The Crossing 1.3: The Missing Inventor

But as the series is progressing, it's less jaw-dropping, and more the kind of mix of good and bad and in-between characters we encountered on The Dome. And also, at the same time, a mix of characters who know a little to a lot of what's going on, with no one knowing everything.
Those mixes can make a series work, but in order to be truly revolutionary and mind-blowing, like Lost at its best, it needs to have more. At this point, although the repeated demonstrations of Reece's super prowess are impressive -- especially tonight, quickly recovering from a bullet, and killing someone played by Steve Harris, meaning he could have been a major character - they're beginning to wear a little thin.
Possibly this is a problem of anything on traditional network television, which is increasingly struggling to keep up in narrative daring with cable and now Netflix and Amazon Prime and Hulu streaming. That was one reason why The Dome faded. But I still think The Crossing has potential.
Someone invented the time travel that has twice gotten people from the future to the present. If Apex are the super-human group in the future intent on destroying what's left of normal, i.e., our current, humanity, why would one one or a group of them try to help normal humans by giving them a way to escape to the past? Or was the time travel invented by some normal human genius (how's that for an oxymoron?) in the future, intent on helping his/her, i.e., our own kind?
Such questions don't even need to get into the metaphysics of time travel. They're just the makings of good espionage narrative, and I hope we start seeing more of them addressed in The Crossing.
See also The Crossing: Lost Again, But OK ... The Crossing 1.2: Calling for More Time Travel

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Published on April 16, 2018 20:30
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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.
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