I didn't see this until today, because I was at the Shore Leave convention over the weekend. It's weird to watch Roger Cross on TV when I was actually talking to him just yesterday. (He doesn't seem quite as tall and imposing in person. But he's much closer to Six in personality than to some of his other roles.) Anyway, this episode made it clear that he's the best actor in the cast.
The stuff on the ship worked pretty well for me, but I still don't like this whole feudal-Japanese-empire-in-space thing. Without some kind of backstory to justify why this empire exists and is so committed to historical playacting and low technology (seriously, needle and thread for a suture, when they have nanotech and hyperspace engines?), it just seems silly and forced, a non sequitur tacked onto a futuristic universe. I can't care about Four's plight or his family conflicts when the whole scenario feels like nothing more than a lazy stereotype. It's a symptom of how weak this show's worldbuilding overall has been, in contrast to
Killjoys, whose intricately thought-out setting is one of its strongest features.
And apparently the Space Samurai aren't the only ones lacking in futuristic technology. Those random bandits in the woods had a very 20th-century shotgun. Indeed, everyone seemed to be still using gunpowder-based projectile weapons. Which is a conceit that seems to be used in a lot of sci-fi these days, I guess because ray guns are seen as dated. Still, I tend to think that futuristic projectile weapons would use something like miniature linear accelerators to fire bullets. That's just a matter of the user's health, since guns are very, very loud and can cause hearing damage in enclosed spaces, like spaceships or station corridors. Developing quieter firearms would be pretty much a necessity.
(Didn't
Firefly actually have something like this? They used bullets, but the gun sound effect was more muffled and future-ish than a plain old "bang"?)
The way Three grabbed the blue pills I thought they were Viagra, but I guess they were really Whisky.
No, they were in addition to the whisky. The whisky was in the same crate as the juice; the pills were in a different crate.