Now we see but a poor reflection as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known. - 1 Corinthians 13:12
Alright. So last week was a bit of a feint. 01 didn’t give Charlie 12 reasons not to kill him. But he gave him one. One, excellent reason summed up by Karl: “01 Boxer, that sick bastard, has done more to hurt Vexcor than either one of us.”
Of Human Bondage
More than a clip show, this episode is partially constructed from pieces of the first half of the series, reexamined through 01’s perspective. We obviously can’t trust his version of events completely and neither does Charlie, but with enough clarification, enough physical abuse, and enough filtering, we all come to a better understanding of 01’s motivations and machinations. But it all starts in bondage.
Bondage is everywhere it seems. Charlie’s got 01 tied up to get information out of him.
Jasmine has a client tied up for his pleasure in pain. No one gets exactly what they want out of this episode - excepting maybe 01 who seems to enjoy playing with Charlie - but everyone gets something.
While Charlie and 01 dance about finding nuggets of truth amid the pile of lies he spews, Jasmine deals with a surly client. So surly, in fact, that she finally brains him, imagining him as Jobbo. It looks like she’ll get off the streets one way or another; she calls Sew Sew.
Things turn out a little better for Charlie. He learns more about his enemy, realizes he has an ally - if an unstable and unreliable one - in 01, and even gets let off the hook on Katie Grayle a little.
Things turned out perfectly for 01, of course. Not only did he get sprung from jail, but he got tied up and beat up by Charlie. Next time, it’ll be his turn to tie Charlie.
The Secrets of 01 Boxer
Last week we saw Charlie pull 01 out of Blues’ hands right ahead of Vexcor security. We spent a few minutes and saw a few glimpses of the interrogation but never learned anything. This week we learn a great deal, though there are still a lot of questions about what’s real and what’s not.
01 believes Essa is driving the company to ruin and to commit terrible acts. Her hubris and vanity are forcing progress on the link to proceed at a calamitous pace. This is true in both the storybook version 01 tells - himself neatly attired in too-short pants, a jacket and tie, and his hair combed down like a child’s - and later versions which we recognize as closer to “the truth”.
Katie Grayle wasn’t a random innocent, but a Vexcor employee. 01 certainly used her as a pawn in his game, but she wasn’t pulled from the dance floor for no reason. More importantly, 01 didn’t kill her. Vexcor killed at, on Essa’s orders.
Krogg wasn’t killed for publishing his memo about the danger of the link; Krogg was killed to keep Vexcor from reestablishing the link. 01’s actions at every turn have been calculated to slow Vexcor. Without Krogg or a functioning link to transport other scientists through from Alpha, Beta had to struggle to make any progress at all. That was further impacted by 01’s assault on the temporary link in the dry cleaners.
The Men in Gray suits are working in the shadows, controlling everything. They suppressed Krogg’s memo, they killed Krogg, and they killed Krogg’s girlfriend. But wait. Those are lies, aren’t they? 01 killed Krogg. So what of the Gray Men? 01 has obviously seen them and knows more about them than he’s letting on, but what exactly their motivations are and where they come from will remain a mystery for now.
Note how 01 keeps common threads and phrases throughout his various flavors of the truth. In particular and most poignant is Essa’s line: repeated when she’s the floozy to 01’s good son; when she’s the corporate master; and finally, when she’s the face of evil, ordering the death of Katie Grayle.
I will do anything it takes to protect the integrity of this company. The company is everything.
Cutting the Red Wire
Reena finds Norman Ord in the boardroom, covering his tracks before taking off. One of the dozens of Vexcor employees in Beta slipping further out of the company’s grasp, Ord is responsible for toxic dumping. When Reena catches him - as she was surely waiting for him to make his move - she gives him two choices. She can either finger him to Vexcor security, or he can give her all the documents she wants on the company’s illegal dumping activities. He chooses the latter.
When he attempts to send the file, security protocols lock down the room and a bomb hidden under the conference table starts ticking down.
Ticking down? Really? Ticking out loud so Reena can hear it?
Either the bomb is the most sloppy device ever, or Reena planted it earlier. Which one of those do y’all think it is? Which one makes it easier for Reena to choose the right wire? Which one makes more sense when you realize that the explosives in the bomb don’t come from Alpha, Beta, or Gamma?
Yeah, I’m not sure what to make of that either. Somehow, Reena planted a bomb using materials she shouldn’t even have access to, found it, and disarmed it. Think it through and provide your best guesses (people who’ve read ahead are not allowed to participate.)
Final Thoughts
Charlie and 01 are now (sort of) allied against Vexcor. In that 01 knows far more than he’s letting on, this is a very uneven relationship and neither safe nor comfortable for Charlie. He still doesn’t have answers to his questions, though it might be that the answers he does have are for better questions.
Reena’s moving forward on her mission to destroy Vexcor from the inside, but considering how she reacted to the bomb, I’m not sure it’s completely *her* mission. Consider the flashback she had to when she was momentarily content with the world, walking down the street and eating ice cream. Strolling and smiling, Reena came across a Vexcor construction site and her mood and demeanor changed instantly. She’s been on this mission since that moment. Why? And who planted the bomb she disarmed? And how did she know which wire to pull?
Who is Reena?
What did everyone else think?
R.A. Porter is an aspiring television writer who currently toils away in the software mines. He can be found at his personal blog and stalked on Twitter.





I agree it was a clip episode, which was frustrating. Even if I buy that he wants to keep Beta from re-establishing the link, I can't buy that it's for purely altruistic motives. Was that proof on Katie Grayle? Essa gave the order, but who carried it out?
I have no idea what's going on with Reena. Everthing I thought I knew about her has been chucked out the window. It's almost like they are re-writing her charcter. Hopefully this will make more sense soon.
Overall, I found this episode to be a pretty disappointing followup from last week.
This was the “bottle” episode they needed for budgetary reasons, but it also served as a clip show edited to show 01's motives were more altruistic than Charlie believed. It also finally got those two crazy kids together. It was magic! I guess the new writing team felt more exposition was necessary. The first half of the season was just too opaque. Cool, but opaque.
I don't know what the heck is going on with Reena, but the stuff about the Men In The Gray Suits plus Ren's claim that the bomb had materials not of any of the three known universes must mean - there's a forth universe in play! Just a wild guess, but that could lead the show in an entirely new direction.
At least SciFi gave us the whole episode, including the musical intro, this week. Still would love to see what we missed last week.
I agree with everyone above, I was a little disappointed and confused by this episode. However, it was good to finally see Charlie and 01 have some lengthy face time together.
I don't buy into everything 01 is selling and I’m completely confused about what Reena is now up to. She acclimated herself into Vexcor’s offices very quickly, didn't she? She seems to know more than I assumed she might at this point.
Lastly, if the room went into a secure lock down mode, how did Reena and Norman Ord eventually get out? Did disarming the bomb cancel the lock down?
I think it probably had something to do with Reena instinctively knowing how to disarm the bomb.
Episodes 10-13 are actually one of my favorite of the season. I really enjoyed this episode. I loved the interaction between Charlie and O1.
Nice recap as always!
OK, what was that bit at the end about “you're one of us now”? Who WERE those people who captured Reena? Are we talking Manchurian Candidate here? And I'm still wondering how Reena and her boyfriend/husband got involved in their crusade to stop Vexcor in the first place. Remember that bit where the husband is reading from a book to Reena about the dangers of “them” (I don't remember the details, I wish I had the time to go back and find that scene again). And then when Reena ends up in Betaverse, she finds that old guy, saying that she'd been told that if “this” happened, ending up in an unknown place, she was to go see him. And he talks not just about how Vexcor killed his family, but about how “they” left him all alone here. I'm waiting and waiting for some explanation of all this. It's time to start feeding in some of that story line!
Both this episode and the last were wonderfully dynamic, but I really feel the change in writers here. They are reconfiguring the show, replaying past bits so that they can frame them appropriately. While the Charlie/01 interaction was, in terms of T.V., incredibly satisfying, on another level I'm ready for the story to start moving ahead now. Anyone else feel that way?
Impressive restraint. I'm not sure if I'd be able to keep myself from jumping ahead in your shoes. What's funny, is when I first got my copies of CJ, I let them sit for a little bit. Just wasn't that interested. Then I played the pilot and *flew* through the rest of the episodes.
As for learning everything, you've got to realize that some stuff really did just get dropped on the floor by the new writers. They didn't know what plans - if any - the original writers had for most things, so they had to retrofit a story that made sense on top of what had come before. I think they do a damn fine job.
At least there's no horrible change like in The Wonder Years, where we're told something very specific in the pilot and it gets ignored years later.