Paul Levinson's Blog: Levinson at Large, page 194
March 11, 2018
Homeland 7.5: "The Russian Angle"

It's acknowledged as fact - even by the former Russian operative Saul visits out in Wyoming - that the Russians did this, used fake news stories, to meddle in our election. That would be the election that resulted in Trump as President in our reality and Keane as President in Homeland's. But the two Presidents, real and fictional, have little in common.
Keane is no paragon of virtue, but she does evince more decency in her "Charlottesville" than Trump did in ours. Keane is not above manipulating events and people to get her way. But she is portrayed as having no interest in playing footsie with the Russians, or in any way allowing herself to benefit from their dissemination of fake news - if, indeed, they are the source of the fake news stories that helped her win the election, or the fake news story that erupted last week on Homeland.
The retired Russian operative makes a pretty persuasive case that they're not - that is, not behind the bogus report that the white supremacist's boy was being left to die - but, again, he does this by saying it would be too soon after the Russian use of fake news to influence the election in Keane's favor, and that makes no sense.
Maybe the Russians tried to tip the Homeland election in favor of Keane's opponent? If so, we need more information to make sense of that. The upshot is that, in our reality, fake news is a very complex issue. Homeland therefore needs to treat this a little more carefully, and with a little more logic, than it has been doing so far. Throwing out concerns about the Russians as the source of the pivotal fake news event on the show may be current doesn't cut it.
More about fake news here ...
See also Homeland 7.1: The Worse Threat ... Homeland 7.2: Carrie vs. 4chan ... Homeland 7.3: Separating Truth from Hyperthinking ... Homeland 7.4: Fake News!
And see also Homeland 6.1: Madam President-Elect ... Homeland 6.2: Parallel Program ... Homeland 6.3: Potentials ... Homeland 6.4: "A Man with Painted Hair" ... Homeland 6.5: The Attack on Carrie's Brownstone ... Homeland 6.7: The Arch Villain ... Homeland 6.8: Peter's Problem ... Homeland 6.9: The Tide Begins to Turn ... Homeland 6.10: Fake News! ... Homeland 6.11: Quinn and Dar ... Homeland Season 6 Finale: Chilling - and True to Life
And see also Homeland 5.1: Moving into the Age of Snowden ... Homeland 5.2: Who Wants to Kill Carrie ... Homeland 5.3: Carrie and Kerry ... Homeland 5.5: All Quinn ... Homeland 5.6: Saul Wises Up ... Homeland 5.7: Tough to Watch ... Homeland 5.9: Finally! ... Homeland 5.10: Homeland and Homeland ... Homeland 5.11: Allison as Primo Villain ... Homeland Season 5 Finale: RIPs
And see also Homeland 4.1-2: Carrie's State of Mind ... Homeland 4.3: Quinn and Carrie ... Homeland 4.4: Carrie's Counterpart ... Homeland 4.5: Righteous Seduction ... Homeland 4.6: The Biggest Reveal ... Homeland 4.7: The Manifestation ... Homeland 4.8: Saving Someone's Life ... Homeland 4.9: Hitchcock Would've Loved It ... Homeland 4.10: The List ... Homeland 4.12: Out of this Together
And see also Homeland 3.1: Sneak Preview Review ... Homeland 3.2: Sneak Preview Review ... Homeland 3.3: Two Prisons ... Homeland 3.4: Twist! ...Homeland 3.6: Further Down the Rabbit Hole ... Homeland 3.7: Revealing What We Already Knew ... Homeland 3.8: Signs of Life ...Homeland 3.9: Perfect Timing ... Homeland 3.10: Someone Has to Die ... Homeland 3.11: The Loyalist ... Homeland Season 3 Finale: Redemption and Betrayal
And see Homeland 2.1-2: Sneak Preview Review ... Homeland 2.3-5: Sneak Preview Review ... Homeland 2.6: What Brody Knows ... Homeland 2.7: Love Me Tinder ... Homeland 2.8: The Personal and the Professional ...Homeland Season 2 Finale: The Shocker and the Reality
And see also Homeland on Showtime ... Homeland 1.8: Surprises ... Homeland Concludes First Season: Exceptional

Published on March 11, 2018 23:59
Counterpart 1.8: Conversations

Howard and Howard Prime always make for a good conversation, but tonight it was top-of-the-line, with Prime haranguing his counterpart to stay out of his wife and his life, and also be grateful for the great eduction meek Howard is getting in Prime's world - until Howard turns the tables on Prime, and tells him that he's gotten Prime's family to maybe care about him just by showing them a little humanity. Prime leaves angry, which shows us Howard has gotten the upper hand.
But Howard figures in another, even better and more surprising conversation - between Aldrich and Quayle. Aldrich of course suspects Quayle as the mole, and arranges a meeting at his favorite bar. Quayle, who seems on the verge of collapse, and admitting to Aldrich that Quayle's wife is the mole, indeed tells Aldrich that Quayle is the source of the leaks, but because Quayle himself has been played for years. And who has been manipulating you this way, Aldrich asks?
Howard Silk is Quayle's answer! So this puts Prime in a great position - at least, for us, the audience. Emily may be coming out of her coma. Prime will have to work hard to fool her, if that's what he wants to do. But he'll also have to fend off Aldrich, if he believes what Quayle told him.
From what we've seen so far, the other side is far more brutal and outrightly evil than ours - the school and the fate of those children being the latest example. But I'm beginning to think our side has some fearsome malice going too, and I wouldn't want to be anyone, including the very capable Howard Prime, with Aldrich going after him.
See also Counterpart 1.1: Fringe on Espionage ... Counterpart 1.2: Two Different Worlds ... Counterpart 1.3: Identification and Pandemic ... Counterpart 1.4: The Switch ... Counterpart 1.5: Ménage à Alternates ... Counterpart 1.6: Alternate Prince, Funeral, and Clear Clare ... Counterpart 1.7: Spying Across Dimensions

Published on March 11, 2018 22:30
Timeless 2.1: "Like Mein Kampf, by Philip K. Dick"

And, indeed, there was one line which really struck me, which shows the high-intellect octane of time travel Timeless can achieve - it's when Barrett, looking at the megalomaniac writings on the smartphone crafted by their new worst arch-enemy, characterizes it as "like Mein Kampf, by Philip K. Dick".
Now I know he could have been speaking figuratively, or loosely, or just mistakenly, but the set-up in this new episode of Timeless and therefore the rest of the series is that history has already undergone changes that our heroes in 2018 don't know about. Or, even more fun, maybe they do know about it, and it's we the audience on the other side of the screen who don't know about it, because we have a different history.
In our off-screen history, it's of course Adolf Hitler who wrote Mein Kampf. Philip K. Dick does have some connection to this, because he wrote the alternate history The Man in the High Castle novel turned into an outstanding Amazon Prime series in which Hitler and Nazi Germany won the Second World War. So what was Barrett referring to?
In the new history on Timeless, unknown to us but not its characters, was Philip K. Dick a Nazi monster who earlier wrote Mein Kampf? Or was Dick maybe an American biographer of Hitler who titled his rambling bio Mein Kampf?
The possibilities are legion and intriguing. Time travel and alternate history have always been closely related - I've always thought that behind every alternate history is an implied time travel, as the agent that brought the alternate history into being. This first episode of the second season of Timeless, in that one statement about Philip K. Dick, promises all kinds of mind-boggling and intellect-puzzling adventures - or exactly what you'd want, or at very least I want, in a time travel story.

Paul Levinson's books ... Paul Levinson's music
Published on March 11, 2018 20:32
Hard Sun: Hard Crime/Soft Science Fiction

What better day to review Hard Sun, binge-watchable in America on Hulu since just a few days ago, than the day in which Daylight Savings Time (which I like far better than Eastern standard) takes effect.
Ok, maybe that's bit of stretch. But there's more than a bit of a stretch in Hard Sun, powerful, searing, and superb as it is. It's billed as a crime and science fiction story. And it almost isn't science fiction at all.
The premise is two British police detectives learn that the Earth and humanity have only five years left of life - because the sun is going nova, or some such. This serves as a harrowing backdrop for a complex and pounding and altogether top-notch police procedural, as only Neil Cross (Luther and MI-5) can do it. There are twists and turns in both the criminals the two police chase, as well as in their personal lives, not to mention their partnership relationship (Jim Sturgess as DCI Hicks and Agyness Deyn as DC Renko are impressively tough and vulnerable in different ways). In this regard, Hard Sun is one of the best police dramas I've ever seen - in the top ten, for sure.
But the science fiction part is frustrating. It's an interesting premise, to say the least - police hunting all manner of heinous criminals, always knowing that the world is going to end in five years. Some of these criminals are indeed motivated by that knowledge - because it has become public, though denounced as a conspiracy - and MI5 (the British FBI) play a significant role in this action, too. They know about the hard sun that's coming, and apparently don't want the world to know about it too soon.
Now were this proper science fiction, there would scientists and people trying to do something to stop the nova, or build a fleet of ships to take whatever number of humanity off this planet to possible safety. But Hard Sun is not proper science fiction.
And though there's a payoff at the end - which I won't tell you - it uses science fiction in a way I haven't ever seen it used before. Being a fan and author of police procedural hybrids - my favorite as a fan would be Isaac Asimov's The Naked Sun, and as an author see my novel The Silk Code - I'm not at all sure that I like to see science fiction used this way.
But as a devotee of police procedurals on television, I can say that Hard Sun is one rough and exciting ride, and on that score I highly recommend it.

"As a genre-bending blend of police procedural and science fiction, The Silk Code delivers on its promises." -- Gerald Jonas, The New York Times Book Review Paul Levinson's books ... Paul Levinson's music
Published on March 11, 2018 14:54
March 6, 2018
A French Village: A Searing Wake-Up Call
I just finished watching A French Village - Un village français - five seasons on Hulu, two seasons (the final two, two of pieces of an Epilogue so titled) on Amazon Prime. For a variety of reasons, mostly because I didn't want to rush this experience, irresistible as it was, I semi-binge-watched it, taking in this extraordinary work in I'd guess about a month.
Let me say up front that this series is among the very best ever on television, in any form, streaming or cable or traditional network. I'd put it right up there with my two other all-time very favorite series, The Sopranos and The Wire. Like both of those series, A French Village has no villain who is totally bad. Even the worst have a glint or more of decency or humanity. And also like those two HBO series, A French Village has no hero or heroine with some serious flaws. That's why all three of series are so truly human in their stories and perspectives.
A French Village is the story of a fictitious village in France, Villeneuve - near a real village, Besançon - and its Nazi occupation in the Second World War, and, in the Epilogue, the aftermath of that. No one escapes unscathed. Every character, if not literally or figuratively destroyed by the experience, is left deeply impaired or indelibly stained. This is inevitable for all of the collaborators, even the ones who managed to resist a little or more, but also for the resistance fighters, who sacrifice a part of their humanity in their resistance. The lesson is unspeakably sad, yet at the same time wise, beautiful, and even satisfying.
My favorite characters are two of the outright villains - well, one is outright and the other maybe 60/40 villainous. Maybe that's just me - but I recall Hitchcock telling Truffaut that his favorites were villains, too. (I'll try to not deliver any big spoilers in what follows.)
Heinrich Müller is an SS intelligence chief. He's cold as ice, brilliant, and enjoys meting out pain. But when he falls into some kind of combination of love and carnal lust with a French woman - it's mostly lust, but there's some feeling there - he's capable of almost being kind and decent, and against all odds I even found myself rooting for him in a scene or two. Jean Marchetti is French police investigator. He's no lover of Nazis, but he believes in strong government and has some fascist tendencies. But he manages to do some very good things, all along, along with the bad - which unfortunately comes to include killing a resistance fighter in a fury, when he's harangued about something he feels deeply guilty about.
Richard Sammel was perfect as Müller and Nicolas Gob as Marchetti, but really everyone was outstanding and memorable in their roles, including Audrey Fleurot and Thierry Godard (who have also been excellent in Spiral - Godard, though he's not related to Jean-Luc Godard, has something of Jean-Paul Belmondo in his look and manner). A French Village began to air in 2009 and concluded in 2017 in France - or, in American terms, from Obama through Trump. Sort of disconcerting but instructive to consider that the trajectory in A French Village - Nazi to liberation - is just the opposite of 2009 to 2017 here in America.
Not that Trump is (yet) a Nazi - he's closer to Marchetti than Müller - and I do believe there's more hope for us now in the United States than in Villeneuve in World War II and after, a French village that often feels like a village of the damned, where no one gets out with their soul completely intact. But in addition to all its other powerful virtues, A French Village is a searing wake-up call for us in 2018 America.
See this marvel of television when you have a month or more. The French have given us Monet, Debussy, Truffaut, and all the people who made and starred in A French Village.
speaking of Monet ... Paul Levinson's books ... Paul Levinson's music
Let me say up front that this series is among the very best ever on television, in any form, streaming or cable or traditional network. I'd put it right up there with my two other all-time very favorite series, The Sopranos and The Wire. Like both of those series, A French Village has no villain who is totally bad. Even the worst have a glint or more of decency or humanity. And also like those two HBO series, A French Village has no hero or heroine with some serious flaws. That's why all three of series are so truly human in their stories and perspectives.
A French Village is the story of a fictitious village in France, Villeneuve - near a real village, Besançon - and its Nazi occupation in the Second World War, and, in the Epilogue, the aftermath of that. No one escapes unscathed. Every character, if not literally or figuratively destroyed by the experience, is left deeply impaired or indelibly stained. This is inevitable for all of the collaborators, even the ones who managed to resist a little or more, but also for the resistance fighters, who sacrifice a part of their humanity in their resistance. The lesson is unspeakably sad, yet at the same time wise, beautiful, and even satisfying.
My favorite characters are two of the outright villains - well, one is outright and the other maybe 60/40 villainous. Maybe that's just me - but I recall Hitchcock telling Truffaut that his favorites were villains, too. (I'll try to not deliver any big spoilers in what follows.)
Heinrich Müller is an SS intelligence chief. He's cold as ice, brilliant, and enjoys meting out pain. But when he falls into some kind of combination of love and carnal lust with a French woman - it's mostly lust, but there's some feeling there - he's capable of almost being kind and decent, and against all odds I even found myself rooting for him in a scene or two. Jean Marchetti is French police investigator. He's no lover of Nazis, but he believes in strong government and has some fascist tendencies. But he manages to do some very good things, all along, along with the bad - which unfortunately comes to include killing a resistance fighter in a fury, when he's harangued about something he feels deeply guilty about.
Richard Sammel was perfect as Müller and Nicolas Gob as Marchetti, but really everyone was outstanding and memorable in their roles, including Audrey Fleurot and Thierry Godard (who have also been excellent in Spiral - Godard, though he's not related to Jean-Luc Godard, has something of Jean-Paul Belmondo in his look and manner). A French Village began to air in 2009 and concluded in 2017 in France - or, in American terms, from Obama through Trump. Sort of disconcerting but instructive to consider that the trajectory in A French Village - Nazi to liberation - is just the opposite of 2009 to 2017 here in America.
Not that Trump is (yet) a Nazi - he's closer to Marchetti than Müller - and I do believe there's more hope for us now in the United States than in Villeneuve in World War II and after, a French village that often feels like a village of the damned, where no one gets out with their soul completely intact. But in addition to all its other powerful virtues, A French Village is a searing wake-up call for us in 2018 America.
See this marvel of television when you have a month or more. The French have given us Monet, Debussy, Truffaut, and all the people who made and starred in A French Village.

speaking of Monet ... Paul Levinson's books ... Paul Levinson's music
Published on March 06, 2018 21:22
March 4, 2018
Counterpart 1.7: Spying Across Dimensions

First, it occurred to me as we watched the young Clare in spy training on the other side, that there's a strong something of The Americans in Counterpart. Except, whatever Elizabeth's original name was in The Soviet Union (I forget) as she trains to be the adult Elizabeth in America, passing as an American, the ante in Counterpart is much higher, because we get Clare training not to be some rival or enemy nationality but her alternate self. This, again, as I've said before, comes from this deft mix of spy story and science fiction story.
We also get more tidbits about what happened to the other side. It was some kind of swine flu that wiped out so much of its population - with the result that, in addition to being paranoid, they don't eat pork. What's still not clear or not even known is why they blame us for their pandemic - it will be an interesting show indeed when that is revealed.
But the last minutes of this episode revealed an outstanding twist, as any superior spy drama should. Peter's discovery of that his wife is really her other, and our knowledge that the Clare who is his wife killed the Clare he intended to marry, is not the last word in this complex relationship. It turns out that Clare has let her cyanide pill outlive its effectiveness - because she wants now, above all else, to live. That's what having a baby did for her - it transformed her, turned her back into a more normal human being. She was still fine with spying on her husband, but is no longer fine with sacrificing her life if need be. Which makes eminent and healthy sense.
--If we can believe her, that is. But I think we can. That scene in the hospital looked pretty real and convincing. Good spy stories always have twists. But they're even better when the spying is across alternate dimensions of reality.
See also Counterpart 1.1: Fringe on Espionage ... Counterpart 1.2: Two Different Worlds ... Counterpart 1.3: Identification and Pandemic ... Counterpart 1.4: The Switch ... Counterpart 1.5: Ménage à Alternates ... Counterpart 1.6: Alternate Prince, Funeral, and Clear Clare

Published on March 04, 2018 23:05
Homeland 7.4: Fake News!

Here's how it happened on Homeland: a teenager's dog in the compound - surrounded by FBI, Waco and Ruby Ridge style - goes running the woods, eventually towards the FBI, who shoot the dog. The boy, running after his dog, sees what the FBI has done, and raises his gun at them, likely to shoot. But before he shoots, an agent shoots him.
He's badly wounded, and after a whole bunch of harrowing turns in the story, he's in the hospital, being treated, doing well. At this point, a mysterious man who has entered the hospital puts on medical garb and takes some pictures of the boy on the operating table - bleeding, though the docs says he's doing ok.
But the photo he takes and puts on the web doesn't say that or show that. To the contrary, it says the FBI have let the boy bleed out and die. This results in the boy's father on the compound killing the FBI agent they took hostage, which in results in the FBI storming the compound and killing lots of people.
Saul tried to stop this, and got assaulted by the FBI commander for his troubles. And so, despite Saul's efforts, another Waco has happened.
Yes, O'Keefe was in one sense to blame for starting this, but the worst known villain is the FBI commander who lost his temper and ordered the assault. He's been portrayed as having a short fuse all along, and should have been fired a long time ago. (I have to hope that in our reality, no FBI agent in command would have ordered the raid.)
But the deepest villain is the guy who created and disseminated the phony photo. Fake news in action. Who was he? A Russian agent? We'll find out soon enough.
But as it is, this episode of Homeland is about the best parable on the dangers of fake news I've seen so far on a television drama.
For more about news, see Fake News in Real Context.
See also Homeland 7.1: The Worse Threat ... Homeland 7.2: Carrie vs. 4chan ... Homeland 7.3: Separating Truth from Hyperthinking
And see also Homeland 6.1: Madam President-Elect ... Homeland 6.2: Parallel Program ... Homeland 6.3: Potentials ... Homeland 6.4: "A Man with Painted Hair" ... Homeland 6.5: The Attack on Carrie's Brownstone ... Homeland 6.7: The Arch Villain ... Homeland 6.8: Peter's Problem ... Homeland 6.9: The Tide Begins to Turn ... Homeland 6.10: Fake News! ... Homeland 6.11: Quinn and Dar ... Homeland Season 6 Finale: Chilling - and True to Life
And see also Homeland 5.1: Moving into the Age of Snowden ... Homeland 5.2: Who Wants to Kill Carrie ... Homeland 5.3: Carrie and Kerry ... Homeland 5.5: All Quinn ... Homeland 5.6: Saul Wises Up ... Homeland 5.7: Tough to Watch ... Homeland 5.9: Finally! ... Homeland 5.10: Homeland and Homeland ... Homeland 5.11: Allison as Primo Villain ... Homeland Season 5 Finale: RIPs
And see also Homeland 4.1-2: Carrie's State of Mind ... Homeland 4.3: Quinn and Carrie ... Homeland 4.4: Carrie's Counterpart ... Homeland 4.5: Righteous Seduction ... Homeland 4.6: The Biggest Reveal ... Homeland 4.7: The Manifestation ... Homeland 4.8: Saving Someone's Life ... Homeland 4.9: Hitchcock Would've Loved It ... Homeland 4.10: The List ... Homeland 4.12: Out of this Together
And see also Homeland 3.1: Sneak Preview Review ... Homeland 3.2: Sneak Preview Review ... Homeland 3.3: Two Prisons ... Homeland 3.4: Twist! ...Homeland 3.6: Further Down the Rabbit Hole ... Homeland 3.7: Revealing What We Already Knew ... Homeland 3.8: Signs of Life ...Homeland 3.9: Perfect Timing ... Homeland 3.10: Someone Has to Die ... Homeland 3.11: The Loyalist ... Homeland Season 3 Finale: Redemption and Betrayal
And see Homeland 2.1-2: Sneak Preview Review ... Homeland 2.3-5: Sneak Preview Review ... Homeland 2.6: What Brody Knows ... Homeland 2.7: Love Me Tinder ... Homeland 2.8: The Personal and the Professional ...Homeland Season 2 Finale: The Shocker and the Reality
And see also Homeland on Showtime ... Homeland 1.8: Surprises ... Homeland Concludes First Season: Exceptional

Published on March 04, 2018 20:59
February 25, 2018
Homeland 7.3: Separating Truth from Hyperthinking

The best of this came at the end, with Wellington ordering the air strike in Syria against the President's wishes. Linus Roache, who was compelling and unpredictable as King Ecbert in The Vikings, is doing it again as Wellington in Homeland, in which he's not (yet) President, but now making as well as calling the shots in the White House. I especially liked this, because it has no analog that we know of in our political reality.
And in second but still strong place is O'Keefe turning the tables on and nearly getting Saul. Again, this was well motivated in retrospect and almost tipped off in a conversation but still somewhat surprising to see on screen. On one level, this story at the compound is another Waco, On the other hand, it's something much deeper, if only because O'Keefe is so much more media savvy than David Koresh, not to mention accurate about what the President is doing - or, more precisely, what Wellington is doing, but there's no way that O'Keefe can see that difference.
And it was a powerful night for Carrie, too. Her dilemma - of being able separate true connections from those her hyperactive mind might generate - is really the template for this entire season. When the enemy is a foreign terrorist, or even some American like Brody under the sway of a foreign terrorist, it's a little easier to separate truth from hyperthinking than when the enemy is in the White House.
And by the way, this set up is much more dangerous than Trump in our reality. Elizabeth Keane seems ten times smarter and more in control of her impulses than Trump. And as much as I can't stand Chief of Staff Kelly, he so far hasn't revealed any of the depth of deception and treachery of Wellington.
And I'll be back with more next week.
See also Homeland 7.1: The Worse Threat ... Homeland 7.1: Carrie vs. 4chan
And see also Homeland 6.1: Madam President-Elect ... Homeland 6.2: Parallel Program ... Homeland 6.3: Potentials ... Homeland 6.4: "A Man with Painted Hair" ... Homeland 6.5: The Attack on Carrie's Brownstone ... Homeland 6.7: The Arch Villain ... Homeland 6.8: Peter's Problem ... Homeland 6.9: The Tide Begins to Turn ... Homeland 6.10: Fake News! ... Homeland 6.11: Quinn and Dar ... Homeland Season 6 Finale: Chilling - and True to Life
And see also Homeland 5.1: Moving into the Age of Snowden ... Homeland 5.2: Who Wants to Kill Carrie ... Homeland 5.3: Carrie and Kerry ... Homeland 5.5: All Quinn ... Homeland 5.6: Saul Wises Up ... Homeland 5.7: Tough to Watch ... Homeland 5.9: Finally! ... Homeland 5.10: Homeland and Homeland ... Homeland 5.11: Allison as Primo Villain ... Homeland Season 5 Finale: RIPs
And see also Homeland 4.1-2: Carrie's State of Mind ... Homeland 4.3: Quinn and Carrie ... Homeland 4.4: Carrie's Counterpart ... Homeland 4.5: Righteous Seduction ... Homeland 4.6: The Biggest Reveal ... Homeland 4.7: The Manifestation ... Homeland 4.8: Saving Someone's Life ... Homeland 4.9: Hitchcock Would've Loved It ... Homeland 4.10: The List ... Homeland 4.12: Out of this Together
And see also Homeland 3.1: Sneak Preview Review ... Homeland 3.2: Sneak Preview Review ... Homeland 3.3: Two Prisons ... Homeland 3.4: Twist! ...Homeland 3.6: Further Down the Rabbit Hole ... Homeland 3.7: Revealing What We Already Knew ... Homeland 3.8: Signs of Life ...Homeland 3.9: Perfect Timing ... Homeland 3.10: Someone Has to Die ... Homeland 3.11: The Loyalist ... Homeland Season 3 Finale: Redemption and Betrayal
And see Homeland 2.1-2: Sneak Preview Review ... Homeland 2.3-5: Sneak Preview Review ... Homeland 2.6: What Brody Knows ... Homeland 2.7: Love Me Tinder ... Homeland 2.8: The Personal and the Professional ...Homeland Season 2 Finale: The Shocker and the Reality
And see also Homeland on Showtime ... Homeland 1.8: Surprises ... Homeland Concludes First Season: Exceptional

Paul Levinson's books ... Paul Levinson's music
Published on February 25, 2018 21:17
Counterpart 1.6: Alternate Prince, Funeral, and Clear Clare

As I've said earlier, Counterpart is if nothing else a taut spy story, though of course it's something more. That duality - spy story and something more - was captured perfectly in the "love the lie" conversation between the Howard Prime and the butcher's widow. She assumes that HP and her husband were spies for Russia or the United States. That would be compelling enough, in the way that any good spy story is. But of course, Howard Prime and we know that they were/are spies for an alternate reality.
And we learn through this episode that that alternate reality really has it in for us. The deaths they're meting out are more than you get in the usual spy games. The killings are part of an effort to wipe us out completely.
What are they - the alternates us's - so angry about? I mean, we learn that Prince is still alive there. Not as momentous as JFK (the big reveal about the alternate reality in Fringe), and not as wonderful as saving John Lennon would be (at least, in my book, figuratively and literally - in "Saving Lennon" in Peter Brown Called, but I won't tell you if the time traveler succeeds) - but, hey, Prince living is still pretty impressive. But that's not enough to budge the huge chip on alternate Berlin's shoulder. The look in Clare's eyes at the end is clear and deadly.
But there's also some hope, I suppose, in Howard Prime, who does have more of good Howard in him than meets the eye, showing real compassion to the butcher's widow. And even Nadia at the edge of her alternate's funeral may be thinking something vaguely humane.
I'm looking forward to finding out more next week.
See also Counterpart 1.1: Fringe on Espionage ... Counterpart 1.2: Two Different Worlds ... Counterpart 1.3: Identification and Pandemic ... Counterpart 1.4: The Switch ... Counterpart 1.5: Ménage à Alternates

Published on February 25, 2018 19:33
Peter Brown Called
just published ...
Writing science fiction and songs have been two of my lifelong passions. This anthology combines them, with a selection of my science fiction and fantasy stories that has music as a theme, and my lyrics that deal with far-off suns, robots, and time travel.
Table of Contents
Prologue
=stories=
Marilyn and Monet
The Harmony
The Kid in the Video Store
Ian, Isaac, and John
Saving Lennon (from The Loose Ends Saga)
The Suspended Fourth
Sam’s Requests
The Singing Pottery (from The Silk Code)
=songs=
Evening's Evergreen Morning
A Piece of the Rainbow
The Lama Will Be Late This Year
Alpha Centauri
Lime Streets
Tau Ceti
If I Traveled to The Past
I Fell in Love with a Robot
The First House on Mars
=alternate equation #1=
Elvis, Ed, and Einstein
read an excerpt you won't find any place else on Speculative Fiction Showcase Paul Levinson's books ... Paul Levinson's music

Writing science fiction and songs have been two of my lifelong passions. This anthology combines them, with a selection of my science fiction and fantasy stories that has music as a theme, and my lyrics that deal with far-off suns, robots, and time travel.
Table of Contents
Prologue
=stories=
Marilyn and Monet
The Harmony
The Kid in the Video Store
Ian, Isaac, and John
Saving Lennon (from The Loose Ends Saga)
The Suspended Fourth
Sam’s Requests
The Singing Pottery (from The Silk Code)
=songs=
Evening's Evergreen Morning
A Piece of the Rainbow
The Lama Will Be Late This Year
Alpha Centauri
Lime Streets
Tau Ceti
If I Traveled to The Past
I Fell in Love with a Robot
The First House on Mars
=alternate equation #1=
Elvis, Ed, and Einstein
read an excerpt you won't find any place else on Speculative Fiction Showcase Paul Levinson's books ... Paul Levinson's music
Published on February 25, 2018 12:08
Levinson at Large
At present, I'll be automatically porting over blog posts from my main blog, Paul Levinson's Infinite Regress. These consist of literate (I hope) reviews of mostly television, with some reviews of mov
At present, I'll be automatically porting over blog posts from my main blog, Paul Levinson's Infinite Regress. These consist of literate (I hope) reviews of mostly television, with some reviews of movies, books, music, and discussions of politics and world events mixed in. You'll also find links to my Light On Light Through podcast.
...more
- Paul Levinson's profile
- 342 followers
