A complaint I always hear people make about serialized shows where the season is basically one extended length movie is that everything is so focused on the story and action and there is no room for smaller character developing episodes that tend to pop up frequently with episodic shows. Well, I'd say this episode proves all them wrong, we get a solid character based episode as the penultimate episode of a six episode season of what is largely an action thriller show and it was just as engaging and enjoyable as the action packed episodes have been.
Excellent observation; the problem is two fold--one, the teasers were leaning in the direction of it being an 80s action comedy, which was misleading to say the least (and was a disservice to a series that is not some punch, joke and blast fest), and two, some fans wanted the series to be the aforementioned 80s action comedy, completely forgetting who Sam Wilson & Bucky Barnes were/are as established in the movies. In fact, some social media reviewers were whining about this series most powerful and relevant moments such as the introduction of Isaiah Bradley's story, the subsequent police harassment scenes, and the introspective moments with the leads. I'm certain the whining will continue/ramp up after they see "Truth" unload exactly that into the MC/TVU.
And, damn, Julia Louis-Dreyfus was really impressive in the relatively small amount of screen time she had. Even though I recognized her right away, by the time the scene was done I was very surprised this is someone I largely associate with comedic roles. In just a few short moments I completely forgot this is the same woman I've thought of for the better part of a decade as Elaine from Seinfeld. A really impressive and well done job.
Yes--ordinarily, one would think she would be out of her element, but she delivered a fairly sinister character in less than 4 minutes of screen time.