To be completely honest, I did not have very high expectations for a Gabriel and Aaron centric episode, my god how wrong I was. Laura Belsey directed an incredible episode, in collaboration with the writers Jim Barnes and Erik Mountain.
The perfect balance between important character development and intensity. Where the first half gave us memorable scenes with good dialogue, the second half felt like a psychological thriller. Seth Gilliam delivered one of the series' best monologues, in a scene that must be one of the series' longest shots, in well over three minutes. Insanely impressive. Robert Patrick was a welcome addition as the crazy and unstable character Mays.
The moral dilemmas and a highly unexpected concluding twist contribute to a very solid and memorable ending to an unexpected but near-perfect episode. Bravo.
The perfect balance between important character development and intensity. Where the first half gave us memorable scenes with good dialogue, the second half felt like a psychological thriller. Seth Gilliam delivered one of the series' best monologues, in a scene that must be one of the series' longest shots, in well over three minutes. Insanely impressive. Robert Patrick was a welcome addition as the crazy and unstable character Mays.
The moral dilemmas and a highly unexpected concluding twist contribute to a very solid and memorable ending to an unexpected but near-perfect episode. Bravo.