Falling Skies 3.07 The Pickett Line **** SPOILERS ****

Episode Summary from Falling Skies Wiki:

[i]Traveling at night, the Masons arrive at the rendezvous point for the rebel Skitters, as Ben questions if they should even return to Charleston upon finding Anne and Alexis. Suddenly, one of the rebel Skitters appears wounded, and warns the Masons of an incoming patrol. Elsewhere, Hal and Matt reminisce about past experiences camping, before Ben and Tom return and prepare to flee.

Back in Charleston, Pope laments that his business’ success means little without another community to trade with, before soldiers arrive to move his entire establishment on Marina Peralta’s orders. Weaver defends her choice to an angry Pope, before Cochise appears on the edge of Charleston carrying President Hathaway, and both collapse. Out on the road, the Masons find themselves confronted by four masked figures with guns, who take the horses and supplies, shrugging off Tom’s suggestions of taking them to Charleston. After the robbers depart, Tom vows they get their things back. President Hathaway recuperates and recognizes Marina Peralta from an old colleague, before the talk turns to Marina’s growing unease with the Volm weapon secrecy. Weaver concurs that too much about the project has been kept hidden, though Cochise reminds them they still likely have a mole on the loose, and Hathaway insists completion of the Volm weapon to be vital to the resistance.

Using Ben’s abilities to track the robbers, Tom and the Masons slowly make their way to the family’s farm, surprising and overtaking the members of the thieving group. Hal struggles to subdue Gil, the lead patriarch’s brother, before Matt shoots the man in the back to save Hal the trouble. Back in Charleston, Pope and his crew make it known to Weaver that a recent rash of equipment sabotage comes from his outrage with Marina’s dictatorial behavior. The Masons tie up the Pickett family, as the father, Dwayne (‘Hell on Wheels‘ star Christopher Heyerdahl), insists they only steal in the interest of protecting their own family. Upstairs, Ben desperately attempts to treat Dwayne’s brother Gil. Back in Charleston, Pope riles the citizens of his bar into allying against the Volm and Marina Peralta, before Weaver arrives to disperse the crowd and place Pope under arrest for endangering the safety of Charleston with his sabotages. Tom learns from Dwayne that their entire family had been raised in the house, as the alien invasion never came to their isolated location. Meanwhile, the boys upstairs learn that the family’s mother had died during the invasion, but by men who came to the house to rob them, rather than by aliens. With Gil likely to die soon, Tom allows Dwayne upstairs to say his goodbyes, unaware that Gil has been hiding a shotgun beneath the mattress. The tables quickly turn as the Pickett family get back the guns, and Dwayne orders the Masons down in the basement. Dwayne insists he has to kill them in order to protect his family, but when the youngest daughter protests, Tom manages to retrieve his gun, and the weapons change hands once again.

Cochise shows the Volm weapon to President Hathaway, Marina and Weaver, explaining that the Espheni will soon launch a worldwide energy field that will decimate the planet, and leave only the aliens to survive. The weapon uses its inordinate energy surge to destroy the grid and allow Volm reinforcements to arrive, but the potential decimation of the planet causes Tom to agree with Cochise that specifics of the plan be kept secret from the general public.

Weaver meets with Pope in a cell, and explains that the man may have a point in his suspicions of the Volm, but riling up civilians won’t do any good. After being released, Pope has a run-in with Maggie in the hallway to warn her of Weaver’s words, though the shared history between the two prevents the discussion from taking on a friendly tone. Lourdes changes the President’s IV, receiving some comforting words about her role in rebuilding the world’s future, before she leaves and heads downstairs to the room directly below. After carefully setting up a gurney aligned with the room above, Lourdes shoots a Volm weapon directly into the ceiling, killing President Hathaway above. Minutes later in the chapel, Lourdes prays with alien bugs all over her face, before a nurse alerts her to the news. Observing the scene, Anthony, Weaver and Marina all agree to keep the matter quiet, and step up their search for the real mole. Outside, Pope points out to Weaver that Marina had the most to gain from President Hathaway’s death, a thought neither can bring themselves to ignore. Meanwhile, the Masons leave the Pickett house behind, but soon observe Skitters and Mechs headed in the family’s direction. Noting that the family ultimately didn’t kill them given the chance, Tom elects to go alone and warn the family, sending the children onward. By the time Tom arrives to the Pickett household however, the family is nowhere to be found, as Skitters and Mechs step out to corner him.[/i]

Please use this thread to discuss the series’ twenty-seventh overall and third season seventh episode The Pickett Line. Rule: Please keep spoilers limited to those revealed during the series up to this episode only.

This episode was a little darker and more twisted than usual. From the rebel skitter’s leader’s death at the beginning to the Mason boys being robbed by the hillbillies to Matt shooting the hillbilly to Delgado killing the American President and being shown to be FULL of alien bugs to Tom’s capture at the end to Pope’s incarceration to the truth about the Volm weapon and the Espheni shield. Yes, this series has a tendency to be dark but it’s usually not this much in one episode.

The Pickett Line had all the feeling of being a set-up episode, full with foreshadowing and placing the pieces on the chess board for the finale strike:

  • Pope had the comment about wanting to trade with other communities.
  • The Masons were discussing weather or not to return to Charleston.
  • Pope led a mini-strike/work slowage in an attempt to gain more rights.
  • The Masons decided that if they turned their backs on the Picketts they would be no better than them, only looking out for their family.
  • Cochise returned to Charleston. Pope being let out by Weaver in an uneasy alliance.
  • Pope talking to Maggie about providing her protection.

It was good to see Christopher Heyerdahl again. I’ve missed him since Sanctuary ended. It was also good to see Michael Rogers again, most recently from Continuum Season 1.

One final note on this episode specifically. With the return of Cochise and President Hathaway we have confirmation that General Donovan/Col Saul Tigh/Michael Hogan as well as Lt Fisher/Luvia Petersen/Jasmine Garza(Continuum) died in their plane crash. It would have been good to see them both in Falling Skies again. But it does bring up a point. How did Lourdes track Hathaway and Mason to their rendezvous location if she is the Espheni spy? Hmmm.

Of all the recent scifi shows this one is by far the most prolific on the internet. The total number of fan pages, review pages and wiki sites is staggering. Falling skies has, by far, the most weekly viewers of any currently produced scifi TV show (non-Doctor Who) and averaged 3.53 million viewers per week on American TV. Conversely, Defiance, which is a far better TV show in my opinion, only averaged 2.04 million viewers this year on American TV. If anyone has the Doctor Who numbers I’d be interested to see them. And I’d also be open to hearing arguments that The Walking Dead is a SciFi show, but I’ll classify that as a Horror-Drama for now. I’ll also classify Game Of Thrones as a Fantasy genre but I’d be open to discussion on that one too. On July 2, 2013 Falling skies was renewed by TNT for a fourth season. I guess that’s no big surprise given its ratings, and its a shame more decent scifi shows don’t do as well as Falling Skies.

~Shooter Out