2.9 The Price Of Greatness As it turns out, getting used to life with all the comforts of home isn’t going to be easy. The 2nd Mass has spent a lot of time fighting with the alien menace, while Charleston has spent a lot of time hiding from the alien menace. They have guns, but don’t know how to use them and don’t have a lot of combat experience, but they do have a state of governance, and that government has a system: go along to get along. That means you give up your guns, go back to being a pediatrician, and, when the President asks for your support – Tom Mason, this means you – you generally give it, even if you, the military leadership, and anyone who isn’t Terry O’Quinn thinks your choice to collaborate with the alien resistance and fight is the wisest one. You’d think that being a friend of President Manchester would get Tom, Anne, and the rest of the Mass crew special treatment, but that isn’t the case. If anything, it gets them worse treatment. Pope does Pope things and ends up in the brig, taking Lee and Maggie with him in the process. Weaver chafes under the pressure of direct command from someone else, even though he likes being reunited with his daughter. Even little Ben gets in a fight on his first day of school. Turns out, Charleston might not be so heavenly after all. I like it when a programme that’s ostensibly an action sci-fi show has a specific source of conflict. Dueling political philosophies are great, when done properly, but there also needs to be someone or something to point a gun at. I also like when the threat isn’t discussed in vague terms, but in specifics. Little things, like Pope’s continued grudge against Tom and the clash between the Charleston heart surgeon and Anne the pediatrician help keep the show grounded in a sense. I have to give writer Mark Verheiden credit for this week. It’s an interesting episode, and an interesting direction for the show. We know and like the 2nd Mass; these new guys I’m not so sure about. Would humans willingly collaborate with the aliens, as I suspected last week? Is the conflict between the Mass and Charleston simply based around battle-hardened vets versus soft civilians? Read Ron’s review of last week’s episode, Death March, here. US Correspondent Ron Hogan was very much into this week’s episode of Falling Skies. The show seemed to fly by this week; even Ben and Maggie didn’t overstay their welcome. Find more by Ron daily at Shaktronics and PopFi. Follow our Twitter feed for faster news and bad jokes right here. And be our Facebook chum here.