Mousetrap

Wednesday, September 24, 2008 at 12:00pm by GeekBoy

Okay, so the title of this week’s episode of The Sarah Connor Chronicles is “Mousetrap”. And about 15 minutes into the episode, you already understand why. And then a few minutes after that, Cromartie point blank gives you the history of the mousetrap, and how it can’t really be improved upon. Which is probably true. It’s not really possible to build a mousetrap that’s much better than the original. But, as Wile E. Coyote has proven time and time again, it is possible to build a more COMPLICATED mousetrap … which may or may not work.

And that’s kind of what this episode felt like. Wile E. Cromartie using assorted ACME parts to try and catch John “The Road Runner” Connor with an overcomplicated mousetrap. All in all, it was an okay enough episode, I guess. Told its story. Had a beginning, middle, and end. But I walked away from it kind of feeling like terminators aren’t really all that scary.

Cameron’s clearly still glitched as a result of the explosion, and is walking around the house worrying about home improvements and a bird trapped in the chimney instead of, you know, protecting John — which she’s doing a shit-poor job of. I’ll abide this for a while longer, because I’m guessing they have plans to bring that plot line to a head soon. But I want Cameron the bad ass back!

Meanwhile, Cromartie’s in the middle of the desert, busy setting up elaborate scenarios and rigging up MacGyver-worthy apparatuses (apparati?) out of mousetraps, molding clay, cell phones, and spare pieces of wire, all in an effort to determine where John is. Then when he finds him, it sets off a “chase” scene on the boardwalk that, if sped up, could easily have had some Benny Hill music playing behind it. And in the end, he’s defeated by the fact that he’s much heavier than water. And tell me that image of him and his red eyes sinking to the bottom of the ocean didn’t remind you even a little bit of the way Wile E. Coyote used to fall slowly to the bottom of a canyon?

So with all of that bumbling, the T-1001 unit, Catherine Weaver, MUST be doing something cool and deadly, right? Um. Okay, not so much. She and Ellison sit and talk. And talk. And talk some more. She makes up some big fake story about her brother and her husband and some plane crash and blah blah blah. And FBI guy is clearly buying it all. And I’m guessing that he’ll hook her up with Cromartie at some point, and to be honest, without knowing what her big picture is, I don’t really care all that much about this plot line yet. Maybe when it comes together more.

And then there’s the matter of Penny, er, Michelle dying. I didn’t honestly care about the character all that much, but it still seemed like kind of a stupid way to die, particularly since she was the only one to get injured by the cell tower falling, and is conveniently miles away from the nearest hospital. And now the writers are open to explore the relationship between Charley and Sarah, which will of course be conflicted. Charley’s probably all hell-bent for revenge on the machines at this point, but he should be pissed at John, for dragging his ass into all this in the first place. John was the one who went looking for him, and John was the one who brought him to the house to save Derek’s life.

And I refuse to even discuss the dopey relationship between John and Riley. Seriously, man, you’re the savior of the human race. Start acting like it!

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3 responses for this post

  1. 1.   Michael said  ( Wednesday, September 24, 2008 at 3:52 pm )

    Like you, I did find it odd that Cromartie set up such an elaborate ruse to what end? Did he really need to do all that in order to get them there? And it’s not like he used the time he bought to leave. He waited around and then blew the cell tower. Anyhoo.

    RE: FBI guy buying Catherine’s spiel
    I could have sworn that they showed him notice Catherine was only PRETENDING to drink water (twice).

  2. 2.   Greater Czarina said  ( Friday, September 26, 2008 at 8:54 am )

    There were too many plot holes in this episode for me to be satisfied. It disappointed me. Here’s the biggest, most glaring one, IMO:

    Why would Chrome Artie not take full advantage of blowing the legendary Sarah Connor to bits by making the bomb under Not!Penny’s chair real? Or just plain blowing up the building instead of the cell tower? What the hell was the point of just interrupting phone service – did he want her to switch to Sprint?

    And I’m still having issues with Catherine having posed as a urinal. How can I buy into her dangerous/cool personna when she stood around GETTING PEED INTO FOR GODKNOWSHOWLONG?!

    They’d better tighten up the writing, or I don’t think this show’s going another season.

  3. 3.   GeekBoy said  ( Friday, September 26, 2008 at 9:15 am )

    I can’t really disagree with the plot holes in this episode. You’re right, based on what I know at this point, I’m not sure why exactly he’d keep Sarah alive. Maybe they’ll retcon a reason for that eventually.

    As for Catherine posing as a urinal, my assumption was that she didn’t just sit there posing as a urinal all day, waiting for that guy to come along, but that she specifically knew when he was going into the bathroom and did it at that time. I mean, realistically, if she saw him and that other guy walking down the hall toward the bathroom, it wouldn’t take much for a liquid cyborg to slither through the air ducts and get in place in time.

    Now is that a long way to go to make a point? Yes. Would a terminator really have bothered to go to all that trouble? Probably not. But it made for a funny scene, so I’ll give the writers some latitude on that.

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