Thursday, 14 February 2008

Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles - Queen's Gambit

Plot: Andy Goode is killed for his computer, The Turk. This leads Sarah to the final resistance fighter, who is being chased by a model T-888.


I think 'patiently paced' is a polite way to describe this episode. It wasn't bad, it just lacked any real spark for the first 30 minutes or so. This was seemingly caused by the Andy Goode plot only serving as an opener to the main story. Andy shows up after seemingly spending the weeks that have passed since the fire re-writing The Turk. He's entered it in to a computer vs computer chess tournament where the winner will receive a military contract. Andy loses the tournament and Sarah decides to let him in on what they're trying to do, with the hope that he'll stop pursuing this perfect AI. She's too late though as he's dead and the computer gone. She chases after the person that she believes was responsible but he's caught by the Police before she can get to him.

The man is Derek Reese, the fourth resistance fighter. He was there to kill Andy and take The Turk, but someone beat him to it, meaning that the AI is still at large. Most interestingly, Derek Reese is the brother of Kyle Reese, Sarah's former lover and John's father. This makes Derek John's father.

John, Cameron and Sarah launch a ridiculous rescue mission to free Derek. He's being transported in a Prisoner Transport Van. Cameron climbs on top of it, rips the driver out of the cabin and pulls the back door off its hinges, freeing Derek. And there I was thinking they were supposed to be keeping a low profile. Cameron also has to battle the T-888 that had been chasing Derek. She subdues it, but not before it shoots Derek. Derek is taken back to the Connors' house, but his injuries are grave. Rather than let his new found uncle die, John gets help from Charley Dixon.

The action sequence with Cameron battling the T-888 was pretty good fun, I do just fear that those encounters will begin to get a bit tired and over done after a while. Surely there are only so many ways that she can kill them. On the other side, bringing Charley back in to the fold works pretty well for me, especially after he was visited by Cromartie earlier in the episode.

I think this episode mostly suffered from feeling like it was the end of one episode and the start of another. Neither of the plots really had time to breathe and I think this may have done better spread across two episodes.

7 out of 10

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