Words by Sam Ring
WARNING. THIS ARTICLE CONTAINS SPOILERS FOR SEASON SIX OF HOMELAND. READ ON AT YOUR OWN PERIL!
Now we have that out of the way, I would like to
start by looking back on my earliest thoughts about the very first episode of
this most recent series. I found the introduction of President-elect Elizabeth
Keane to be a refreshing development for the series as, although keeping up
with real world parallels by having a very against-the-grain President-elect in
the frame, the series subverted real world politics and focused on Kean being a
more left-leaning liberal politician, as opposed to the right-wing posturing of
the real world President.
Homeland’s reputation for its handling of its
female characters who don't happen to be played by Claire Danes has been
inconsistent in the past. Characters like Jessica and Dana Brody, Moira, and
Astrid act more as tools to aid their male co-stars, rather than shining and functioning
as their own characters contributing to the story. On the flipside, however, we
have also seen great female characters like Farah and Allison alter the status quo
and become meaningful players in the show’s storylines, yet this hasn't stopped
them from being unceremoniously killed off whenever the writers feel like it.
This
was a big fear of mine from the opening episode (especially with regards to the
fate of President-elect Keane) but despite a very tough run and being
confronted with a whole host of problems, from rebellious government officials
colluding with members of the alt-right, the legacy of her beloved son, killed
in the line of duty, being dragged through the mud, and surviving an assassination
attempt, Elizabeth Keane thankfully managed to survive to the series end and,
as the finale revealed, she will go on to be perhaps the major antagonist of
the last two seasons of Homeland.
On the contrary, however, I did not quite expect
the series to launch into full-blown-conspiracy-to-overthrow-the-PEOTUS
quite as quickly as it did. I had been looking forward to the series delving
further into the conversation about home-grown terrorism in the U.S, and the
questionable methods of various Homeland security agencies when it comes to
dealing with alleged threats. I am, of course, referring to two of the season’s
rather short-lived players, Sekou and
FBI agent Conklin. The deaths of both characters were rather unexpected
developments for me personally, as I had become quite invested in wanting to
see more of the conflict between the two play out. Sekou, despite his best attempts to be as
unlikable as possible at the start, became a much more sympathetic character
when he realised how out of his depth he was and actually started to listen to
what other people were telling him.
This new-found maturity was brutally brief,
as he became the first casualty of the conspiracy against Keane via Dar Adal’s false
flag operation. This resulted in Sekou
being unwittingly painted as a suicide bomber after the explosion of a bomb
placed in the van he was driving. Killing Sekou
in this way was a good move, as it injected the season with some much needed
drama and intrigue, which then led to the other unexpected death in the first
half of the season when Conklin, the agent tasked with investigating Sekou (but convinced by Carrie that he could
have been framed for the alleged suicide bombing) being unceremoniously bumped off
as well. Again, whilst this did raise the tension and accelerate the pacing of
these and consecutive episodes, it quite clearly pointed the direction in which
the series was headed for its remaining episodes.
Whilst the show did a commendable job in showing
the inner workings of the grand conspiracy to challenge, discredit, and
ultimately to kill the next POTUS, it does feel as if the latter somewhat overstepped
the mark. Depending on whether or not you believe various conspiracy theories
about the CIA being behind the assassination of JFK, it does not stretch that
far in the imagination that dissident figures in a United States government
could conspire to do something similar in the modern day, but the question,
ultimately, is why?
Think of the sheer amount of money and time already
invested by the conspirators and by Dar in particular, from arranging the
framing of Sekou, silencing Carrie via
arranging for social services to take her child away, setting up the Alt-Fact
think tank to discredit Keane, hell going all the way back to the beginning of
the season with the joint Mossad operation to convince keen the Iranians are
cheating on the nuclear energy deal. There was already enough in place to cause
Keane's presidency to be a nightmare, and potentially fold in on itself in a
similar way to how the real world expects Donald Trump's premiership to unfold.
So why take the gamble and attempt to kill her? It makes little sense,
particularly to someone as sneaky as Dar, hence why he turns his cloak at the
very end and warns Carrie about the conspiracy. What I am getting at here is that
Homeland is often best when it relies on real world parallels to further ground
the story and setting. By sacrificing a much more interesting slow-burn
conspiracy to ultimately force the President-elect from power, the show plays
its hand too aggressively and the finale loses a lot of its impact because of
this.
Similarly, the surrendering of the real world relevance of characters and
conflict (like that between Sekou and
Conklin) leaves me asking more questions about whether the show runners may
have missed the opportunity to make the series more credible by grounding it in
the very in-your-face reality of these stories about ordinary, but misguided,
people vs the equally misguided government agencies who feel threatened, and who
are unable to cope with the challenges they face in the modern day without
resorting to the power of force.
On the overwhelmingly positive side of things
though, the show runners deserve credit for sticking to what Keane was saying
she wanted from day one, a complete overhaul of the entire intelligence
community and the strategy it practices. Now, it was never really talked about
in great detail how exactly she planned on doing this, but given how liberal
her character had appeared throughout the season, we may have been left to
assume it would involve the quiet removal from office of Cold War vets like Dar
and Saul, and putting new people with new ideas in their place.
When we see
Saul being arrested and hauled from his car at gunpoint whilst Facetiming
Carrie, and see the process repeated to a dozen other former colleagues of hers
that she had, only minutes ago in the episode, assured on behalf of the
President, that they would not be facing persecution as part of the ongoing
investigation into Dar and co's conspiracy, one has to applaud the writers for
their creativity. Dar and his associates were worried about her before she was
elected, that she might be bad and potentially spell the end for them. I don't
think any of them ever stopped to imagine they would become the architects of
their own destruction. In pushing against Keane for the entire season so hard,
she finally snapped and pushed back, but in a way that completely undercuts
everything we had been led to believe about her and what she stood for.
Flipping the equation of a liberal, democratic leader on its head and turning
her into a potential authoritarian figure is certainly bold and completely
engrossing. That last lingering shot of a seemingly nervous Elizabeth
attempting to ignore Carrie’s pleas serves to undercut her once more as
transitioning from a confident career politician into a quiet and isolated woman
who is unable to trust her own establishment. What this will bode for the
future of the series can only be guessed, but it is bound to make for more
gripping television.
Finally, it would be impossible to sign off a
review for Homeland without an obituary to the late, great, Peter Quinn. It initially
appeared that Saul was going to be the one to bite the dust, after stepping
into the doomed SUV as part of President Keane's motorcade which was bombed by
rogue Delta Force operatives. But, somehow, he miraculously survived and popped
up at the end of the episode (which still gives me hope that Majid Jivadi, the
slimy bugger, may still be alive despite being handed over to Mossad, à la the
Game of Thrones rule that they aren't dead until you see the body). Tragically,
it was the much adored Quinn who heroically sacrificed himself to protect
Carrie and Keane from the Delta members.
There was much controversy at the end
of Series Five, when it appeared that Quinn was not going to pull through his sarin
gas induced coma, after Carrie rather desperately tried to pull him out of it
too early. Many viewers and critics felt that this should be Quinn's end and he
should be allowed to die with dignity, but thankfully the show runners brought
him back for another season and allowed him the truly heroic death he deserved
after coming to the end of his most compelling character arc yet.
Dignity is
the go-to word here, as when we caught up to Quinn at the start of the series
and saw what state he had been left in after the end of Series Five, we saw the
once incredibly capable killing-machine and impeccable soldier reduced to a severely
disabled, traumatised version of his former self. Quinn has long been the moral
compass of the show for me, frequently asking the right questions about what he
and, by proxy, the agency do in their murky grey area of operation and if it is
justified.
Watching him slowly pull himself out of the hole he was in and rediscover
a sense of purpose, i.e. protecting Carrie from Dar's schemes, and ultimately
avenging the murder of Astrid that he indirectly caused, was nothing short of
fist pumping and a worthy end to a great character. How the series will go on
without him remains to be seen, as Rupert Friend brought so much heart and soul
with his performance as Quinn, often at times the show was severely lacking it.
The void may just be too big to fill.
Regardless, this season of Homeland has been one of the best in the eyes of many viewers, delivering gripping and entertaining stroylines that draw perceptive parallels with the real world. The end is now in sight for the show, and there is clearly a massive agenda that the writers are building towards with the remaining two seasons. Where the show will go following this most recent reason remains, for now, a mystery. But I, alongside many others, will be looking forward to it, sleuthing and shocking its way forward to its conclusion.
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