"Homeland" Achilles Heel (TV Episode 2011) Poster

(TV Series)

(2011)

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8/10
Carrie's acting a little off
NatashaWM24 March 2023
Warning: Spoilers
A decent episode but I didn't like the way Carrie kept apologizing to Brody and acting all heartbroken by him. It's ridiculous because they were not in a relationship.

For me the exciting thing about them hooking up is that I saw it as them using each other, both for stress relief (they both have very stressful lives) and more importantly as information gathering. She wants to know if he's been "turned", he wants to know if the CIA suspect he's been turned. They both use the truth as a weapon to confuse/convince each other that they're trustworthy. It's a total mind bender and I love it. I also think it's silly that Brody is suddenly no longer a suspect, when their new suspect is so closely connected to him. Especially since Brody went on the record saying that the guy is dead and buried.

Despite my complaints this is a great show and it definitely has me hooked.
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6/10
Misogynist shadows of judgement
dierregi17 March 2021
Warning: Spoilers
After having read stellar reviews about this show, I decided to check it out, also because it's over, so no useless, meaningless additional series to reach the 10 years-running mark.

Half-way the first season I agree about a good, suspenseful script and the Danes character being interesting, but sort of predictable. All female leads must be involved in some sexual cavorting (a lot of it, in the case of Carrie, who's painted as promiscuous and unfaithful).

In this episode, I found her repeated apologising to Brody annoying. She was apologetic enough the first time, maybe the second was still OK but three times is excessive. Brody doesn't like the way she treated him? Tough luck.

For the show to work the audience must like Brody as the vulnerable but jaded unconventional war hero. Problem is, I don't like him, his hypocrisy, his sanctimonious attitude and his being judgemental when he has a lot more than cheating on his conscience.

Finally, his wife Jess is shown from the start as a "cheating" wife. Her first scene is Jess having sex with a guy and you cannot make a first impression twice. The theme of her "cheating" is reiterated by her annoyingly judgemental teenage daughter. Jess is nothing more than a sex object the men pass around. Technically her "cheating" is not even that, because she thought her husband was dead.

It's typical of the American hypocrisy to paint women in a bad light (for their sexual "sins") and the men as tragically heroic, even if they too sleep around, are violent and plan terrorist attacks (see also the Muslim "professor" married to Aileen, the female American terrorist corrupting the innocent man).
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