4: “ A Feast of Friends” (plus reviews for episodes 1-3) You can follow him on Twitter You can follow the website ALSO: + Good balance of humor and drama + Chilling subject matter + Manny and Constantine – Zed’s really long ‘art class’ – No follow-up on betrayal subplot But with some great interactions with Manny and some confidence building for Constantine, “Rage” at least does a good enough job to entertain and show its main character and setting are uniquely fun. While it’s been confirmed “Rage of the Caliban” was meant to air earlier, it doesn’t excuse the episode of being weaker than the previous few weeks. Having at least one of the parents be on his side was a welcomed development.Where did Constantine get that map of lay lines?.Liked how Constantine’s paralegal help was from a woman he helped in the past. The spook factor was strong this week, especially in the final moments at the haunted house and when possessed Henry lures his dad into the light bulb trap.Constantine’s line: “I’ll set the table for three then,” was priceless.Would love to see more of the Sword of Night.Having watched Eureka for it’s entire run, it was nice to see Zane in a non-Syfy production (the young kid’s Dad here).Plus, it was a different take on the murderous child, which has been done to death (pardon the pun) as someone taken over by the devil’s spirit while here it was the soul of an angry, demented child. Having ghouls of the week be demons created by humans, instead of them being summoned up from Hell, gives them a more grounded and realistic feel. The twist with the parent murdering entity actually being the soul of the first killer, instead of some ancient hellish ghoul, caught me completely off guard and was a refreshing change of pace. If there’s one aspect “Rage” was the strongest at, it was letting Constantine, and Matt Ryan, really shine. He continues to come through each week in defeating the demons, but the show has done a wonderful job of not making it easy for him, like having to sacrifice his best friend and facing his fears here. Manny is trying his best to groom Constantine for the fight ahead while following the rules of being unable to interfere and his scene with Constantine behind bars was my favorite of the night, as it hints at a longer connection between the two.īut having Constantine face his fears of exorcising an entity out of a child-the Newcastle incident-was a great step in his journey here. He’s not sure he’s going to be good enough to help fend off the ‘rising darkness’ (which is getting a little annoying to keep hearing referenced to as if it’s just a far away event, which plays off the odd feeling of the episode being meant to air earlier) and he wonders why Manny, who keeps appearing to him and dropping hints, can’t just do the work himself. As proud and confident Constantine always comes off, it’s interesting to watch him almost beg Manny for some assistance. It’s possible the reason “Rage” aired later was to have the more action-packed and character building episodes early to help draw in viewers.Įven with Chas getting a good chunk of screen-time, Manny got some of the better scenes with Constantine. While in the middle of writing this review, I began looking around for info on this episode’s airing order and IGN’s review confirms “Rage” was meant to air as the second episode of the season, so they added in a throw-away line for Zed’s absence. I get Constantine doesn’t need to necessarily follow-up on the betrayal subplot, but considering the strange absence of one of the main characters following such a revelation, it dampens that subplots urgency and intrigue. Because of his nonchalance, while normally not odd for his character, the episode had an odd feeling permeating the hour like it had been meant to air earlier in the season and yes, it being Halloween in the show, which happened almost a full month ago for us, helps back up that feeling. It was disappointing this week that Constantine wasn’t more on edge around Chas and Zed, who was conveniently away at a really, really, long art class, after he learned the information last week that someone close to him would betray him. “The Rage of Caliban” had an engaging, yet chilling premise, but it had the feeling of being out of place (airing out of order) with some lacking character interactions.
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