Friday, April 16, 2021

The Falcon and the Winter Soldier: Truth Review

TFATWS "Truth"
In its penultimate installment, The Falcon and the Winter Soldier got back into its wheelhouse for a moving and satisfying "calm before the storm" episode.

We begin in the only place we could after the heinous events at the end of last week's episode: with consequences for John Walker. Sam and Bucky confront the enraged, 'roided up, unrepentant Walker, and an exciting two-on-one fight ensues. The power sets on display land logically, but more than that, the motivations behind the fight have the spice of a proper build-up. The sequence is earned.

Henry Jackman breaks out his main theme from Captain America: Civil War, underlining superficial parallels the fight has with Steve and Bucky vs. Tony Stark in that film. Another MCU moment comes up when Sam uses his wings' rocket booster to force the shield out of Walker's hands; it's reminiscent of Tony and Peter Parker trying to wrest the Infinity Gauntlet off Thanos' arm in Avengers: Infinity War.

After Walker is stripped of his duties and military pension, he and his wife are approached by a quirky and enigmatic woman played by Julia Louis-Dreyfus (giving a performance not unlike her Arrested Development character). After visiting Lemar's family, Walker begins to make his own knock-off Captain America shield.

When I say the episode throws itself squarely in the show's wheelhouse, I mean that it largely gets away from the pokey Flag Smashers material and focuses on the areas of the show where its strengths most clearly reside: reckoning with the exploitation of Isaiah Bradley, the Wilson family drama in Louisiana, and the partnership between Sam and Bucky. Each element is tended to, as the episode prioritizes relatively quiet character moments after the initial action business has been dealt with. Even the telling detail of Bucky's right-handedness plays into this, and the bonding he and Sam engage in is genuinely touching.

Sam wrestles with the revelation of Bradley's all-too-predictable story, and the problematic nature of a Black man wielding a shield so loaded with nationalistic symbolism. Ultimately, he decides to "keep fighting", and get himself a sweet training montage. Sam practicing his shield throw is undeniably cool. Bucky also delivers a gift for Sam from Wakanda, that the show is teasing hard. Presumably it's a new wingsuit, to replace the one Walker tore apart. Wakanda has given Bucky a metal arm and Steve retractable "shields", but there's an extra resonance to the country giving gear to a Black superhero. (Granted, the Captain America shield is made of likely-stolen vibranium...)

Elsewhere, Bucky delivers Zemo to Ayo and the Dora Milaje, who intend to deliver him in turn to the Raft. We learn that Sharon Carter really is a villain, working with Batroc of all people. Come on, Sharon, this is the Hydra type of bullshit you took a stand against in Captain America: The Winter Soldier! And Karli and the other Flag Smashers begin their attack to delay a GRC vote on a resolution to repatriate thousands of blipped people to their original countries. Hmm, a terrorist attack to stop a vote, does that sound familiar? 8/10.

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