norwich36: (claire hiro)
norwich36 ([personal profile] norwich36) wrote2007-05-07 10:12 pm
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Heroes: The Hard Part



Ok, was anyone else laughing their ass off at the way Sylar completely literalized the metaphor "you're a special snowflake"?

That actually was a beautifully-filmed scene, and I loved the subtle shift from Sylar creating a wonder world for his mom, recreating the snowglobes she loved so much, to her horror as it goes wrong. And it perfectly encapsulated the theme of this episode, that the bad guys are human beings, just like us, but ones who hubristically misuse their powers and in doing so cause others to suffer.

Sylar was being paralleled to Nathan in interesting ways in this episode. Both of them are ambitious and driven in part by their desire to live up to their mothers' hopes and dreams for them. Both of them have mothers who are a little scary, and who try to control the world, though Sylar's mom does it symbolically through the snow globes, while Nathan's mom does it through Machiavellian schemes and political manipulation. Sylar is ultimately not strong enough to break from his mother without killing her; we can only hope that Nathan is stronger than Sylar, and resists going along with the nuclear plot. I was amused by the irony that throughout most of the episode, Sylar the serial killer was more overtly concerned with protecting New York than Nathan was--though I hope Nathan is just playing the various members of the Linderman faction.

I also loved the fact that the first person Sylar called when he realized he might explode and destroy NYC was Mohinder! They are SO ex-boyfriends, and Sylar's the stalkery kind. Good thing Mohinder had an excuse to get out of town. And for the first time in a very long time, Mohinder did not annoy me in this episode; in fact, he was so good with Molly I think he should just be confined to being charming to small children and solving scientific puzzles for the duration of the show.

I think that's another significant parallel in this episode: both Claire and Hiro are being placed in a situation where they have to kill someone to save the world, both are understandably reluctant, and it is questionable whether they will actually be able to do it. And even though killing Sylar seems like the correct choice, I actually liked the fact that Hiro was questioning it, and concerned about becoming cold like his future self. I like that he has an ethical code, even though I'm worried that what they're actually setting up is Hiro working up the determination to kill Sylar only after Sylar has killed Ando. Meanwhile, Peter is trying to get Claire to embrace her heroic destiny, which means killing him--and she's not sure she can do it either.

And yet we're not sure that either of them will have to make this sacrifice, since we still don't know who precisely is going to be the one who blows up the city. It could be Ted, Peter, or Sylar, and I love that ambiguity. I'm sure Peter's not going to blow up the city at the beginning of the next ep, with another ep to go, so that's a red herring--but we still don't know who it will be! How set in stone is the future Hiro saw? Will Sylar definitely become president if Hiro doesn't kill him? That's such a terrifying prospect--really the only upside to it would be Mama Petrelli and Linderman's realization of precisely what they've brought about with their machinations, just before he ate their brains.

[identity profile] sadface.livejournal.com 2007-05-08 12:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Poor Sylar :(((((( He made her a real life snowglobe! and sure, he accidentally hit her in the face with glass, but the thought was there.

I really do want NY to blow up, a lot. I also think it probably will, they make a whole deal about the being unable to escape destiny thing, it just, it would seem cheap to me if it didn't. With the previous ambiguity in the paintings where the dead cheerleader wasn't Claire, I can accept that, but a lot of people have drawn NY blowing up now, I just, it would be annoying if they could actually thwart it. idk, I totally just want the future to play out.

[identity profile] prim-rose-etta.livejournal.com 2007-05-08 12:34 pm (UTC)(link)
for me, this ep made Sylar-as-Prez the worse prospect, compared to the big-blow-up (convenient, though, that I dont' live in NY *cough*)

[identity profile] norwich36.livejournal.com 2007-05-08 05:39 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm pretty fond of New York, so I'm still hoping they avert that scenario. But Sylar-as-President really is a terrifying prospect!

[identity profile] norwich36.livejournal.com 2007-05-08 05:35 pm (UTC)(link)
Sorry, hit the wrong key accidentally.

Between you and Bop I really fear for NYC!!! Though I agree with you--to a point--about destiny being inescapable. They did actually save Claire, though, and given the popularity of the character I doubt she will die in the finale, so you can change some things. (I disagree about the ambiguity of the paintings, because the last episode showed that Claire *had* died before Hiro went back in time with the "save the cheerleader" message--so it was more than just the paintings).

I did actually like the snowglobe effect; too bad it went so wrong.

[identity profile] bop-radar.livejournal.com 2007-05-08 01:16 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm in a very silly mood and found it hard to take this eppy seriously.

Sylar's mom does it symbolically through the snow globes, while Nathan's mom does it through Machiavellian schemes and political manipulation.
And yet Sylar's mum bred the psychopath... I blame the cardigans and the clock mechanics. EVIL!

Sylar's mom does it symbolically through the snow globes, while Nathan's mom does it through Machiavellian schemes and political manipulation.
Hee! That was my favourite scene. 'I can hear you dialling 911!' I kind of feel sorry for Sylar that he only has Mohinder to call. :-(

I actually liked the fact that Hiro was questioning it, and concerned about becoming cold like his future self.
Oh, serious moment: yes, I really liked that too. Because I don't like future!Hiro very much at all. I think Hiro does have a lot of growing to do, but I'd like to see him do it without becoming quite so steely.

I'm worried that what they're actually setting up is Hiro working up the determination to kill Sylar only after Sylar has killed Ando.
Image

[identity profile] norwich36.livejournal.com 2007-05-08 05:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Stop pouring salt in my wounds re: Ando. It's mean!

I think if Nathan were actually to choose to kill millions of people to ascend to power, it would make him much worse than Sylar, so I think the verdict is still out on who's mother is scarier.

That Sylar/Mohinder scene makes me want to read fic where (A) Sylar is creepily stalking Mohinder or (B) Sylar keeps drunk-dialing Mohinder and leaving hilarious yet terrifying messages. I am really trying to resist this pairing--Sylar really does creep me out!--but it is very very hard, given all the canonical support for it.

[identity profile] bop-radar.livejournal.com 2007-05-08 09:47 pm (UTC)(link)
Sorry. I shush.

I find Sylar/Mohinder very amusing. I would read the fic as long as it didn't involve actual sex. This show really is quite warped--as you say, this is the biggest non-incest pairing and one of them eats brains. WRONG!

[identity profile] bop-radar.livejournal.com 2007-05-09 12:35 am (UTC)(link)
*awake now*
Hang on a minute! What wounds?! Ando is not dead yet! (Nor do I think he ever will be--I have entered resignation where this is concerned.)

[identity profile] norwich36.livejournal.com 2007-05-09 07:15 pm (UTC)(link)
You mocked my anxiety, which is good enough for me. :D

I actually spent about five minutes looking at your post going "huh? wounds? were there wounds in the episode review?"

[identity profile] bop-radar.livejournal.com 2007-05-09 09:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, ok, me bad there. Sorry! *hugs*