Category Archives: Graphic Novels / Comics

When A Lonely Man Loves His Ideal Woman: Gemma Bovery, the Film

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Gustave Flaubert’s classic novel Madame Bovary, details the tragic life and illicit love affairs of provincial Emma Bovary, married to her “boring” but ever-so-faithful husband Charles, yet constantly longing for a more exciting life, which ideally would take place anywhere but where she currently happens to be. Emma B is completely in charge of her life, her affairs, and, ultimately, her death by suicide, though things never seem to turn out quite the way she hopes or expects. The French-British film Gemma Bovery, based on the graphic novel of the same name by Posy Simmonds, and directed by Anne Fontaine, ostensibly examines the character of Flaubert’s famous tragic heroine by placing her in contemporary Normandy. The film begins as a comedy, and has some comedic touches throughout, but is ultimately a drama, which is not surprising given that it is an adaptation of an adaptation of Flaubert’s tragic novel.

The first realistic novel, Madame Bovary has been called perfect [Henry James], with “prose doing what poetry is supposed to do” [Valdimir Nabokov], and with Flaubert’s “modern realist narration” so subtle and pervasive that the Voice of the author-persona is scarcely noticed, Flaubert’s “influence almost too familiar to be visible.” But it is the author-persona’s Voice that gives the novel much of its power, since it observes, comments on, and condemns Emma’s fatalistic, bourgeois romanticism even while it seems to empathize with her plight.

Isabelle Huppert as the tragic Emma in Madame Bovary ©

Almost as important as this Voice in Madame Bovary is the fact that Flaubert’s novel starts and ends with several chapters on Madame Bovary’s husband, Charles, the provincial physician who cannot ever quite believe his luck in getting such a charming and beautiful woman for his wife. Many readers miss the fact that Charles is the emphasis of a substantial portion of the novel long before the titular heroine is even introduced, and that it is Charles who finishes the story after Emma has committed suicide by ingesting arsenic. By taking the emphasis off Emma at both the beginning and the end of the novel named after her, Flaubert is directing his readers’ attention to Emma’s most wounded victim, her husband Charles.

Jean-Francois Balmer (Charles, in background L) and Isabelle Huppert (Emma) in the Oscar-winning 1991 film, Madame Bovary ©

Some viewers and critics also missed this framing technique in the film adaptation Gemma Bovery. Just as Charles, with his idealized image of Emma, begins and ends Flaubert’s novel, the transplanted baker Martin Joubert begins and ends the film, giving viewers his idealized albeit tragic fantasy version of Gemma, not necessarily presenting Gemma as she might really be. It is this view of Gemma, this Martin-narrated perspective, that changes the focus of the film from adulterous Gemma to that of the completely unreliable narrator of the film, the lovelorn baker himself.

Luchini as baker Martin Joubert in Gemma Bovery ©

Critics who found the film a nothing more than a “frothy modern sex comedy” or a “cheeky, literary mash-up” that is both “sugary and soapy,” missed the major premise of the film. Though much of the film’s comedic moments come from the characters’ “infinite capacity to misunderstand each other,” its tragedy derives from that same misunderstanding. Gemma Bovery is not about Gemma, the ostensibly modern equivalent of Flaubert’s Emma. Instead, it is about how men view women as sexual objects, how men idealize women as Madonnas even as they view women as whores, and how men can love a woman without ever really knowing her.

Fabrice Luchini as baker Martin and Gemma Arterton as Gemma in Gemma Bovery ©

Specifically, Gemma Bovery is about how one lonely man, the baker named Martin, views women, how Martin confuses real-life women with his literary heroines, and how Martin views one woman in particular, Gemma, whose name alone reminds him of his favorite novel, Madame Bovary. Almost as tragic as Emma B’s husband Charles, Martin the baker is madly in love with Gemma B, but she scarcely notices him, and it is the comic-tragic character of Martin that gives the film its power.

Gemma Arterton as Gemma and Fabrice Luchini as Martin in Gemma Bovery ©

Martin Joubert, splendidly played by Fabrice Luchini, is an ex-Parisian editor who has settled in the (fictional) village of Bailleville, in Normandy, to become a baker, thinking he would be happier in the more provincial location, where people care about living. Alas, Martin is not happy. He virtually ignores his lovely and insightful wife, Valérie (Isabelle Candelier), though she works alongside him at the bakery,

Isabelle Candelier as Valérie and Fabrice Luchini as Martin, Gemma Bovery ©

makes cutting sarcastic remarks to his clever son Julien (Kacey Mottet Klein), and regards everyone in the village with an almost disdainful, emotionally distant eye. At the start of the film, Gemma is already dead, and her husband Charles is burning her clothing in a bonfire in the backyard. Martin, supposedly worried that Charles is so grief-stricken that he will commit suicide, goes over to comfort him. There, he learns that Gemma kept journals, which Charles cannot bring himself to read, and which Martin steals.

Though ostensibly viewed from the perspective of Gemma’s intimate diaries, the story is still from Martin’s perspective since he “imagines” everything else that happens in the film, viewing even Gemma’s adulterous liaisons from his own vivid viewpoint.

Charles Bovery (Jason Flemyng) and his wife Gemma (Gemma Arterton), Gemma Bovery ©

Martin’s imagination involving Gemma begins when Martin introduces himself to the British couple who has purchased the rather decrepit property across the road. Upon learning that their names are Gemma (Gemma Arterton) and Charles Bovery (Jason Flemyng), Martin immediately launches into a fantasy about the couple, especially about Gemma, imagining her to be the tragic leading lady of Flaubert’s masterpiece. Likening himself to a director at one point in the film, Martin almost seems to fancy himself as another Flaubert: relating — and attempting to control — the story of a beautiful, sensual woman who does not know the consequences of her adulterous behavior or the impending tragedy awaiting her.

Gemma Arterton as Gemma Bovery ©

Once Martin is convinced that Gemma B is merely a modern day reincarnation of Emma B, her story becomes one of a bored, pampered housewife, whose ennui cannot quite be explained, but which is symbolized by long pensive stares out a rainy window, sighs, dissatisfaction with their crumbling home, and a vague unhappiness with her kindly husband Charles. Everything about Gemma is sensual and exciting, from the way she kneads bread for the first time in Martin’s bakery

Gemma (Gemma Arterton) kneading bread, Gemma Bovery ©

to the way she pours Martin tea when he is answering a legal claim for her,

Gemma (Gemma Arterton) and Martin (Fabrice Luchini), Gemma Bovery ©

from her reaction after getting stung by a bee

Gemma (Gemma Arterton), Martin (Fabrice Luchini), and Hervé (Nils Schneider) in Gemma Bovery ©

to the way she dances — solely in Martin’s imagination — with one of her lovers after having torrid, adulterous sex.

Hervé (Nils Schneider) and Gemma (Gemma Arterton), Gemma Bovery ©

Martin is so obsessed with Gemma-Emma that he becomes almost creepy, following her everywhere, spying on her, and, aided posthumously by her diaries, vividly imagining anything about Gemma’s private life that he does not witness first-hand.

Gemma (Gemma Arterton) visiting Hervé (Nils Schneider) for a sexual rendezvous, Gemma Bovery ©

It is a credit to Luchini’s performance that Martin doesn’t degenerate into a scary stalker. His view of Gemma may be exaggeratedly sensual and recklessly sexual, but Martin is still madly in love with her himself, and Luchini’s poignant portrayal of Martin never lets the viewers forget that.

Gemma (Gemma Arterton) and Martin (Fabrice Luchini), Gemma Bovery ©

As in the novel through which Martin interprets her, Gemma embarks on a series of adulterous affairs, though no reason is ever given for them. She was spurned, before marriage to Charles, by her adulterous lover Patrick (Mel Raido), who happens to be friends with boorish neighbors Wizzy (Elsa Zylberstein ) and Rankin (Pip Torrens), and who comes back into her life when she is emotionally vulnerable.

Wizzy (Elsa Zylberstein ), husband Rankin (Pip Torrens), and friend Patrick (Mel Raido, back to camera), Gemma Bovery ©

Gemma also gets sexually involved with a wealthy aristocratic Hervé de Bressigny (Niels Schneider) who, contrary to his parallel character in the novel, Rodolphe, falls in love with Gemma himself, and it is this latter relationship that the baker Martin most attempts to control, fancying himself more knowledgeable about life and love, I suppose, than anyone else in the story.

Gemma (Gemma Arterton) and Hervé (Nils Schneider) in Gemma Bovery ©

Yes, Gemma Bovery is a tragedy, and like her kind-of-namesake, Gemma dies, but you know that from the beginning of the film, even if you’ve never read the original novel or the graphic novel adaptation. The real story of the film, however, concerns Martin: lonely, aging, misunderstood, and ignored by a beautiful younger woman whom he adores. And it is Martin that viewers should focus on to get the full impact of the pathos and splendor of the film, for Martin is the protagonist of Gemma Bovery, not Gemma, and just as Charles is the most poignant victim in Madame Bovary, Martin is the most poignant and tragically romantic character of Gemma Bovery.

Gemma Bovery is rated R for explicit sexual situations. Available for rent for $3.99 from Amazon (free for Prime members), iTunes, and YouTube.

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Amber Joins the Bad-Ass Club: Outcast Season 1 Finale, Review

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We knew it was going to happen. Ever since the episode when Kyle’s daughter Amber (Madeleine McGraw) revealed that she was able to see the demon in her mother Allison, it was pretty obvious that Amber was just like her father Kyle. She proved that in the season 1 finale of Outcast, “This Little Light,” by casting out Aunt Megan’s demon.

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Before Amber could join the Bad-Ass Ladies Club of Outcast, however, first she had to be terrorized, once again, by a demon in the form of one of her family members. She was already terrorized and abused by the Demon-Allison, and Daddy Kyle (Patrick Fugit) had to help cast that demon out. In the finale, Amber came to Kyle’s rescue, grabbing her Aunt Megan (Wrenn Schmidt) by the face from behind, and holding her in an attempt to keep her from attacking Kyle. Suddenly, Megan convulsed and coughed out the black miasma we’ve come to associate with Outcast’s demons.

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But are the demons really demons?

To be honest, I hadn’t thought much about the identity of the “evil beings” occupying the inhabitants of Rome WV until I read Kevin Yeoman’s ScreenRant post on the finale. He theorizes that the “demons” might be refugees of a sort, fleeing from some place other than Hell.

As it stands now, Outcast has the makings of what sounds like an inter-dimensional, inter-galactic, or inter-something refugee drama, which affords Sidney and his kind an extra layer of characterization with minimal effort on the part of the show’s writers. If these beings taking over people of Rome, West Virginia are not merely malevolent creatures from hell but immigrants fleeing from a hostile environment, then the show has immediately become more interesting and it makes Kyle’s ability to expel them from their hosts something of a double-edged sword; one with strong allusions to the contemporary political climate and crisis in Syria.

Wowza!  I do hope that it’s the way Outcast creator Robert Kirkman is going. That would add an incredibly fascinating and complex layer to the “possession” story. Sure, it would take Outcast into the sci-fi arena, but I don’t see anything wrong with that. After all, we didn’t get any answers  to the questions the show, and its protagonists, have been asking all season, like these:

Why are the “demons” attracted to Kyle?
What is the “light” within Kyle that draws “demons” to him?
Why have so many of The Rev’s exorcisms failed?
Why are so many “demons” coming to Rome WV?

So why not take the show into an other-worldly, sci-fi arena? Having an other-worldly story for the demons inhabiting the population of Rome would make the show more than just an Exorcist-clone, which is what Outcast was in the first few episodes of its freshman season.

It would explain why Sidney (Brent Spiner) is the “boss” of the demons, though he may not be the Devil.

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 It would make The Rev (Philip Glenister) seriously question his faith.

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It would make Kyle (Patrick Fugit) even more interesting a character, since we’d have to throw away out preconceptions of good and evil in order to understand what it is that’s attracting the “refugee-demons” to Kyle.

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Of course, right now, viewers do not know the answers to any of the questions the show has posed. When Kyle questioned Sidney, he evaded answering, giving only a bit of information, in the form of a metaphor, as to why the “beings” were drawn to Kyle. And no one knows why some of the “exorcisms” work and some don’t. All the questions posed by the characters and by the show itself were left woefully unanswered in the season 1 finale, though I only expected a few to be answered. Still, it was a bit disappointing not to have any of the show’s questions answered. And there’s only so long the show will be able to drag out the questions further without alienating its viewers, so I hope we get some answers beginning with the premiere of season 2.

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In “This Little Light,” Megan was un-posssessed — making her possessed and freed  in less than 2 episodes — which was a bit disappointing. I wanted to see if the demon in Megan treated Kyle any differently because of its host’s relationship with the protagonist.

Meanwhile, in Rome, Kat and Ogden are running a demon hospital of sorts: they were running it in the Camper in the Woods, but after Ogden burned that, and after Sidney asked a favor of Kat, she set up a triage center in some abandoned mannequin warehouse. That was the only disappointment of the finale (besides the unanswered questions). Why did Sidney have to ask Kat to take care of the incoming when she was already doing it? Did it matter that he made it official? If so, why?

The Rev has officially become a fully human character, even if he is a bit of an idiot in his fervor to rid Rome of demons. The Rev went to the small home where Sidney was staying and set fire to it, assuming that Sidney was inside. Since the episode went to a great deal of trouble to have Sidney mention to Patricia’s son Aaron that it was the second time Aaron had broken in to Sidney’s home, viewers were left with the inference that The Rev burned Aaron alive in the torched house, not Sidney. What a bad guy The Rev is turning out to be.

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The finale basically left us with three major protagonists in Rome: Sidney, who may be the Devil; The Rev, who is losing his faith and turning more violent in his attempt to exorcise demons; and Kyle, who is fighting to save his daughter and his family from whatever is possessing the inhabitants of his hometown.

The episode ended with Megan “returned” to herself, but with no memory of what she’d done to her husband Mark, and with Kyle attempting to leave Rome with daughter Amber in tow. A bunch of creepy strangers surrounded them at the gas station, making it clear that the two aren’t going anywhere soon.

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In any event, Madeleine McGraw is showing some fierce acting chops as the demon-fighter daughter of Kyle, and her character, Amber, is now officially one of the Bad-Ass women of Outcast.

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Mirror, Mirror, on the Wall: The Bad-Ass-Women of Outcast, 109, “Close to Home,” Recap & Review

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Gory & Spooky-Sad

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We’ve known from the start of the season that the women in Cinemax’s horror show Outcast, based on the comic book series by Robert Kirkman and Paul Azaceta, were some pretty fierce, bad-ass women. Not just when they’re possessed by demons, either. Sure, some of the girls get a little more feisty when they’re taken over by demons. Kyle’s mother and Mildred come to mind. Given how strong and tough all the women are, even when they are not controlled by demons, I’m guessing Kyle’s mother and Mildred were already strong: the demons just made them tougher, and, okay, a bit more violent. This week’s episode, “Close to Home,” showed protagonist Kyle Barnes (Patrick Fugit, below) and the viewers just how close to him the demons are.

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Last week, episode 108, “What Lurks Within,” revealed that when the human host fights the demon, the demon has a more difficult time staying in control. Witness the camper in the woods: Chief Giles (Reg E Cathey, below R) has been investigating the site all season as a murder scene, only to have his friend Ogden reveal that he and his wife Kat have been helping demons get control of their often-violent hosts. Hence, all the blood and guts and eviscerated animals mounted to trees.

imagesWe haven’t witnessed Kat being violent, but she’s obviously tough: how else would she convince her husband to help her — when she’s already demon-controlled — give aid and sustenance to other demons trying to conquer their human hosts? Ogden’s wife Kat (Debra Christofferson, below) has seemed just fine to everyone else in Rome, while, in fact, she’s been facilitating the possession of fellow citizens.

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In another surprise Reveal last week, Ogden (Pete Burris, below) told that he actually prefers Demon-Kat to his own wife. He prefers Demon-Kat so much that after Sidney gave her a “job” in episode 9 — a job which will prevent her from leaving Rome, as husband Ogden wished — she persuaded Ogden to stay with her in Rome, telling him there’s no “us” if she doesn’t do what Sidney’s instructed her to do. In a warehouse basement full of creepity-creepy mannequins, as Ogden expressed reluctance to stay in Rome, Kat took the matter into her own hands, literally and figuratively, by getting down-and-dirty with hubby. The woman knows what she wants, and she knows how to get it. At least from hubby Ogden. Yes, Kat’s bad. She’s so bad that, contrary to most folks’ expectations, Ogden thinks she’s very, very fine.

There are plenty of other bad-ass women in Rome, though some of them get badder after demon possession. In previous episodes, while Mildred’s daughter Sophie complained that Mildred (Grace Zabriskie, below) had changed over the last several months, and that Sophie no longer liked the woman her mother had become, Reverend Anderson thought Mildred was just the same as she’d always been. After the exorcism, of course. As he pointed out to Kyle, Mildred has been in church at his service every week for the past two years and The Rev is pretty dang sure he would have known if Mildred were still possessed.

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Demon-Mildred is such a bad-ass, that she caught Kyle completely off-guard when she came to his home, cold-cocked him with her walking cane, straddled him on the floor, and tried to “steal” his energy or life-force or whatever it was she was trying to steal by doing some weird air-kiss. She was only prevented from finishing Kyle off by Sidney’s arrival. Sidney yanked Mildred away from Kyle. It was apparent afterward, from the way she kept trying to convince Sidney that Kyle was fine, that Sidney is a superior demon of some sort — if not the Devil himself, as The Rev suspects — and that Demon-Mildred had stepped out of line. She paid for her disobedience with her life: Kyle later found her dead in her home. The women of Rome may be tough, they may be demon-possessed, but they still have rules and orders to follow. Bad-asses can only be so bad, apparently, and then they have to pay for their mischief.

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The Rev (Philip Glenister, above L) discovered, in episode 9, that Patricia (Melinda McGraw, above R) is much tougher and more bad-ass than she seems. Because she has been chasing after him, basically, and because she wasn’t up to helping him exorcise Caleb, The Rev may have gotten the idea that Patricia was a pushover. Despite the obvious conflict and discord between her and her son Aaron (CJ Hoff, below), Patricia chose Aaron over The Rev, whom she’d asked to move in with her after he lost his job and his home.

The Rev got upset with Aaron because he’s been hanging with Sidney (Brent Spiner, below).

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The Rev foolishly thought that Aaron didn’t realize that Sidney is the Devil. Aaron knows. In fact, he’s been doing things to help Sidney, albeit without Sidney’s foreknowledge or approval. After Aaron saw Sidney carve the pentagram into The Rev’s chest, Aaron told Chief Giles that The Rev did it to himself.

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When The Rev went after Aaron in Patricia’s home, which is also, technically, still Aaron’s home for about 6 more months (he’s counting down to his 18th birthday, when he can leave and be legally on his own), Patricia got her bad-ass on and ordered The Rev to leave. Permanently. The Rev was kind of surprised. Apparently, he thought that Patricia would choose him over her delinquent son. Given a choice between a relationship with The Rev and one with the wayward Aaron, Patricia showed herself to have a spine of steel and a mother’s love to die for: she chose her son, even though he doesn’t like her very much. Patricia may have seemed whiny and clingy and weak, but when forced to choose between the new love in her life and her own son, she proved herself the bad-ass that most of the women in Rome have shown themselves to be, with or without demons.

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Kyle’s wife Allison (Kate Lyn Sheil), though she’s been a minor character all season, is another one of the tough, bad-ass women of Outcast. After she recovered her memory of the night Kyle “attacked her,” she remembered that she had been choking their daughter Amber. That means that, instead of being an abusive husband who assaulted Allison for some unknown reason, Kyle had been protecting Amber by fighting off Allison. Kyle  thinks Allison was demon-possessed. Amber agrees, insisting that someting was in Mommy. Allison thinks she’s just losing her mind. After making love with Kyle in an earlier episode, Allison left Amber with Kyle and disappeared.

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Kyle found Allison last night. In a mental hospital. He tried to persuade her to come home, but she wouldn’t listen. She’s convinced that she’s a danger to Amber — and she obviously is — but whether she’s a danger because she’s losing her mind or because she’s demon-possessed is not clear. Kyle thought he’d exorcised the demon during their battle on Assualt-Night. Allison has still not been acting like herself, however, though Kyle may not know this (it’s only been shown to viewers and to Amber). Is the demon still in Allison? We don’t know. We do know that Allison is one tough lady, and when it comes to protecting her daughter, and her ex-husband Kyle, she’ll even lock herself up in an asylum to do it.

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Without a doubt, the most bad-ass woman in Outcast is Kyle’s sister Megan (Wrenn Schmidt), who, despite a few “cracks” in her tough-woman armor, is the baddest of them all. She’s been violated by childhood rapist Donnie, who returned and tormented her, then blackmailed her after Megan’s husband Mark (David Denman, below L) assaulted Donnie. Megan’s been depressed since Donnie came back to town and taunted her, since she pawned her ring and robbed the savings account to pay off blackmailer-rapist Donnie, since Donnie filed assault charges despite receiving money, since Mark lost his job for assaulting Donnie, and, as viewers learned in episode 9, since she learned that she is pregnant.

Mark, good-guy that he is, was much more delighted and optimistic than Megan at the news of her pregnancy. She was talking about the expenses — clothes, food, diapers, doctor visits, etc — which seemed insurmountable now that Mark has lost his job, and Mark was just being the Happy-and-Totally-Supportive-Hubby.

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Mark managed to convince Megan that her being pregnant again, after all these years, was a good thing, though completely unplanned. Megan seemed fine with that. After all, she is Woman, hear her roar. This is the woman who takes care not only of their daughter Holly, but of Kyle’s daughter Amber whenever Kyle needs Megan to sit for him. This is the woman who watches out for Kyle, going to his home and forcing him to come to the grocery with her, or taking lunch to his worksite just because she loves Kyle. This is the woman who is protective toward Kyle’s ex-wife Allison, going to see how she is when Kyle is concerned about Allison’s mental health,  trying to intervene for Kyle with Allison, then telling Kyle that Allison is fragile and that he needs to leave her alone. And she does all of these nurturing, caring things on top of being a full-time teacher. Megan is a tough, strong survivor. She’s one bad-ass woman who fights for herself and for the people around her. She’s the baddest of the bad-ass women in Outcast. 

And she got even more bad-ass in “Close to Home.”

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Megan was taking a shower and suddenly started convulsing as if someone had flushed a toilet somewhere in the house, causing all the water to turn fiery hot. She jumped out of the tub, and seemed to have a difficult time walking. It was like the room was moving under her feet. As she stared at herself in the mirror, she seemed not to recognize her reflection. When Mark rushed into the bathroom, concerned for her, she grabbed him and slammed his head into the mirror.

Viewers, no doubt, collectively gasped at one of the most graphically violent scenes of the season.

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Then, as Mark lay bleeding out on the bathroom floor, Megan pulled a wicked shard of broken mirror out of his neck. Was she confused about what she’d just done? Was the demon just interested in looking at himself in the piece of mirror? Or was the demon chanting, Mirror, Mirror, on the wall, who’s the baddest of them all?

It’s not clear yet why Demon-Megan was so fascinated with the mirror-shard.

It’s clear, though, that the most bad-ass woman on Outcast just got scary-bad-ass.

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Please Allow Me to Introduce Myself: Choosing the Devil in Cinemax’s Outcast, 108, “What Lurks Within,” Recap & Review

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All season, Cinemax’s new horror series, Outcast, based on the comic book series by Robert Kirkman and Paul Azaceta, has concentrated as much on its characters’ inner demons as it has on possession by external, hellish ones. Protagonist Kyle Barnes has struggled to discover what inner quality he has that draws the demons to him; other townspeople have attempted to control their own demons, internal psychological ones, and external, hellish ones; and the spiritual leader of the community, Revered Anderson, was forced to recognize that he has been casting out demons more for his own glory than for God’s. Episode 8, “What Lurks Within,” took a harrowing and unexpected turn when characters — and viewers — were given a chance to “choose” a demon — perhaps even the Devil himself — who was less evil than his pedophile human host.

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The episode was a bit confusing at the start, showing Sidney (Brent Spiner) in a loud-print shirt, waiting on some boys at a shop, then at home, where he had a young boy bound and gagged in a padded torture chamber. Initially, I assumed that the Devil in Sidney was also a pedophile, and it freaked me out. I feared Outcast was about to go into graphically violent and sexually explicit territory that would trigger me, and lose me as a viewer. Instead, we gradually learned that this was a flashback of Sidney before demonic possession. Sidney the man was a pedophile, not Sidney-the-demon.

Please allow me to introduce myself…

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As Kyle (Patrick Fugit) learned when he visited Sidney in jail, the demons, who are attracted to Kyle’s “light,” don’t have a choice about what body they end up in. They simply open their eyes and discover who they’re in, along with what kind of life that body leads. Much as Mildred and Sidney discussed in an earlier episode, they can “find their passions” in the new bodies. Mildred’s demon learned to like collecting porcelain figurines. Sidney’s demon learned that the body he inhabited was a pedophile, a rapist, a torturer, and perhaps a serial murderer as well. Sidney-the-demon was not happy about that.

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As you can imagine, Kyle thought Sidney’s story was ridiculous when he first heard it. No doubt, he thought Sidney was playing him for a fool. Kyle simply didn’t believe that these demons — which can destroy a person’s life, and which have some nefarious ulterior motive for invading the residents of Rome WV  — don’t have any control over where they end up.  Sidney-the-demon was surprisingly forthcoming, however, which forced Kyle to believe that it was telling him the truth.

Though the demon never did reveal exactly what it is about Kyle that draws them to Kyle, the demon did say that they were, in fact, honing in on some sort of light or radar in Kyle that attracts them. The demonic possessions may have started with Kyle’s mother. It may have started before that.

I’ve been around for a long, long year
Stole many a man’s soul and faith

Kyle, who was a young boy when his mother was possessed and her personality changed, may not have noticed the demons in any other Rome inhabitants. When choosing between the demon and his mother, however, Kyle chose his mother, casting the demon out as best he could, leaving his mother a catatonic shell.

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To Kyle’s horror, Demon-Sidney revealed that the longer a demon is in its human host, the less of the human host remains when the demon is cast out. That means that Kyle did, indeed, cause his mother’s catatonia, albeit unintentionally, when he exorcised the hellish demon.

But what’s puzzling you
Is the nature of my game

Then Demon-Sidney told about the host that his demon inhabits. The story eventually returned to flashbacks involving Sidney-the-Pedophile, with a vicious looking knife in hand, about to open the locked door to the padded room where the bound boy was imprisoned. In a shocking volte-face, viewers rooted for the demon, who was not a pedophile, and who actually released the imprisoned boy rather than killing him.

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Would you ever have imagined that you would prefer a demon to its host? Well, if the host is a murdering, raping pedophile, the demon is preferable. Especially when that demon releases the intended child victim rather than hurting him. When you’re introduced to the Devil, which The Rev (Philip Glenister, below) believes Sidney to be, and you find the Devil to be less evil than his human host, you’re probably going to choose to have the Devil stick around.

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As if it weren’t enough of a shock for the viewers to find themselves rooting for the Devil-as-Sidney, we learned that some of the other Rome residents also prefer the demon to the human host. When The Rev cornered Ogden’s wife and took her to Kyle’s house (below) so the two of them could drive out the demon, Kyle didn’t want to do it. He doesn’t know how long the demon has been in her, and he doesn’t want to cause yet another innocent host to become catatonic: recall that it’s already happened with Kyle’s mother and with the runaway Sherry.

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Now Kyle knows why the exorcism sometimes causes catatonia. It’s nothing that Kyle is doing or not doing correctly: instead, a successful or failed exorcism depends on how long the demon has been in its human host. Too long, and there’s nothing of the human host left. When the demon is cast out, the remaining host becomes catatonic. Kyle doesn’t want to risk another exorcism without knowing more about the possession, especially how long the host has been inhabited by the demon.

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The Rev has gone absolutely off-the-rails-crazy, though, and he and Kyle had a knock-down-drag-out-sine-missione brawl. (In fact, the battle was so physically rough that when Philip Glenister’s The Rev smashed Patrick Fugit’s Kyle and knocked him into the car, Fugit/Kyle hit the car so hard, he dented it.) When Chief Giles (Reg E Cathey, above L) pulled up with Ogden, to rescue Ogden’s wife, he also had to stop the fight between Kyle and The Rev.

Made damn sure that Pilate
Washed his hands and sealed his fate

In a reversal of their roles over the last few weeks, Kyle has become the cautious and pacific one, while The Rev has become the hot-tempered, violent one. Now, instead of trusting The Rev, people like Giles prefer to trust Kyle. Chief Giles was inclined to change his opinion of Kyle and of The Rev before he saw them fighting. On the trip over to Kyle’s home, Ogden (Pete Burris, below) explained that he already knows his wife’s body is inhabited by a demon, that he took her to the camper in the woods because some host-bodies fight harder when they first become possessed and that’s where Ogden kept his wife during those early demon-thrashing times, and that Ogden actually prefers the new demon-wife to his former human-wife.

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Yowza!

Unlike Mildred’s daughter, Sophie, who preferred the sweeter pre-possessed version of her mother, some of Rome’s inhabitants like the demons and do not want the demons exorcised.

Talk about turning the Possession trope on its ear! As Kyle, and the viewers, came to realize that Demon-Sidney was vastly preferable to the Pedophile-Rapist-Murderer-Sidney, other characters have revealed their own preferences for the demons.

What a shockity-shock, my fellow Outcasts.

The Devil has introduced himself, and he’s more likeable, affectionate, and moral than some of Rome’s original residents.

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Even in the human bodies, however, the demons appear to have their own “demons.”

After the red-head son of the red-headed Patricia (who’s dating The Rev) showed up at Demon-Sidney’s home, Sidney cautioned the boy to leave. The boy has already lied to Chief Giles, telling him that he saw The Rev carve the pentagram into his own chest, when viewers know that Demon-Sidney did the flesh-artwork. The boy broke into Demon-Sidney’s home. The Kid appears to suspect, or actually know, that the Devil is in Sidney, and, contrary to expectations, The Kid likes the Devil. The Kid seems to prefer the Devil’s company to that of his mother or The Rev.

Unfortunately, the pedophile is still lurking beneath the surface of Demon-Sidney, and it wants the Redhead-Kid.

The Kid doesn’t want to go home.

He’d rather hang with the Devil.

And hang, he may.

 ———

(lyrics, in italics, from “Sympathy for the Devil”
© 1968-69 by Mick Jagger & Keith Richards)

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Damage Control: Cinemax’s OUTCAST 107, “The Damage Done,” Recap & Review

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Every character in Cinemax’s horror series Outcast, based on the comic book series by Robert Kirkman and Paul Azaceta, has been damaged, by other people if not by demons. In episode 7, “The Damage Done,” many of the characters attempted to limit the damage previously done (whether by them or by others), to make up for past damage, or, at the very least, to prevent any future damage from occurring. They were not always successful. Sometimes, by trying to prevent any more damage, the people in Rome WV caused more damage in their personal lives and relationships. They didn’t need external demons from Hell to make their lives worse: the characters messed up their lives just fine without any demonic help.

Allison

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We already know that Kyle’s ex-wife Allison (Kate Lyn Sheil) is not behaving normally, though Kyle’s sister Megan thinks that Allison’s slightly “off” behavior might be due to some of the medications she’s taking. Megan has already told Kyle that Allison is fragile, perhaps permanently damaged due to what happened on the night that Allison cannot remember. The night she was assaulted, she was told by police and ER doctors that her husband had admitted to attacking her. What she hadn’t knows was why he assaulted her.

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In episode 7, after finding a drawing inside the closet where daughter Amber keeps hiding, Allison has a flashback of her daughter being choked. Amber cries out, “Don’t, Mommy,” in the flashback, and Allison realizes that her ex-husband Kyle has taken the blame for something that she herself did.

She then brought Amber over to Kyle’s home, made love to Kyle, then left them both: Kyle awoke to a note from Allison which read, Take care of our little light. He got his daughter back, but at the price of his wife. After recognizing Kyle’s sacrifice to keep her and their daughter safe, Allison sacrificed her relationship with her daughter to keep her safe. I’m sure it was incredibly bittersweet for Kyle, who has always made it clear that he wants his entire family back, wife and daughter.

Kyle

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Chief Giles (Reg E Cathey, above R) came to Kyle’s home and took Kyle to the burnt camper in the woods. Giles kept asking Kyle if he got a “read”on it. Kyle told him he wasn’t “psychic.” After Kyle explained that he sometimes got a reaction from a person who was possessed by a demon, but had unpredictable success casting out the demons — at times the victim is freed, but at others, the victim becomes catatonic, like Kyle’s mother — Giles and Kyle were shown at the town’s Memorial Service (Day of Remembrance) for 29 miners who died 7 years earlier. While Chief Giles’ friend Ogden, who burnt the camper, was greeting people at the celebration, Giles watched Kyle go up and shake Ogden’s hand, hoping to determine if there was a demon in Ogden (Pete Burris).

Fire Chief Ogden didn’t have the type of reaction that viewers (and Kyle) have come to expect when Kyle touches the demonically possessed. Instead, Ogden became verbally and emotionally abusive to Kyle, telling him that he was one of the miners who should have died 7 years ago, and that Kyle’s death would have been a blessing to his wife. Ogden tried to damage Kyle more his his abuse, but Kyle is already traumatized enough by what’s happened to him. Ogden’s words didn’t seem to affect Kyle. After shaking hands with Ogden, Kyle shook his head at the Chief to let him know there didn’t seem to be a demon in Ogden.

Later, when the crowd got there, Kyle accepted a candle from Ogden’s wife, and she jerked away, dropping the candle, when her hand touched Kyle’s. Demon Warning. Kyle attempted to follow Ogden’s wife, but lost her in the crowd. Kyle then had to abandon the hunt when the Reverend needed Kyle’s assistance at damage control.

That night, Kyle thought he was being reunited with his family only to wake in the morning and find himself alone with his daughter. Kyle probably thinks he’s cursed: not only does he seem to be the person that all the demons want, but he got his daughter back at the price of his wife. Furthermore, there seems to be some indication that his daughter Amber is a bit like Kyle: she admitted being able to see the demon that was in her mother 7 years ago. If she could see the demon, she may be like Kyle.

Megan

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 After Megan (Wrenn Schmidt) was blackmailed by her childhood rapist, Donnie, who was assaulted by her Police Officer husband Mark, Megan got together all the money she could and took it to Donnie in the hospital. Unfortunately, Donnie didn’t want money: he probably wanted Megan. He said he wanted “whatever she could give him,” or something equally ambiguous. Megan interpreted “what she could give him” as money. Donnie (Scott Parker, below), apparently, meant something else entirely (or he meant a lot more money than Megan could gather).

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Donnie’s lawyer filed assault charges, Mark was suspended from his job, and Megan was left to deal with the fall-out of her not telling Mark about Donnie’s blackmail. Megan and Mark had a bitter argument about secrets, each of them accusing the other of not being completely honest. At the end of the fight, Megan asked, “How are we going to fix this?” and Mark told her, quite candidly, “I don’t know if we can.” The damage from the past has been complicated by the damage in the present, and these are two people who don’t have demonic possession to blame for ruining their lives.

Reverend Anderson

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After being attacked by Sidney and mutilated with a knife, Reverend Anderson (Philip Glenister) has become unhinged. The damage to his ego may be even greater than the damage to his body. Before the attack, The Rev was angry at God, blaming God for the Rev’s own failures to cast out all the demons in his congregation. Now The Rev is blaming Sidney (Brent Spiner), taunting him in the barbershop before the Remembrance Day Service.

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After giving his dedication to the Memorial, The Rev flipped out when the statue of the miner was unveiled. It had been defaced with red paint, marked with the pentagram in a circle, the same mark that Sidney carved in The Rev’s chest the previous night. The Rev went totally berserkers, pointing out Sidney to the other members of the crowd, shouting that Sidney was The Devil, saying, “We can send them [demons] back. I can send them back.”

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By the time The Rev displayed his own mutilated chest, he’d already lost the crowd. They were probably more frightened of him than they were of the black-garbed Sidney, who is a stranger in the town. The physical damage done to The Rev wasn’t as great as the reputation damage he did to himself with his neurotic, paranoid rant at the Memorial.

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Kyle had to come “save” The Rev from alienating people any further. While The Rev realized afterward that everyone probably thought he was crazy, he listened to Kyle when Kyle said they needed to “be smart” to get the demons — and perhaps the Devil himself — out of Rome.

Mildred

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I thought, when she was taken away from her home, that Mildred (Grace Zabriskie) was catatonic, like Kyle’s mother and the exorcised Sherry in Charleston. To my dismay, I learned that Mildred is dead. What a shame. I hope we’re going to see more of the demon-possessed Mildred, at least, if only in flashbacks. She’s one of the best actors in the series, and I’d hate if we only got that little bit of her wonderful performance.

Kyle has become a Saviour, of sorts, to many of the people in Rome, and not just because they’re demonically possessed and need his exorcism services. He had to save The Rev from his own crazy diatribe and rescue him from the townies before they became a mob and turned on him. Kyle already had to save his daughter once from her mother Allison: now Allison has explicitly asked him to be Amber’s Saviour again. Allison didn’t ask Kyle to save her, but he may still have to do that. I can’t believe that he’d cast out the demons of Rome’s other citizens but neglect the demon in Allison. Chief Giles asked Kyle to help him identify a demon in his friend, Ogden. Whether or not the Chief will care about the demons in townspeople who are not his friends remains to be seen. In any event, the Chief has already made the first step to becoming more involved in the exorcisms by asking Kyle for help.

The only people who haven’t yet asked Kyle to be their Saviour are his sister Megan and his brother-in-law Officer Mark. But then, these two aren’t dealing with demons from Hell. They’re not even dealing with the Devil. Instead, their fighting their own inner demons.

And losing.

I don’t know if Kyle will be able to help them in that battle.

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