Retro Review: Continuum, Episodes 4-7

The binge-watch continues. I’m now knee-deep in the first season of Continuum, and despite some stumbles, it’s continuing to be an entertaining ride.

The official logo for Continuum“Matter of Time”:

This is the first episode of Continuum to date that I haven’t much enjoyed.

“Matter of Time” features Kiera and Carlos investigating the death of a scientist working on an experimental antimatter energy source. His machine backfired, blowing a hole in him and five stories of his building, and it may not have been an accident.

Kiera worries Liber8 may be involved, so she decides to investigate.

The problem is that Liber8 was not involved, and this becomes clear pretty quickly. Thus, “Matter of Time” becomes a largely irrelevant tangent with little to no significance to the ongoing plot. A connection with Kiera’s future is ultimately revealed, but it doesn’t seem to mean much for the larger arc of the show.

The end result is that “Matter of Time” just feels like an episode of any other random cop show, albeit with slightly more technobabble.

On top of that, Kiera acts very out of character through the whole episode. She should only care about Liber8 — she’s shown great reticence to influence the past in any way that isn’t about stopping them — but she’s happy to drop everything and investigate this unrelated murder. She even abandons a search for Liber8’s newly arrived leader, Edouard Kagame, to continue following up on the murder.

The cast of ContinuumWhat the Hell?

The main redeeming feature of “Matter of Time” is that it gave Alec an opportunity to have a really good scene at the end. But otherwise, it’s just filler.

Overall rating: 6.7/10

“A Test of Time”:

“A Test of Time” sees Kagame reinstated as leader of Liber8. He orders a change in tactics, encouraging his followers to focus on more subtle and non-violent means of achieving their goals.

However, there’s still a little bloodshed on his agenda. To eliminate Kiera as a threat as well as test the ramifications of their trip to the past, they resolve to pull a Terminator and kill Kiera’s grandmother, Lily Jones.

When women named Lily Jones start turning up dead, Kiera figures out what’s up, and the race is on to find the correct Lily.

After the misstep of last episode, this a return to form for Continuum: fast-paced and exciting.

Rachel Nichols as Kiera Cameron in ContinuumI think it’s hilarious that Kiera instantly assumed the most well-educated and successful Lily Jones was her grandmother, and I experienced quite a bit of schadenfreude when she was proven spectacularly wrong.

This was an interesting episode for Kellogg, as well. I’m rather confused by him and his motivations, but I think that’s the point. He’s a complicated dude.

Also, I find I’m really starting to hate Travis, and I mean that in a good way. His smug self-satisfaction and casual cruelty inspire the kind of visceral disgust you want from a good villain.

I did have some issues with the ending, though. It raises a lot of interesting questions… but they’re all the same questions we’ve had since the start. Nothing really changed.

I’m also starting to wonder how much longer Continuum can maintain the current formula without becoming ridiculous. If every single episode is going to end with a gunfight with Liber8, how much longer is it going to take before they lose all intimidation factor as villains?

They’re already starting to seem a bit like stormtroopers. Anyone would be bound to hit Kiera at least once or twice after firing that many bullets; it’s just probability. And these are battle-hardened, chemically enhanced super-soldiers we’re talking about. How is she coming away unscathed every single time?

Rachel Nichols as Kiera Cameron in ContinuumOverall rating: 7.4/10

“Time’s Up”:

Ah, but here’s an interesting twist. Just as I was starting to worry Liber8 was turning into buffoons, things suddenly go in an entirely different direction.

“Time’s Up” sees Kagame enact his new, more subtle strategy to achieve Liber8’s ends. Coordinating with a bunch of violent anti-corporate extremists from the modern era, Liber8 arranges to kidnap the CEO of an oil company. But there’s far more to their plan than a simple hostage-taking. They intend to win the hearts and minds of the public with some clever theatrics.

Meanwhile, the tension in Alec’s home reaches a boiling point as he discovers that his supremely douchey step-brother, Julian, has signed on to the Liber8 cause.

I thoroughly enjoyed this episode. It’s the first time Liber8 has started to feel truly dangerous as a group of villains. They’re not just thugs; they can wield their wits as effectively as any weapon. They pull off some almost Joker-worthy mind-fracks as the episode progresses.

I particularly loved their use for the ransom money. “Give the people the money, or she dies.”

Brilliant.

A wallpaper featuring propaganda for Liber8Throughout “Time’s Up,” Liber8 is two steps ahead of Kiera and co., and by the end, they have enjoyed unmitigated success in their goals. Kagame has painted himself as a latter day Robin Hood, and Liber8 as his Merry Men, and the public has been won to their side. Anti-corporate graffiti covers the city as cries of “Liber8” echo through the air.

The seeds of a revolution have been planted.

Also, I’d like to say that I really love how the fight scenes are choreographed on this show. Sure, they’re not terribly realistic, but damn if they aren’t entertaining.

Overall rating: 8.1/10

“The Politics of Time”:

“The Politics of Time” is another case where Continuum basically forgets about the sci-fi and becomes a regular cop show. But it still manages to be more interesting than “Matter of Time.”

In this episode, Kiera and Carlos investigate the murder of a reporter who had been looking into the campaign finances of two candidates in a union election. Things are rather complicated by the fact one of those candidates is an old friend of Carlos, and it just happens he slept with the reporter about an hour before she was killed.

Kiera, Alec, and Carlos in ContinuumKiera is theoretically investigating because of a potential Liber8 connection, and a tangential one is discovered, but in practice, this episode serves as an opportunity to flesh out Carlos as a character and his relationship with Kiera wrapped in a whodunnit.

It’s pretty much just filler, but I’m willing to forgive it. Considering Carlos’s importance as a cast member, it was overdue for him to get some proper attention as something other than Kiera’s sidekick.

It’s also a pretty good mystery as these things go. I didn’t see the final twist coming, so that’s something.

There were also some little touches that made this episode endearing. Alec had some very funny lines, and while this obviously wasn’t the main point of the scene, it was interesting to hear how Kiera rationalizes the ruthless invasiveness of her future. I do hope we will eventually come to the point where Kiera has to accept she’s not “the good guys” in this. She may be better than Liber8 — maybe — but that’s not much of a recommendation.

Also, it turns out her husband is a scumball. I may be jumping the gun, but I’m starting to think he may have been involved in Liber8’s escape. He was a highly placed member of Sadtech (worst company name ever) and may have had access to experimental technology like the time device, and he seemed to know something was up at the execution sooner than he should have.

But now I’m off-topic.

A first person perspective of Kiera's HUD in ContinuumThe bottom line is that “The Politics of Time” was basically filler, but at least it was interesting filler. And it was nice to see Tahmoh Penikett again.

Overall rating: 7.1/10

Retro Review: Continuum, Episodes 1-3

Orphan Black left me a bit disappointed, but the hunger for new sci-fi remains. Defiance is good, but it isn’t enough on its own. So when I discovered that Showcase has the full series of another Canadian sci-fi show, Continuum, I decided I’d give it a try. I knew even less about Continuum going in than I did about Orphan Black — something something time travel — so I had no idea what to expect.

The official logo for ContinuumThese reviews will follow roughly the same format as my Orphan Black reviews — that is, somewhat truncated and a little more loose with the spoilers than usual.

“A Stitch in Time” (pilot episode):

Continuum begins in Vancouver in the year 2077. The world’s governments have collapsed, and corporations have stepped in to restore law and order, but this has come at the cost of virtually all personal liberty.

So really not much different from the real world.

Not all accept the new order. In the show’s opening scene, the leader of the terrorist organization Liber8 makes a pirate broadcast calling for an uprising against corporate tyranny. He is tracked down and arrested by the local law enforcement, led by the show’s protagonist, Kiera Cameron (Rachel Nichols). As he is put in chains, he tells them they are too late, and one of the massive skyscrapers in the background implodes, killing thousands.

Flash forward a few months, and the core leadership of Liber8 have been arrested and are facing execution. At the last moment, they activate a smuggled time travel device, opening a rift that hurls them back in time. Kiera tries to stop them, but is caught in the blast and also thrown back in time.

Liber8 launches a devastating terrorist attack in 2077 in ContinuumThey wind up in the year 2012. Kiera attempts to apprehend the escaped Liber8 ring leaders, while they seek to continue their war against corporate oppression, attempting to stop the future’s oligarchy before it can begin.

Along the way, Kiera picks up some unlikely allies. While trying to contact her superiors via her cybernetically implanted communications device, she accidentally makes contact with a young man named Alec Sadler (Eric Knudsen). As it turns out, he invented the communications technology she relies on. In her time, his company is one of the world’s most influential, the Apple of its time, but in 2012, Alec is just a greasy kid working out of his parents’ attic.

In a twist bizarrely reminiscent of Orphan Black, Kiera also begins to impersonate a modern day police officer in order to gain the cooperation of the Vancouver police department. Of course, it’s much less hard to swallow on Continuum, because Kiera actually is a cop — albeit one torn out of time.

The fact that I’ve already spent so many words on the synopsis should tell you that this was an eventful pilot. And that’s probably my favourite thing about Continuum so far: It is not wasting any time. It’s full of all the action you could want, and it moves at breakneck pace. The hour flew by, but it doesn’t feel rushed.

Continuum does have its rough spots. It can be a bit cheesy at times, and it’s not very believable, even if you put aside all the sci-fi techno-magic. Once again, TV cops are nothing like real cops.

Liber8 activates their time device during the Continuum pilotI’m also a bit underwhelmed with Kiera as a character. The actress is a little stiff, and her character could only be more cliche if she had been one day away from retirement before being pulled backward in time.

On the other hand, she is very entertaining as an action hero, if not necessarily as a person. Between her extensive cybernetic enhancements and her seemingly all-powerful combat suit, she’s basically the combination of Inspector Gadget and the Predator.

And that’s the other thing I like about Continuum: It’s entertaining. Maybe not the most thought-provoking piece of television, but a very fun action-adventure story.

I suppose Continuum also deserves some credit for portraying a kick-ass action hero who is also a working mother. That’s a bit different.

There are a few other things that I find interesting about Continuum out of the gate.

One is how many actors I recognize. The leader of Liber8 is played by Tony Amendola, who is one of those people who’s in pretty much everything but is especially noteworthy for playing Master Bra’tac on Stargate: SG-1. The head of Vancouver’s 2012 police is played Brian Markinson, another omnipresent actor I know from his roles in Caprica, Sanctuary, and Blood and Chrome. Lexa Doig, who played the titular character on Andromeda, appears as a Liber8 lieutenant, and according to the Wikipedia page, Magda Apanowicz (Lacy Rand on Caprica) and Tahmoh Penikett (Carl “Helo” Agathon on Battlestar Galactica) will be appearing later on.

Kiera arrives in 2012 in the Continuum pilotThe other is how many parallels there are between Continuum and Orphan Black. Both sci-fi shows filmed and set in Canada. Both feature a tough, dark-haired woman as the protagonist — and you know how much I love my tough, dark-haired heroines. In both cases, the protagonist ends up impersonating a cop.

However, it’s not a comparison that reflects kindly on Orphan Black. Continuum is (so far) far faster paced, far more focused in its story, and just better in almost every way. The only thing that Orphan Black can claim superiority in is the acting chops of its lead — Tatiana Maslany does a very good job considering the weak material she’s given to work with, but I am thus far uninspired by Rachel Nichols as Kiera.

Overall rating: 7.5/10 A little rough around the edges, but lots of fun.

“Fast Times”:

In the second episode, the fugitive Liber8 commanders seek to repower their time device in an attempt to return to their own time, or something near to it. Which is something of a contradiction of their stated goals in the pilot.

Kiera is hot on their trail, hoping she might be able to hitch a ride back to the future as well and thus be reunited with her husband and son, but she comes across a rather nasty complication: The cops discover she is not who she says she is.

Like the pilot, “Fast Times” moves at a breakneck pace. I was quite pleasantly surprised to see Kiera’s false identity torn apart so quickly. It was something that was bound to happen eventually, and I’m glad they didn’t string us along — a stark contrast to Orphan Black’s glacial pacing.

I’m sorry to keep knocking Orphan Black, but it’s so hard not compare these shows, giving that I’m watching both around the same time and their many similarities.

Liber8 in the year 2012 in ContinuumDespite once again providing plenty of action and plot twists, “Fast Times” serves more to advance character arcs than anything else. Kiera struggles to come to terms with being marooned in the past, and to find her place in 2012. But that’s okay; it helps lay the groundwork for how the show will play out going forward.

Overall rating: 7.2/10

“Wasting Time”:

As the name might imply, “Wasting Time” starts out a bit slower than the previous episodes. This is fine; a little respite from the breakneck pacing is welcome.

Mostly, this episode seems to serve the flesh out the identities of the various Liber8 terrorists. Since Continuum is in the odd place of having a larger cast of villains than heroes, this is a worthy pursuit.

I find I’m growing to like Kellogg. He’s pretty amusing, but he has the potential to be more than just comedy relief. Interesting potential for a trickster/double agent style character here.

As “Wasting Time” progresses, the action ramps again. I’m starting to worry that this show is going to be rather formulaic; seems like the bullets start flying at almost exactly the same time every episode. On the other hand, there’s something to be said for consistency, and I’m not sick of the fights yet.

Overall rating: 7.6/10

* * *

So far, I find myself pleasantly surprised by Continuum. It’s not terribly deep or intellectually stimulating, but it’s a lot of fun, and a great show to veg out and relax with.