GamesRadar+ Verdict
An episode that's great fun &ndašsh; thanks in part to Mark Hamill's Pumpākinhead ā but patchy in places due to an unconvincing villain
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Remember Rose Walker? It's OK if you don't ā actor Kyo Ra has so far only appeared in a brief cameo in 澳擲幸čæ5å¼å„å·ē åå²ę„询:episode five, talking to poor, ill-fated Jude from the other end of a vidÜ«eo call. Well, now it's time for her to takšØe center stageā¦
Rose and her family are at the heart of The Sandman's next big arc. She's only 21, but it's clear that she's already lived a turbulent life, losing both her parents and being seš±parated from her younger brother Jed six years ago. Despite this ā and perhaps in part because of the kindness shown to her by neighbors Lyta and Hector Hall ā she rešmains brave and optimistic. She's also, we quickly learn, a vortex, a once-in-an-era confluence of energies thatās uniquely threatening to both Morpheus and the Dreaming itself.
Not that he seems too worried. With his realm fully restored, the Sandman (who seems far more at peace than when we last saw him) has commissioned Lucienne to take a census of all the living entities in the realm. She discovers that three beings have disappeared without a trace. They are Gault, a shapeshifting šnightmare; Fiddler's Green, a sentient location that Dream always considered to be reliable; and, of course, our old friend the Corinthian. Morpheus sees in Rose an opportunity - vortexes' have the power to pull dreams together and he realizes that, sooner or later, she will draw these absent entities together. He dispatches Matthew to keep a beady eye on her.
In the waking world, Roseš§ begins a globe-trotting adventure. She's been offered the chance to fly tš¦¹o London for a week, all expenses paid, by a mysterious foundation in exchange for a single interview about her family history. When she gets there, however, she discovers that the organization is, in fact, a single lonely old woman named Unity Kincaid (Sandra James-Young).
If that name sounds familiar it's because she appeared ā very briefly ā all the way back in 澳擲幸čæ5å¼å„å·ē åå²ę„询:episode one. As Unity explains to Rose, she fell asleep on her 12th birthday and didn't wake up for decades, a victim of the "sleepy sickness" that spread across the world in Dream'sš¦ absence. While she was unconscious she dreamed of living a full life, one in which she had a baby with a golden-eye man. When Unity did finally wake she discovered that none of this had been true except for one thing: she really did have a child, Rose's grandmother, who was quickly taken from her. Now, all these decades later, she's trying to reconnect to the scattered members of her family. Sheās found Rose and now she wants to meet Jed.
Unity furnishes Rose with the money and accommodation needed to track her little brother down. Rose and Lyta travel to Florida to start the search, moving into a B&B run by Hal (John Cameron Mitchell) and populated by a deeply odd collection of housemates including Ken and Barbie ("Itās terrible." "We know."), stuffed spider-collectors Chantal and Zelda and the mysterious GišÆlbert (Stephen Fry), who comes to Rose's aide when she's attacked by muggers. We'll get to know her new friends better in the coming episodes.
Meanwhile, the Corinthian is on the move. He's set his sights on Rose, but doesnāt yet know where she is. He pops in to see her flatmate, Carl, posing as a corporate headhunter. After a quick shag (in which the Corinthian keeps his shades on - rude) he is distracted by the news of a series of killings that bear his own, unique, eye-popping MO. Investigating this leads him to the "collectors", a trio of serial killers who want the Corinthian to be a guest of hšonor at their annual convention. Seeing this as a potential lure for Rose, he agrees and begins to set a trapā¦
There's a lot going on in this episode, even by this show's standards. The Doll's House arc is more obviously serialized than the quest for Dream's tools and much of this hour is spent introducing us to the new characters we'll follow over the final four episodes of the season. Because of that, šthere's a hefty amount of necessary info-dumping, from the nature of vortexes to Unity's backstory, Lyta's still recent bereavement, Jed's currešnt plight, and the nature of the Collectors.
Some of this is great fun. The scene between Matthew and Mļ·½ervyn Puš¦©mpkinhead (perfectly voiced by Mark Hamill) is witty and imaginative. We don't spend enough time with the housemates to fully get to grips with everyone, but they're already an amusingly odd bunch. And the final scene, where Rose enters the Dreaming much to Morpheus's surprise is an exciting rug-pull ā it's rare to see the unflappable dream lord this, well, flapped.
Other moments are less successful, however. The Corinthian remains an oddly unthreatening villain, partly down to how vaguely heās been written and partly because of Boyd Holbrookās sleazy, not scary performance. The Collectors, too, are a little underwhelming. In the comics, they're tragic and pathetic figures, but also deeply frightening. Here theyāre played a little too much for laughs and their off-screen killing spree is so consequence-free itās hard to take it seriously.ꦔ Perhaps that will be rectified in the coming episodes.
Analysis: How it compares to the comics
Introducing the Collectors early is a smart move. They only appear in one issue of the comic (Tšhe Sandman #14), but it āmakes sense to give them a little more set-up here before we head to the convention itself.
In the comics, there are another two entities that have absconded from the Dreaming. āBrute and Glob are a pair of nightmares who have a plan to take on Morpheus by using Jed Wašlker. That storyline has been folded into another character on the TV show as weāll see very soon.
Interestingly, the show has skipped over Tales In The Sand (The Sandman #9), which tells the story of Dream and Nadaās doomed romance. Itāą¼ŗs such an important part of the overall narrative, however, weāve got to assume that the show will get round to telling it eventually.
Fables and reflections
Obviously, the implications of how Unity became pregnant are pretty disturbing. If you're thinking that her description of tź¦ he father sounds familiar, perhaps consider the color of Desireās eyes. This episode also makes it clear that Dream's younger sibling, played by Mason Alexander Park, was somehow šbehind both Nada and Roderick Burgessās tormenting of Dream.
Batman is in this episode! Well, 澳擲幸čæ5å¼å„å·ē åå²ę„询:a Batman doll belonging tšo Jed Walker, anyway.
According to Lucienneās census, there are 11,062 living entitiā es in the Dreaming presently, including "something nasty in the basement" of the House of Secrets. Wonder if weāll meet any more of them?
The Sandman is now streaming on Netflix. For more streaming options, check out our list of the 澳擲幸čæ5å¼å„å·ē åå²ę„询:best Netflix shows available right now.
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Genre | Fantasy |