'The 4400': One nation under Jordan
Alternate, but too long, title for this post: "Take me down to the Promise City, where the river is clean and the garden is pretty."
(Spoilers ahead, of course.)
You know, I should have seen it coming. This entire season of The 4400 seemed to be building toward it. First he just had a following; then he had a city; now Jordan Collier has annexed himself a piece of Seattle and called it Promise City. Of course, that's just a backdrop to the real point of the episode, the question that's been hanging over this season -- and possibly over the preceding three as well -- is Jordan Collier a good guy or a bad guy?
The fact is, we didn't get a definitive answer. We were invited to make up our minds, as Maia did. On the one hand, Jordan took a toxic corner of Seattle on the Duwamish River delta and cleaned up the river, made all kinds of plants grow, and promised to work miracles everywhere. On the other hand, he caused mini-disasters to happen as a demonstration of his power and essentially carved a sovereign nation out of a major city, which the government wasn't too cool with. So the government sent in enhanced soldiers -- remember them? -- commanded by Glenn Morshower, Aaron on 24, who can't seem to not play government or military personnel.
Since Maia foresaw that something very bad, possibly the end of the world, was going to happen if the soldiers killed Jordan, she snuck in to Promise City like the teenager she almost is. There she saw enough to decide that Jordan was good, and she warned him about the soldiers. But she still didn't trust him; she lied and told him that she'd had a vision that a war would doom all mankind, hoping to keep Jordan from hurting anyone. It worked, since Jordan's response to getting invaded was not a bloody reprisal, but an expansion of his borders.
As always, the mystery of Jordan continues to be fascinating. He seems to be gentle and reasonable, but there are hidden reserves of ruthlessness, and he's certainly not above allowing his minions to do the really dirty work, so he doesn't have to. And I was glad that there was a lot of Maia in this episode, as she's been lacking recently. I don't remember seeing Maia take this much action before -- she doesn't go out on her own much -- and it seems like another indication that she's growing up. It's the natural next step for her, and I'm just happy that the writers thought to take it.
Shawn, meanwhile, jumped into the running for Worst Political Candidate Ever. He dated the daughter of a woman he healed, slept with her, and proceeded to be surprised when it got all over the internet. Shawn, you idiot, the internet knows all. But as he didn't have the foresight to spend the entire campaign sitting quietly and doing nothing, he did the next best thing: admitted he had made a mistake. He also, in spite of warnings from his mentor, asserted that he would continue to take the middle road between promicin-positive people and the rest of the world. At least, that's what he keeps saying, but I haven't seen much of this middle road. Now that the divisions are starting up in earnest, I'd love to know what the middle road is and what he proposes to do, especially because Shawn is the only character who's advocating this middle course.
And Tom/Meghan 'shippers got something to squee over when Marco totally walked in on them almost-but-not-kissing. I like Meghan; certainly the show has gone out of its way to give her a personality, what with the sick dad and the Fellini predilection. But I'm not really feeling this Tom/Meghan love. Oddly enough, the only person Tom seems to have any chemistry with is Diana (see: their cute dinner at the beginning of the episode, in which Diana got all gal pal with Tom and grilled him about Meghan). But, as I actually enjoy the fact that they're the only male-female partnership on TV without any sexual tension between them, I don't want them to get together. Tom is nice; Meghan is nice; I wish I could care about them together.
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The Tom/Meghan thing seemed to come out of left field for me. I don't see them together, either, frankly, since I'm a little su****ious of her.
Jordan's demonstrations of good things reminded me of the "Twilight Zone" episode "To Serve Man" where the Kanamites, wanting to make friends not enemies with the world, demonstrated that their powers could end such things as famine and make barren lands furtile again, only to gain the trust of everyone so they could wisk people off to their planet to make them into stew. It's a "wolf in sheeps clothing" type of thing, and I think Jordan's the same thing. He wants to show everyone his group can do good things, but what he really wants is to control the world. This show is getting good!
Maia lives! Maia speaks! Maia does in half an hour what the other adult characters spend half a season discussing! Whew, got that out of my system. Really, it was nice to see Maia come right out and say what everybody else on the show either takes as gospel (pun intended) or worries about while deciding whether or not to take Collier's threats at face value or as just a marketing ploy for Promicin. Maia didn't wait around for the next committee meeting--she snuck out of the apartment, walked into Collier's mini-city (how did she get past the barricade that knocked everyone else senseless? Just wondering...), and asked him point blank if he was good or evil. Only a kid/almost-teenager would have the guts or lack of PC-ness to do that. I don't think she completely believed Collier's claims, subtle though they were, that he was not evil. Hence her lie at the end. Maia probably has sensed a lot more about Jordan Collier than she lets on, if only because she now knows that the adults around her will act stupid and stand around drinking coffee a lot instead of just going up to Collier and getting some semi-straight answers out of the guy. As for me, I haven't trusted Collier since the end of last season, when he essentially started creating an army of Promicin-zombies that he can somehow control. We'll see how that plays out. Oh, and my favorite moment? When that Asian Promicin-zombie jerked her head sideways and essentially did a fingerless Vulcan neck pinch to everyone. Kinda reminded me of the Thriller video, though...
I want someone to look behind Meghan's ear, I swear she is going to turn out to be "Marked"! Don't trust her either and do not want to see her with Tom. Kyle, I'm just not liking his character this season at all. Happy to see more of Maia also.