The Breakdown
Revolution opens with Charlie attempting to brush off the advances of some men in a bar. The men try to gang up on her, and she fights back. Charlie handles herself well but begins to feel groggy. One of the men drugged her. Monroe busts in and saves her as she passes out.
Miles catches up to her and fills her in on what happened. He introduces her to Ed Truman of the U.S. Government. Truman explains that they are trying to restore order, but Rachel doesn’t seem to trust him.
Neville breaks up a fight in the Georgia Federation refugee camp. The commanding officer later tells him that he’s waiting for Neville to screw up so he can kill him.
That’s not good enough for Rachel; she breaks into Truman’s office to look for information about the group. Truman catches her and takes her to her father, who promises it won’t happen again. Another one of the Patriots asks if Rachel is going to be a problem. Truman replies that he’ll get back to him on that. Someone is found wandering outside of town. The Patriots kill him.
The Patriots later bring the man they killed to the doctor. They tell him and Rachel that the Andover clan got him, and this is why they want people to stay inside the walls.
Charlie wakes up with Monroe looking after her. When she asks why he helped her, Monroe tells her that it’s a show of faith. He knows he can’t make up for what he did, but he wants to try. Charlie calls him a sociopath who will do whatever it takes to get what he wants. Her words appear to hurt him, but he tells her that she doesn’t have a choice. He needs her to take him to Miles.
Aaron passes out and has some kind of vision. It shows Miles investigating the Andover camp. Miles seems to sense him for a moment. He then turns his attention to some rustles in the room next door. Miles opens the door to find Titus, who claims that the Patriots packed his people onto trains and sent them away. He curses the Patriots’ betrayal while explaining that he escaped.
Neville stops in what appears to be the local drug/sex house. He pays the attendant in diamonds, and she takes him to the CO’s room. The commanding officer is there with a needle in his arm. Neville finds the man’s gun.
Cook wakes up with Neville asking how Allenford will react to hearing her CO has a drug problem. Neville offers him a deal: no crap details, a promotion, and his son’s whereabouts. The CO swears that he doesn’t know where Jason is, but Neville doesn’t believe him. He kills Cook.
Tom steps in for the now missing CO, which is a post Allenford that lets him keep.
The show ends with Monroe and Charlie nearing Willoughby.
Analysis
I’m not sure what to make of this episode. It was straight-forward for the most part, and a lot of the pieces moved into place for the plot to move ahead. The problem is that the Monroe/Charlie portion of the story was pushed aside. Let’s get this straight: Monroe kills Charlie’s brother and holds her mother hostage, but the writers don’t see fit to spend more than a couple short scenes dealing with the two characters? That doesn’t make sense at all.
The rest of “Patriot Games” was well-done. Every side story had a place within the overall plot and the acting was solid. Elizabeth Mitchell (Rachel) continues to carry this show, and her skills were on full display through the episode. Overall, it was another good night for Revolution.