Oh, I know! Pure innocence and played quite well by the actor.
Jossverse 1: Emotional Resonance & Rocket Launchers
TV, movies, web media--this thread is the home for any Joss projects that don't already have their own threads, such as Dr. Horrible.
Does anyone else think Paul has a history with Caroline, possibly familial?
I don't think so, he didn't know who she was until he had the picture with "Caroline" written on the back. And he had the striking FBI lady trying to find out who she was.
Yeah, also, because the previous wiping seems to not have been complete, given the freakout on Viktor.
They weren't wiping the doll state, so she had memories of what happened. Hearn asked her if she remembered the game, and Sierra remembered that she had to be quiet.
While the Dollhouse gets points for stopping Sierra's abuse, don't forget that they're the ones who set her up as the perfect victim in the first place. She's had her personality and memories wiped and her handler - who she's programmed to trust absolutely and who has the power in the relationship - was the one they picked to be in that position. There probably had been hints in his past that he'd be likely to take advantage of anyone in his power.
And I'm getting more and more tired of the extent to which the women on the show are subjected to violence. Even if they can fight back, they're being subjected to a lot of being hit. And until Mellie's programming kicked in, she was being beaten, strangled, dragged around that apartment.
And I'm getting more and more tired of the extent to which the women on the show are subjected to violence. Even if they can fight back, they're being subjected to a lot of being hit. And until Mellie's programming kicked in, she was being beaten, strangled, dragged around that apartment.
Yes, I find that viscerally squicky as well.
yes, the women are being subjected to violence, but they're not the only ones. Paul gets beaten up just about every show. And, although the women are subjected to violence, they ultimately come out on top.
I know... logically, I know. But it still makes me clench.
If I may ask, did it bother you on Buffy? I remember reading about how Buffy was the first show where women really fought and got hit, and it really disturbed a lot of people.
I wonder if some of it is the attitude Eliza projects during fight scenes. I remember the fights between Buffy and Faith (or Angel and Faith) were by far the most disturbing fight scenes on either show, and I think it was the vibe coming from Eliza.
The scene with Mellie bothered me, but it was supposed to. The audience was definitely being set up to think she was toast. In fact, for me, it was giving Maddie's murder on Twin Peaks a run for the money. However, I was so relieived when the twist came that I didn't care how disturbing the set up was.
I think it bothered me less on Buffy because (1) she went out looking for vampires, etc., to kill; (2) she was aware of what she was doing and was pretty much prepared for it; and (3) I don't remember it being so unrelenting. It just seems that week after week we've seen women - who aren't actually aware of what's going on (having been programmed) being beaten. And, often, they aren't prepared for it - when the guy decided it'd be fun to hunt Echo, or in the cult show when the leader hits her, or this past week when Mellie's in the apartment and Hearn (that was his name, right?) breaks in and starts beating her.
And he had the striking FBI lady trying to find out who she was.
Let me also cast my vote with finding her very striking and cool. I wouldn't mind her character being expanded at all.
I wonder if some of it is the attitude Eliza projects during fight scenes. I remember the fights between Buffy and Faith (or Angel and Faith) were by far the most disturbing fight scenes on either show, and I think it was the vibe coming from Eliza.
Interesting point. ED does project a bruisedness very well.