The Expanse: “Weeping Somnambulist” focuses on the ladies – Review
Iโve been looking forward to this moment for a couple weeks now. In โThe Weeping Somnambulist,โ Episode 209 of The Expanse, two ladies with very different motivations, but fundamental strength and understanding of honor and duty, get face-to-face at last.
Martian soldier Bobbie Draper and U.N. bigwig Chrisjen Avasarala are two characters Iโve come to really enjoy in The Expanse. Draper, a soldierโs soldier, is passionately committed to Mars and, to a lesser extent, waging (victorious) war on Earth. She is tough, strong and with a sense of honor that matters greatly to her. Avasarala is the consummate politician with a gamblerโs nerve, finely-tuned intuition in the arena of politics, and her own tough-as-nails sense of right and wrong in the universe.
They are characters to be admired and examined and the way Shohreh Aghdashloo (Chrisjen) and Frankie Adams (Draper) deliver them is always a delight on the screen. In โThe Weeping Somnambulist,โ we see one suddenly unsure of her place and motivations, while the other is dead sure thereโs more to what sheโs witnessing than meets the eye. And itโs fun to see their respective mindโs working through the issue.
THE EXPANSE — “The Weeping Somnambulist” Episode 209 — Pictured: Frankie Adams as Bobbie Draper — (Photo by: Rafy/Syfy)
But first, letโs focus on the protomolecule for a moment as itโs an alien creation that just keeps giving and giving. We have an expedition to Venus to see what remains of Eros. The captain of the ship is convinced itโs Mars tech and a danger to earth. Fortunately, Chrisjen has an inside man on the ship as her eyes and ears and as they begin surveying the planet โ well, Iโll let you see it for yourself. Letโs just say itโs a game-changer.
Also on the trail of the PMC (remember, weโre cutting Protomolecule down to PMC for easier handling) is Captain James Holden and the crew of the Rocinante. Holden, Alex Kamal, Naomi Nagata, Amos Burton and former Ganymede scientist Dr. Meng are headed back to Ganymede to see if they can run down answers about Mengโs daughter and this mysterious Dr. Strickland โ and how they relate to a PMC sample being there. They want to sneak in so they decide to commandeer a Belter aid ship to help them get past any โofficialโ obstacles that may be swirling around Ganymede.
Itโs actually kind of funny how Holden and Amos, with the best-laid plans, kind of stumble through the hijacking attempt with the Belter pair, a man and woman. Kind of sets up their attempt at getting to the planet and the struggles they keep encountering. Once the ship is secure, the planning begins. Holden lays out the basic outline, which has plenty of hope and very little of substance, a situation that Dr. Meng notes with a wry degree if irritation. A fun bit of dialog ensues with Amos.
Dr. Meng: โYour plans always this vague?โ
Amos: โThis is about average.โ
Dr. Meng: โYou all must be very lucky.โ
Amos: โWeโve certainly had our fair share.โ
Holden: โHey.โ
Kind of reminded me of Chris Prattโs plan in Guardians of the Galaxy, โI have part of a planโฆ12 percent.โ
And yes, itโs barely a concept, but there are contingencies they hope wonโt be needed, including Alex, whoโll be hiding behind an asteroid nearby, flying in for the rescue โ under fire, of course.
THE EXPANSE — “The Weeping Somnambulist” Episode 209 — Pictured: (l-r) Steven Strait as Earther James Holden, Dominique Tipper as Naomi Nagata, Wes Chatham as Amos Burton — (Photo by: Rafy/Syfy)
But this is all a backdrop to the real meat of this episode. Draper has arrived on Earth as part of the Mars peace talks delegation. As you recall, sheโs been told to explain what she saw on Ganymede up to a point โ the point where she lies about what she saw (the 7th man) and who started shooting first. Itโs a big ask by the Mars government of a soldier who wears her pride and honor on her sleeve, but sheโs going to soldier up and take one for the team.
Called upon to address Earth and Mars delegations, she tells the story as sheโs been instructed to. Grains of truth here, grains of fabrication there. In the end, Mars offers a reparations package based on the false information that it fired first. What they didnโt tell Draper was they were going to toss one of the soldiers under her command under the bus. This rattles her to her core.
The conflict raging within Draper is really well done. There isnโt this overriding angst written all over her face, but a subtleness that makes the whole thing a little more painful. Fortunately, the truth sheโs holding inside isnโt lost on Chrisjen.
As the negotiations for reparations climaxes, Chrisjen asks to see Draper again for a few follow-up questions. Politely rebuffed, she digs in those talons and demands it. Dang, she can be the boss at times, right? Aghdashlooโs portrayal of Avasarala is often subtle as well, but thereโs something fun and exhilarating about this character when she puts the bite on someone, as she does in the episode โ a couple of times.
โWith all due respect, madam, where are you going with this?โ a Mars official admonishes Chrisjen.
โWherever I GโฆDโฆ like,โ she tells him firmly and returns to talking with Bobbie.
THE EXPANSE — “The Weeping Somnambulist” Episode 209 — Pictured: (l-r) Jeff Seymour as Korshunov, Rachel Crawford as Admiral Pena — (Photo by: Rafy/Syfy)
Her instincts tell her thereโs something more, something under the surface of all this and Draper is the key. In the end, with a little proding and poking, Draper drops the wall of compliance sheโs been hiding behind and a little bit of what she really saw spills out quickly, including a little ditty about the 7th man she saw without the bio suit. She catches herself, resets her professional composure and re-ups to the original story. But itโs enough, more than enough, to confirm Chrisjenโs initial assessment. Thereโs something deeper and darker going on here.
Meanwhile at Venus, the impact crater from Eros draws us into the PMC equation with the shocking discovery of life sign readings near the crater. It should be impossible on that dead planet, but there it is. Chrisjenโs inside man sends her the data from the scan and she puts it pretty succinctly when she says, โEros changes everything. Just like a soldier on Ganymede without a suit.โ
Itโs a testament to the writing, vision and acting on this show that something like the PMC can successfully run its tentacles through so many episodes without getting stale. Thereโs enough about it to tantalize us after Miller and Julie Mao rode Eros into Venus, but itโs not overdone or cumbersome. There are other storylines going on, but they all kind of weave themselves in and out of the PMC storyline in some way or another. Itโs well done sci-fi and itโs continually interesting, episode to episode. And I think thatโs why people keep coming back to The Expanse.
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