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Helix - Episode 1.11 - 'Black Rain' Review

15 Mar 2014

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As we count down to final episodes of the first season, we see a turning point for those trapped at the arctic scientific outpost, as the hunters become the hunted, and the scientific team chase down vectors with – finally – a cure. The cure is a combination of Julia’s healing properties mixed with a freezing compound designed to slow the virus long enough for the cure to take effect.

A kill squad from Ilaria also arrives with plans to find the virus and kill all who remain. This new Ilaria group is led by a very young-looking immortal whom Hatake describes as The Scythe – an assassin and the most deadly of the 500 immortals.

But before this all happens, we were treated to more gore, horror, elevator music, and camp. The tone of the episode is set by an exploding rat in a microwave. The vectors are luring out the starving survivors and set out the rat as a trap, because apparently a live rat that’s likely had scientific experiments performed on it looks like an appetizing meal to someone who may have run out of food in the past day or two. I’m not sure why the vectors felt they needed to microwave the rat though, since their mission was accomplished and the researcher was captured. Maybe vectors like gore too.

Hatake, meanwhile, is characteristically purposeful and nonverbal, as he sets explosives throughout the compound in preparation for Ilaria’s arrival. There’s no doubt about who’s in charge here, as the vectors clear a path for him as he continues with his work.

Alan characteristically makes poor decisions as he rounds up the remaining 20 uninfected to bring them to the sunroom (the location of Peter’s first big attack), assuming they’ll be safer there because there are no vents and only one point of access. Peter and a fellow vector, however, are spying on Alan, and plot their attack – leading to the best scene of the episode and the inspiration for the title, Black Rain. They collect their black goo and feed it into the sprinkler system and douse the uninfected with the virus. This scene is accompanied by the upbeat and ironically fitting song, “Raining in My Heart,” made popular by Buddy Holly.

Leading to this memorable scene, fuzzy camera footage of the vectors making preparations in the dingy basement quarters, with Peter’s red eyes and their off-color veins standing out, create a wonderfully creepy vibe in the scenes. While this show has the worst depiction of an arctic environment that I’ve ever seen, they’ve consistently done creepy well – from the shots of the long, deserted hallways, to the filming of the vectors scurrying around in the claustrophobia-inducing air ducts, to now the blurry camera effects that succeed in highlighting the most terrifying features of these creatures.

More Silver Eyes

While this final battle plays out between the CDC and the infected, with the CDC in the end winning and succeeding in giving infected, including Peter, the cure, a possibly more significant plot plays out with Sarah’s tumor and the cure she is given by Julia. Sarah’s tumor goes into remission, but the big reveal is that she, too, now has the silver eyes. Is she immortal now as well? It appears so. So that leads to the question whether all of the vectors who have gotten the cure will now become immortal – and what type of consequences we should we expect since we’ve been told that there can be only 500?

We have two more episodes left of this first season, so let’s speculate on how you think this season will end. Who, if anyone, do you think will survive the final episode? What is the threat that we will be left with to serve as a plot foundation for future seasons, should the series be renewed?  My current speculation is that Peter, Julia, and Sarah will be left, with their army of vectors behind them, as the next generation of immortals. There have been hints the current immortals didn’t start off bad – they became that over time – and that some like Hatake are also scientists. Immortality can corrupt, and our group of scientists has potential to become the next big threat to humanity, with Daniel, Anana and Balleseros fighting on the side of humanity. I’m betting that Alan and Hatake won’t survive the battle.

What are your thoughts? Let’s hear them in the comments below.

7 comments:

  1. I believe that only Sarah was turned Immortal, because she was treated with Julia's blood, the rest wasn't cured with her blood, I guess.

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  2. Thanks for commenting. I'm pretty certain that the cure for the vectors came from Julia too. Not blood, but I think they said cerebral fluid. If the cure didn't come from Julia, where did it come from?

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  3. Thank you. It's always a little more creepy when the really dangerous one looks like a kid. I think Sarah's symptoms (headaches, etc.) are the same that Julia experienced as she was getting used to the silver eyes. Agree that was a very good setup to the final couple of episodes.

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  4. Guessing -- The Willis Hypothesis will tie back to everything, right down to the organic vegetable garden prominently featured throughout the series as a backdrop. (Check out a summary of Christopher Willis, botanist). Betting that was the subtlest foreshadowing ever. Sutton claimed Hatake was "chasing" it to save his daughter. She was disgusted by his "weakness for them", so "them" being humans. And Julia's an "abomination" b/c she's a halfbreed. So I bet the vectors (and missing children) turn out to be his experiments that didn't go as planned. Or maybe they did, but needed Julia's mixed dna to change them. Creepy veins, crazy growth in petri dishes, silver eyes... sounds like photosynthesis run amuk, no? So, Hatake created a mutant race to battle the 500 who were aiming for a "thin the herd" version of genocide? Other sites' snarky reviews aside, I get a kick out of the camp and hysterical soundtrack. The Sergio/Anana and endless, loopy family tree reveals were handled clunkily, but could end up being awesome serial subplots (there's a reason why the soaps are some of the longest running shows, and, hey, didn't they bring back Dallas?). They just need a better writer on that who gets the whole "girl saving the bad boy" and relatable Daddy-issues appeal. It's not House of Cards by a long shot. But maybe the dearth of interesting television, period, helps to keep Helix's questions/ reveals on our short list for precious dvr space. We'll see if they get renewed and can keep it creepy and atmospheric once they necessarily expand outside the arctic. THAT should be interesting. IMO, only, but it's the first time we ever bothered to tune in to Syfy.

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  5. Yeah it was cerebral fluid, about the cure for the vectors I really don't know, but anyway I wouldn't like to every vector become Immortal... And Alan is the only one that hasn't become one yet... he should do something about it, lol...

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  6. Weird, I responded to this comment earlier, but I guess Disqus ate it. I love your thoughts on tying the plants and the Willis Hypothesis! There's got to be more to this than what's been confirmed so far - to give us more to speculate on in season 2 (hoping it's renewed) ;-).


    The campiness and song choices don't bother me either, and I usually find them funny. The area I'd most like to see improvement if the show comes back is in the writing of the characters. I feel like I should care more about them by this point.

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  7. Michael Jentsch21 March 2014 at 01:18

    They gave the vectors a protein from julia which was isolated from her blood and combined with a cryo agent. The protein targeted the mrna synthesis if I am correct

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