We're introduced to a misguided teen mother Christina played by Elizabeth Moss. Christina is a hybrid just like Mariel, but she's an interesting character, she's psychotic. We're shown a hybrid alien who happens to be homicidal in nature. This provides a new tension that gives our main characters a new type of uncertainty that might come to haunt them later. This episode loosely explores the Christina character. This is a good episode, it employs the same pacing used in American Gothic but Invasion is so much better. The writers created another great episode. I'm looking forward on watching the next episode.
this show is so slow in the storie line that has me thinking that the idea is not that great. I also think that they have a good product but need some more adventure. I think this episode is more adventurous that all that i have. I look forwards for the next show tosee if the directors and writers makes us understand better what they want with the story
Another truly chilling and engrossing episode, there's fantastic atmosphere, and some great character moments here. The focal characters of this installment, Mariel, and Underlay have real resonance now. Her discoveries, and his continued deceptions creat
Another truly chilling and engrossing episode, The Cradle has fantastic atmosphere, and some great character moments. More than making up for last week’s ‘filler’ episode, the focal characters of this installment, Mariel, and Underlay have real resonance. Her discoveries, and his deceptions are much of what make this show great. And here the tone is captured perfectly.
While I admit that the other players in this episode are all but forgotten. The story of the baby is merely a plot device then tossed away, Larkin continues to annoy sometimes overacting, and Dave is practically non-existent. The episode succeeds fabulously in continuing our journey with Mariel, and exposing Tom’s maddening deceitfulness. I have to give serious credit to Kari Matchett (Mariel) this episode. In the past I’ve definitely felt that she wasn’t showing her best work, or she was written badly and just kind of playing along, but here, oh here it’s another story altogether. We’re really getting to the meat of her arc that’s been developing since the first episode and she is playing it wonderfully. Wounded, fascinated, calmly terrified, she pulls off this really conflicted state of mind with real style here. And she really deserves to be applauded for it.
Ultimately the tone of the show; that being the quality clever writing, editing, music, and lighting, along with the superb acting which I already mentioned are what made this episode one of the series strongest to date. I love the way sentences and moments are left to hang, the viewer has time to really feel the weight of developments as they occur. This is another reason why I think the pacing of the show works so well. I don’t feel like I’m being rushed through the story. I can relish every interesting, character moment. If unfortunately I have to suffer through a lame immediate plotline that I don’t think is executed well, like in the previous episode; I’m grateful that I know they are developing all of the character to such an extent that I really will care for them, when eventually the real dangers develop…
So, we finally know why she didn't have her wedding ring after the storm... It was on her finger.
I don't see that it was as revealing as other people seem to think though. It was still as vague as it could possibly be in an episode where it seems like so much is revealed.
I’ve been complaining about the pacing for this series for quite some time, so I was pleasantly surprised by this episode. It didn’t move the story forward too far, but a lot was covered and it was handled well. Suddenly there are new levels to the complexity of the story, and while this is still an unusual exploration of dysfunctional family dynamics, it’s no longer just that.
I was under the impression that Underlay was aware of what was happening, since he was the first (or so we are led to believe) to be changed. Now it makes a little more sense. This is very much like “Invasion of the Body Snatchers”, in that the people changed are not quite who or what they think they are. The original person is dead, but the copy runs around with limited understanding of their own nature.
The result is actually quite interesting: Underlay has been running around, sure that this is all for the better, as if his body was super-charged. Now he knows the truth, that he’s been dead for years and he’s really something else, an “alien” with his memories and personality. More than that, he’s completely unaware that the other “aliens” have more or less awareness of their true nature.
So the end of the episode is not just a lie to Mariel, but a lie to himself. He’s in serious denial, and he may even think that he can remain in charge. It’s going to be a lot harder for him to do that, though, because Mariel clearly has a lot less understanding of her new nature than, say, Christina.
Speaking of Christina…what a creepy character! I’ve always been on the fence with Elisabeth Moss. On the one hand, she has a very sexy line delivery, but she also has a very down-to-earth look. In that respect, she’s similar to Kari. Elisabeth did a great job in this role; it was unnerving to see Zoey Bartlet like that!
I think we’re supposed to assume that the skeleton found in the pilot was, in fact, Underlay himself. That would make sense in terms of the wedding ring found with the bones, though it could still be Underlay’s first wife. A bigger question surrounds the role of the military. Are they trying to contain exposure and prevent the “invasion”? If so, why would Underlay be working with them? Why would Underlay show Larkin the military activity in the first place?
Even the family-oriented scenes were more energetic than usual. Russell’s incredibly stupid mistake with Larkin was appropriately cringe-worthy, and Mariel’s concerns about her emotional state was well communicated. I hope that the season continues along this same vein in the future, because if the writers can make it this interesting every week, I might stop asking myself why I’m still watching the show.
I actually enjoyed most of this episdoe of Invasion. The whininess of Larkin was the greatest drawback of the episode, but otherwise it was a decent installment (for once). They finally ramped up the storyline and had Mariel confront Tom about what he knows. I thought they were finally going somewhere and all of Tom's cleverly crafted plots would come crashing down around him. And this is exactly what I had been hoping they would do for most of the series. Tom's cover-up madness has grown so stale at this point that you couldn't feed it to a duck.
So, Tom is finally going to have his lies and cover-ups revealed. Mariel finally takes a proactive stance on her own situation and finds her own corpse...very cool. We're finally getting somewhere with this lagging plotline. And in the final scene, Mariel asks Tom if he saw her corpse. The moment she said it, they started playing the ominous music and it was incredibly obvious he was going to lie and say no. But they dragged out his answer like it was going to be some shocker.
So he lies and says there was no corpse there and we're back to square one. Sigh. They finally getting things cooking and they pull the rug out from under us and say "Nope...sorry! We like the status quo and we're going to keep on with the same bland characterization of Tom Underlay that you've been suffering through throughout the whole series.
So Tom will continue to lie. Whee. Maybe they can keep this plotline dragging for a few more seasons. Gee, I can't wait.
Dave may not know who the ring belongs to but we already found out that it belonged to Tom in an earlier episode. In this episode we learned that it seems when people are taken, changed, whatever you want to call it, their original body dies and is replaced by the thing in the water. Mariel's body in the water and the thing Russell taged and followed changed into the strange fisherman's son show this. I believe this implies the body Dave had in his car for the first few episodes was Tom's. It was found where Tom's plane crashed years before, it had on Tom's wedding band, and we already know Tom has been changed. I can't wait for the next episode.
I loved this episode. Seeing Mariel's head under water really creeped me out. The episode was really good at giving some more information about the "survivors". I really enjoyed it. But it only made me madder at Tom though. If I was Mariel I would shake him and say "what is going with me?"
The summary for this episode states Dave discovers the identity of the owner of the wedding ring. That is not in this episode. However, something about Mariel is revealed!