Blood Must Have Blood: Part 2
- Episode aired Mar 11, 2015
- TV-14
- 42m
After being betrayed by Lexa, Clarke makes a final stand against Mount Weather, while Jaha shocks Murphy as they continue their journey to the City of Light.After being betrayed by Lexa, Clarke makes a final stand against Mount Weather, while Jaha shocks Murphy as they continue their journey to the City of Light.After being betrayed by Lexa, Clarke makes a final stand against Mount Weather, while Jaha shocks Murphy as they continue their journey to the City of Light.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThelonious quotes Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland when he states, "Curiouser and curiouser!" upon reaching Alie's house.
- GoofsRadiation, even at its highest GY scale, does not cause death immediately. In the worst case scenario, one dies from radiation sickness roughly a day after exposure. This is a case more radioactive than that of Chernobyl or Hiroshima.
- Quotes
Bellamy Blake: Look. If you need forgiveness, I'll give that to you. You're forgiven. Please come inside.
Clarke: Take care of them for me.
Bellamy Blake: Clarke!
Clarke: No. Seeing their faces every day is just gonna remind me of what I did to get them here. What we did.
Bellamy Blake: You don't have to do this alone.
Clarke: I bear it so they don't have to.
- SoundtracksWerewolves of London
(uncredited)
Written by Warren Zevon, LeRoy Marinell and Waddy Wachtel
Performed by Warren Zevon
There're no good people.
That a character has to remember us this is unnecessary, but forgivable. Shows tend to self-reference and talk too much.
But that's the only problem one can find with this last episode of season two. If you leave Jaha's search for god on the side (full of surprises, and a terrible outcome most probably), this last episode has everything that a show may desire. The Ark people are afraid for their own, but the Mount Weather people can't wait anymore, won't wait anymore. Everyone becomes blind but for their own desires and motives. It makes for great moments, as you can see characters (as Kane) trying to dialogue, and the other side making the three-monkeys thing. It's very real and very human, as has been studied that people react with their most basic instincts to the need to survive. Clarke and Bellamy (they really act as a team, even if everyone seems to believe Clarke is the leader)'s decisions are justified, not by long discourses, but by situations, actions, consequences. But everyone else's too (Lincoln, Octavia, who has some great moments, Monty, Maya...). Even if the viewer doesn't agree with what happens, they won't be able to say that the show doesn't explain why they do what they do. Everything keeps being dark, bleak and hopeless, with little chance that sunny and bright days are to come.
And now, about that crazy Jaha...
- tenshi_ippikiookami
- Feb 9, 2016