Intelligence 1.07 "Size Matters" Review: What It Means to Be Human
18 Feb 2014
Cancelled Shows ReviewsThis week’s episode of Intelligence, “Size Matters,” was written by Shintaro Shimosawa and directed by Alrick Riley. The plot itself was pretty obvious – I knew who the bad guy really was almost immediately. The big tip off is when Shenendoah (John Billingsley) defers to Bryce’s (Tommy Dewey) expertise in nanotech. However, the episode features some excellent performances – John Billingsley I’m looking at you! – and the episode also explores some interesting philosophical questions.
Once again, a lot of the enjoyment of the show is watching the team work together to determine what the threat is and how to neutralize it. A great example of this is Gabriel (Josh Holloway) running the tire track to determine the vehicle, but it’s Riley (Meghan Ory) who realizes it’s a Ford because her brother is a ‘gear-head.’ This week the team member under threat is Shenendoah (Billingsley) as top scientists in artificial intelligence are targeted. Unlike last week, which I commented felt out of order, Lillian (Marg Helgengerger) calls him Shen – not Cassidy – indicating their close relationship.
The Cyber-threat is nanotech – tiny artificial intelligence that kills. Gabriel (Josh Holloway) immediately identifies with it - “If the chip fits.” Riley (Meghan Ory) is immediately concerned that Gabriel is identifying with it, and Ory is terrific as we see her clearly assessing Gabriel’s remarks. I also loved the looks she throws Gabriel and Nelson (PJ Byrne) to cover for Gabriel’s using the chip in front of Bryce.
I will never grow tired of watching Riley protect Gabriel. Last week he remarked that her tackling him was emasculating. This week we see her forcing him to wear gloves again – though a hasmat suit would have been more appropriate. Riley drives and it’s Riley who grabs Gabriel around the shoulders and drags him to the ground when Greyson (David Marciano) shoots at them. In point of fact, none of this makes Riley less “feminine” or Gabriel less “masculine” which is one of my other favorite things about this show.
I really like the slang they’ve developed for using Gabriel’s chip. It’s now a question of whether Gabriel can “chip it” if there is technology involved. Holloway deserves a lot of credit for his credible delivery of reading and assessing all the information passing through his chip. We only get one cyber-render in this episode – of the nanotech – and it is excellent. Also a shout out to the VFX team for the incredibly gross nanotech effects of people gushing blood – yuck!
At the heart of the episode is the debate over artificial intelligence. Shenendoah remarks that what has held them back in artificial intelligence is that computers can’t program themselves – and that would make humans expendable. Bryce says it’s call trans-humanism and is a biological synthesis between man and machine and is the future. Greyson wants to know how you reason with a technology that is thinking in ways that the inventor never even anticipated – how do you control it. We already know that Gabriel’s cyber-rendering is one way that they never anticipated the chip would work, and we’ve seen Weatherly (Tomas Arana) express concern again and again that Lillian doesn’t have control of Gabriel. When Greyson brings up Frankenstein’s monster, Gabriel is clearly troubled and Riley is troubled by his reaction – great work by both Holloway and Ory in this scene.
Riley protects Gabriel both physically and emotionally. She tells him she doesn’t like it when he calls himself a freak. Gabriel brushes it off, saying “the youngest one is always a freak.” She is also the one to point out to him that he is completely different than the nanotech. I loved the scene when they are interrogating Bryce and he says that he and Gabriel aren’t even the same species and Riley growls, “No you aren’t. Gabriel is warm-blooded.” I liked that Riley drew on Lillian’s words to her in the “Pilot” – we’re defined by the decision we make. Riley points out the difference between people who make decisions and robots who execute code. She tells him that he makes decisions and decision she respects.
Billingsley is listed as a regular, but I was really worried they were actually going to kill him off. I really liked that they found a problem/threat that Gabriel was really helpless to fix and it took the team to do it. His ‘deathbed’ scene is a terrific performance by both him and Byrne as he tells Nelson how proud he is and demonstrates that he actually does know his son as he tries to lighten the mood with Nelson’s usual humor. I will quibble with the fact that no one attempted to do CPR on Shenendoah – which is the way you actually restart someone’s heart.
Overall, even with the predictable plot, this was a very enjoyable episode. The chemistry between Billingsley and Nelson, Ory and Holloway, and the entire team is the core of this show. I do hope they don’t push Riley and Gabriel into a relationship but that does seem to be the direction they are going. What did you think of the episode? Let me know your thoughts in the comments below!
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I love the Ory and Holloway/Riley and Gabriel dynamic and it seems like they have amazing chemistry together. Honestly, I'm a hopeless romantic and right from the pilot, they're romantic tension could be felt, but I do have to agree that they don't push it. Maybe in the second season or one of the last episodes of this season. I believe that there should be some push and pull (will they/won't they) in order to make a tv couple become great (i.e: Chuck's Chuck and Sarah).
ReplyDeleteI'm so torn about this! They DO have amazing chemistry - but I worry about what it will do to their working relationship - I love how strong Ory is and we have so few great female role models on television... of course, it's not like Gabriel isn't already a bit protective of her too though and Amelia was also in the service and he let her do her thing...
ReplyDeleteI love your optimism! I love this show but unfortunately even getting a second season will be hard, let alone 6 seasons! Hope I am wrong though.
ReplyDeleteI really liked this episode. As said, it was indeed predictible who was the bad guy but it did adress some very interesting philosophical questions. Like are you still human if you have a chip in your head!
ReplyDeleteI vote for Gabey!
ReplyDeleteSadly, I have to agree with you. CBS has done nothing to promote or help this show. The story/writing, characters/chemistry/acting, and effects are all above average, yet they stuck it with a 13 episode order and dumped it as not a quite a mid-season replacement/not a fall show. To top it off - or put nails in the coffin, after March 4 we have to wait almost 2 months for the last 2 episodes. Crazy. My fingers are crossed that the show has enough ratings - the DVR numbers are usually good, but I'm not terribly optimistic either.
ReplyDeleteI definitely agree! I think that is one of the strengths of this show. Even though it is a procedural/espionage show, it's more than that, so the main plot can be predictable - it's how the characters react to it that is the interesting part.
ReplyDeleteI love how Riley never stops believing that's he's human, even if no one (no even him) believes so...
ReplyDeleteWell, Lillian hired someone who was good at protecting people. I don't think Lillian would have chosen someone who would only see him as an "asset". Also, Riley got a commendation for protecting the President's _kids_ don't forget!!
ReplyDeleteGood review, hitting both the interesting bits and the less successful ones (like you, I knew who the villain was pretty much right off the bat, even with the rigged death of his assistant--way too obvious, guys!).
ReplyDeleteI quite enjoy how this show deals with SF tropes I find interesting--transhumanism, cyborgization, etc--though they do tend to downplay serious discussion of the implications/consequences in favour of action/thriller-oriented plotting. Not that there's anything wrong with that, but I would be interested in seeing more on the philosophy side than depicting the pro-transhumanist guy as such a one-dimensional villain. Not sure the show has quite worked out the attitude about AI it wants to put forward. not that there's anything wrong with that, either, of course; ambiguity can be good.
But for once, we managed to get through an episode without a reference to Amelia, so I'll call that progress!
ReplyDeleteOf course, nothing kills a budding relationship like the mention of the last one!
ReplyDeleteThanks - I think a show like this has to pull off quite a balancing act. I think the actor could have been given more to do to flesh out his thoughts. It was interesting how easily Bryce and Greyston were able to hit Gabriel's insecurities about the chip. I'm sure there's going to be more going forward on the subject...
ReplyDeleteYeah, but the times when Gabriel is faced with some situations in which being human clouds his judgement, Lillian always say "His our most important asset," or something like that...
ReplyDeleteFYI -- if you are going by the dates listed on IMDB, as to waiting two months for the last two episodes, they aren't right. The dates that are listed for some of the upcoming episodes are based on the originally announced start date of Feb 25. When Hostages flopped CBS decided to start the show 5 weeks earlier on Jan. 7, and IMDB has been changing the air dates accordingly as the individual episodes air. If they show all 13 episodes straight in a row which it appears they are most likely going to do, then the show will have it's finale on March 31, which is the same night that CBS should have ratings through the roof as last episode of How I Met Your Mother is scheduled to air that night.
ReplyDeleteAlso, a couple weeks ago I read and article in PCMag about how tablets/devices are changing the way people watch TV. In it quotes an CBS exec who states that Intelligence is in a really difficult time slot and while it comes in 3rd place in live viewer, when they add DVR's, on-demand, online (website and tablet app), that Intelligence becomes the most viewed show in the time slot. Of course, while DVR numbers don't always help with renewal prospects because you can fast forward through the commercials, on-demand and online certainly do because you can't fast forward and are forced to watch the commercials. So it will be interesting to see just how much CBS/advertisers are going to embrace the future of TV watching if they decide to renew a show that gets a lot of views online, which I certainly hope they do.
Yeah, I'm afraid that Gabriel and Riley are going start to get close and then Amelia, either literally and/or figuratively is going to rise from dead and throw a monkey wrench into things. Setting everything back to just co-workers and/or friends until the Amelia storyline is put to rest once and for all.
ReplyDeleteTo which Riley pointed out to Lillian from the get go in the pilot that he is a man and not an it and that he has emotions and desires, which he shouldn't be expected give up just because he has government property in his head. Honestly, I think Riley is his touchstone and she keeps him grounded and is there to remind him that the man defines the chip, the chip doesn't defines man.
ReplyDeleteI have sneaky suspicion that where this headed is a showdown between those entities that view him as a machine (that is Weatherly the Director of National Intelligence who wants a whole army of Gabriels and Tetazoo the head of the CIA who said he would have thought the chip would have made Gabriel more predictable) and those who see him as unique and individual man, who just so happens to have a chip in his head (Team CyberComm - Riley, Cassidy, Nelson, Jamieson and at the end of the day Lillian). Of course, we know at the end of the day Team CyberComm will come out on top, but the battle to that point should be interesting.
Good to know about the IMDb site. The wiki for Intelligence isn't updated either - it would be nice to have a solid idea of CBS lineup for March. I'm curious what they will show in April/May however.
ReplyDeleteYes. I'm very familiar with the alternate streams of ratings and especially the DVR live +3 and +7 rankings. Advertising is becoming less and less of the main income stream. CBS is particularly at the forefront in changes to the way television is monetized. If Intelligence is picked up by Hulu or Netflix, that should net it quite a hefty boost - but they may not have enough episodes banked for that. Of all the networks, I think Les Moonves - the CEO of CBS - is the most forward thinking of the big 4. It's not surprising that Mark Pedowitz at CW shares this vision as the CW is half owned by CBS (the other half is WB). In the end, DVRing is no different than when people taped on their VCR - which counted as live viewing - and fast forwarded or people simply going to the bathroom during the commercials. The first commercial in a break and the last will always cost more because those are the most likely for people to see at least part of. Regardless, the point is that television is changing and hopefully Intelligence will benefit from those changes. (Sorry to blather on about this but this is my primary area of research, so I'm pretty absorbed by it on a daily basis)
We've seen that Lillian can be ruthless, and if people at the head of these agencies really thought about the people under them as people, they'd never put them in danger - so to some extent I can see the necessity of Lillian distancing herself from Gabriel by her use of "asset." On the other hand, she does recognize that he's a persona and that results in her giving him a lot more autonomy than either Weatherly or Tatazoo thinks he should have...I think that Lillian leaves the job of protecting the person up to Riley so she doesn't have to...
ReplyDeleteI bet that Riley is gonna end up dating some new guy who works in CyberCom or an old boyfriemd is gonna resurface and there's gonna be this whole jealousy thing going on like every other tv show. That is what makes the fans so dedicated, after all. :) Can't wait for the next episode, did umyou see that smile on Gabriel's face at the end of this episode?!
ReplyDelete