"The 100" I Am Become Death (TV Episode 2014) Poster

(TV Series)

(2014)

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7/10
This episode reminds me of the coronavirus going on right now
Neptune16515 September 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This episode reminds me the situation in the real world right now. That's what happens when you banish people for your own mistakes, and without Lincoln, this would be the end of them all. Obviously Murphy shouldn't kill his own people and he is a total idiot. But I thought the banishment was so unfair! He was banished for trying to have justice for the girl killing Wells and him being blamed and even hung for it. I like his character because he is so different than everyone, keeps you on edge. "I am become Death." Is what the head of "The Manhattan Project" Dr. Robert Oppenheimer said after the competition of the Atom Bomb. Finn's an idiot. He is a big risk. Raven broke my heart at the end. I think the line she delivered ("Not the way I want to be loved") was so incredibly powerful. That's painfully true in a lot of relationships we experience- often, we settle for much less than what we deserve. I hate that Raven is hurting but it wasn't fair for her to be with someone who couldn't give her all his heart. And of course, Octavia walking away from Lincoln 💔. Murphy is low-key one. He got such a complex character development and you just gotta like the fact that he's trying to do his best to survive. I mean everybody hated him, never gave him a second chance, like they give Bellamy or Clarke, so he always did the best he could to survive. A great character 🔥🔥
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8/10
... Ok?
ououzaza26 February 2020
This episode is ok. Delivers fun, good reference, new storyline that starts and ends in one episode.
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6/10
Pest
tenshi_ippikiookami31 January 2016
Murphy's back! He was taken in by the Grounders, who tortured him. But he run away and asks the 100 for help. They take him in, without knowing that he's not alone, as his body is infected by a virus. The people in the camp have to think fast, as many are getting infected, and the Grounders are planning on an attack.

This last episode of "The 100" doesn't say anything about what happened in the Ark, keeping the viewer on the edge of their seats, as they will be wondering if the people up there are alive or not. The pod that arrived to Earth crashed, and no one seems to have survived. Is Diana and her people dead?

The episode centers on the sickness and the imminent attack by the Grounders. The young people in the camp are inexperienced, and even if they have guns, they are still little puppies in the hands of the Grounders. Clarke continues her fall into militarism, becoming even more aggressive than Bellamy. Good show of how fear and the need of survival changes us.

On the down side, people with bleeding eyes don't make for much fun, and the I-hate-you-why-are-you-taking-my-boyfriend looks by Raven are becoming a little tiny too much.
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1/10
Writers need to go back to writing school, or get fired
praqoon28 May 2021
Warning: Spoilers
"I trust him/her/them" when the person saying it has absolutely zero knowledge or experience to dictate whether or not those in question can be trusted. It makes no sense to say a person can be trusted without evidence other than to cajole someone else into doing what you want them to do. It happens so often it's become laughable. You can fool some of the people all of the time and all of the people some of the time, but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time. Not even the audience in a sci-fi show!

"I won't let anything happen you, I promise." when those saying it have absolutely no influence or control over the outcome of any given event. How can someone say this without seeming to be acting above their level or outside of the remit of their abilities?

The writers of these scenes are using platitudes to convince the viewer that this is "okay" or "acceptable" within the scope of the storyline and that in itself is insulting to the intelligence and the spirit of entertainment. I hope the writers worked pro bono for the entire first season.
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