dec-2012 06:05 am (UTC)
"Hi, Dad, I'm incredibly awkward and oblivious and trying to earn your love!" Every time he's on screen, I cringe.
hpxstac 5th-Dec-2012 06:41 am (UTC)
LOL! This is so accurate.
railway 6th-Dec-2012 12:20 pm (UTC)
HI DAD IT'S ME CHRIS I HAD TO SAY THAT BECAUSE YOU WOULDN'T RECOGNIZE MY VOICE GIVEN THAT YOU HAVEN'T SEEN ME SINCE I WAS AN INFANT DESPITE BEING HOME FROM CAPTIVITY ABOUT A YEAR NOW WHAT OKAY I'LL PUT DANA ON NOW BYE.
hrhobo 5th-Dec-2012 05:26 am (UTC)
brody, if you're gonna keep neglecting chris, he's gonna rebel against you and join the CIA while being a successful and competent terrorist. cuz this is what happens in all the stories when you love a boy who isn't your son while forgetting about your real son.
dirkismyhomeboy 5th-Dec-2012 05:26 am (UTC)
I wish the Brody family (sans Nick) would pack up with Uncle Mike and go away forever. They are all so annoying and boring.
deftonedpiano 5th-Dec-2012 06:05 am (UTC)
I HATE THEM ALL
hpxstac 5th-Dec-2012 06:42 am (UTC)
OMG YES!
waxandstrings 5th-Dec-2012 08:55 am (UTC)
I don't mind them, but would be for it if they took Nick with them
she_rockstar 5th-Dec-2012 03:36 pm (UTC)
I don't mind the cheesy plot contrivances, but the Brodys + Mike have got to GO NOW. Nick doesn't need them anymore.
kerrence 5th-Dec-2012 05:30 am (UTC)
tbh if brody doesn't die, just cancel the show
i'm a huge fan but where the hell can his character possibly go
expromqueen 5th-Dec-2012 05:36 am (UTC)
if quinn kills brody and there is carrie/quinn sexy conflict as a result i would be so happy hehe
ms_mmelissa 5th-Dec-2012 05:38 am (UTC)
Brody should have died during the season 1 finale like he was supposed to. I hate that they built up to that moment and didn't do it.
deftonedpiano 5th-Dec-2012 06:06 am (UTC)
I read something in EW that Brody WAS supposed to die but they liked Damian Lewis too much or something.

anyway.


Yeah. Brody needs to die. I wish that vest detonated.
nene718 5th-Dec-2012 06:21 am (UTC)
he's the face of the show now so I don't think they will :(
waxandstrings 5th-Dec-2012 08:56 am (UTC)
Seriously. There is nowhere for them to take him, and I really need this plot wrapped up and not dragged out for another season, so he can die. But I'm sure he won't
rlmoonyk 5th-Dec-2012 05:28 am (UTC)
I gave up on this show weeks ago. It just wasn't holding my interest
oatmealmonster 5th-Dec-2012 05:29 am (UTC)
I still like the show but definitely prefer the first season. I get the disappointment but I think it is sort of a natural thing that happens. The show loses its luster because of age and writing, not just writing alone. It is no longer new and exciting but we still want it to be. I don't think the ball has been dropped yet--if Brody doesn't die... that is when I know this show has no clue what it is doing.
nene718 5th-Dec-2012 06:22 am (UTC)
yeah but that process usually takes a few seasons, not the effing 2nd season. the fact that it's regressed so quickly is worrisome.
oatmealmonster 5th-Dec-2012 06:33 am (UTC)
True but I don't really think they could have successfully extended the first season much more because the show relies so heavily on suspense. Either way it would have gotten a little extravagant. If the seasons were something like 16 episodes then that would change it but these premium cable shows have a tendency to have very closed/concise seasons with themes and stuff so they wouldn't allow it to roll into the next arc mid-season. We would have had season 1 expanded into 2 by that structure and that is way too much.
oatmealmonster 5th-Dec-2012 06:30 am (UTC)
Also: The line about Brody being unmonitored in Walden's office doesn't even make sense because the only people that know Brody is a terrorist are Saul, Carrie, etc. Everyone else believes he is a stand up guy helping the CIA. It would make sense for his handler people to not monitor him so closely and Saul & Co didn't even know he was leaving the safe house.
ediesedgwick 5th-Dec-2012 03:13 pm (UTC)
idk, the show is frequently compared to breaking bad, and that show managed to last 4 seasons+a couple episodes before it started to fizzle a bit.

I really have no idea where the show is going for this finale which is not a good thing... if the writing was stronger you'd know approx where everyone would end up by the end of the season, but not know exactly how it was gonna get there. It feels like they were making the second half of this season up as they went along, not that they had a planned story arc that they were working within.
estella7 5th-Dec-2012 05:32 am (UTC)
I'm still disappointed in LOST and Prison Break. I hold grudges.
brokenseas 5th-Dec-2012 05:33 am (UTC)
Honestly if Brody doesn't die, I don't get where the story will go. I am not interested in any extension of his story beyond this season. The best parts of the last two eps have been the random CIA shit, not the Brody/Carrie stuff
boweeko 5th-Dec-2012 05:33 am (UTC)
Kill Brody and move on to other storylines duh. Simple fix.
minderbinder 5th-Dec-2012 05:35 am (UTC)
Killing off one of the leads (and an Emmy-winning one at that) really isn't that simple.
lovelyeli 5th-Dec-2012 05:46 am (UTC)
game of thrones does it all the time..maybe im just jaded now idk lol.
welurklate 5th-Dec-2012 07:09 am (UTC)
No, it is. Carrie is the center of the show. This is Carrie's story. Another season of Bordy would be a complete MESS.
minderbinder 5th-Dec-2012 05:34 am (UTC)
Vulture has been on the ball lately in terms of their original pieces. Loving it, Vulture!

And I don't think I've mentioned this, but I love everything you post OP. :)
aglows 5th-Dec-2012 05:36 am (UTC)
Aww thanks! I wanted to post a bunch of reviews from the previous episode, including this conspiracy theory on Brody that was really interesting, but it would have been a whole lotta text! Lol.

I don't know if ONTD would have appreciated that!
brokenseas 5th-Dec-2012 05:38 am (UTC)
What conspiracy theory bb?
minderbinder 5th-Dec-2012 05:39 am (UTC)
That sounds super interesting, tbh. Do you have a link? You can always link it in the post.
headswillroll88 5th-Dec-2012 05:35 am (UTC)
I literally only watch this show for Carrie. I never liked Brody as a character, he's so annoying.
brokenseas 5th-Dec-2012 05:36 am (UTC)
"Chris, a character with even less screen time than Max or Galvez"

What is this Max/Galvex shade? Why would you even mention them in the same sentence as the Brody child?!
expromqueen 5th-Dec-2012 05:43 am (UTC)
max is one of my favorite characters hehe...him and virgil are so awesome. i don't even care that max gets little screentime cause i feel like when he does get it, it's always quality
brokenseas 5th-Dec-2012 05:47 am (UTC)
He and Virgil are basically the only efficient person working at the CIA rn. You never see them dropping the ball or fucking things up. He's even out there snapping pics of black ops agents while driving.
everythngintime 5th-Dec-2012 05:38 am (UTC)
For me the first season was so good because I had such mixed feelings about Brody. I loved him and hated him at the same time. It seemed like he had more of a conscious then. It was ~complex. Now I feel like he is just becoming super high-strung (understandably, I guess) and shallow.

I also enjoyed Carrie's ups and downs during the first season and watching her be vulnerable. Speaking of Carrie I wish there was much more of a build up and tension between her and Nazir. Like, they skipped all of her getting "kidnapped" and just cut right to her being tied up. I guess they have to edit but I wanted more.

At least Sal is consistently flawless!
minderbinder 5th-Dec-2012 05:40 am (UTC)
Yeah, I didn't really feel her frustration at having the man she had devoted so much of her life to right in front of her with the tables turned. I wanted more out of that situation, but hopefully we'll get it next week.
saintssin 5th-Dec-2012 05:44 am (UTC)
They need to get rid of Brody and his family. I love them, but eh. There's really no place for them in the series anymore.
expromqueen 5th-Dec-2012 05:38 am (UTC)
i feel like brody dying would be a good way for the season to end, but idk if they have the balls to do it
jaimelannister 5th-Dec-2012 10:43 am (UTC)
I really hope they do it.
blooms_lady 5th-Dec-2012 05:39 am (UTC)
is this show worth watching during my winter break? I plan to do nothing
lovelyeli 5th-Dec-2012 05:48 am (UTC)
yesss

this season it's gotten a bit "wtf"..but overall it's great to marathon imo.
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