What Caleb did over 279 builds, Bernard did in 8 years with Sublime, Frankie AKA C (Aurora Perrineau) has only one life to learn. To her credit, she did a great job picking up all the lessons her mother Uwade (Nogyfo McLean) and (especially) her father taught her about surviving and thriving in a mind-controlled world. She has been doing this ever since Caleb went to war with Maeve (Thandiwe Newton) at a young age, rescuing outliers and teaching them how to fight. He never returned, but she never gave up hope. It is the driving force behind my continued hard work.
The parallels between Caleb and Frankie’s stories are really well done, and Andrew Securil and the show’s editorial crew smash-cut between the two (and Bernard’s) reality in the cold white box. It does a great job of matching cuts between. His core memories of his daughter ran with him through the fields. Her importance became a defining element of his character, his hook, with Maeve’s daughter resonating with her through several jobs and programming changes, and Hale’s dead child and ex-husband being an afterthought. Sure, she’s referring to her loss — and though it’s wise that screenwriters Jordan Goldberg and Ali Rock remembered that small detail. , as is the case with biological fathers Caleb and Maeve, coming from her lips feels a little unimportant. As Frankie told Bernard, Charlotte’s love for her children is only part of her programming and not a central memory like Caleb and Maeve.
Seklir and company take advantage of the show’s vanity, especially during the rescue sequence that shows young Frankie (Celeste Clark) learning on her mother’s side during a very rigorous hands-on training. Every time an entire group of people freezes in place, people pouring wine spill everywhere, and children slowly stop on swings (viewers see the children actually coming A shot held long enough to be able to) until stopped mid-play), it gets me. Frankie and her friends work especially well in “Fidelity” as they try to trick Host Blank, who is sent to capture them. It’s a very tense scene, equal to everything Caleb stands up for, with the host masquerading as one of the members of the resistance group while listening to Frankie return her father’s very sweet message to her. It outweighs the latter scene where you have to fight.
It’s a clever setup and a good fight. WestworldThe third season of , where the host was regularly taking over humans. Further back, case, only without a flamethrower test to determine if there is someone in the host. Frankie needs only to use her knowledge of the people around her and Bernard’s helpful suspicions (and not-so-helpful hints) to expose the host in their midst, and she herself. Or do so for a friend with minimal bloodshed.
A very tense scene before devolving into violence, most of “Fidelity” is made for tension that is rewarded with a few good moments. Has done a great physical job as the various Caleb and his final radio address to his daughter is a beautiful job very well delivered by the actor. McCready’s impression of Aurora Perrineau roaming the eerie wreckage. Frankie’s non-violent handling works very well.