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NetFlix Original Series
Season 1, Episode 9: DWYCK
Air Date: 30 September 2016
Starring: Mike Colter, Frankie Faison, Simone Missick, Theo Rossi, Frank Whaley, and Alfre Woodard
WARNING: SPOILERS – review written for those following the show who have watched episode nine through its completion!
So we’re back on an upswing. DWYCK, which I’m told stands for Do What You Can Kid, brings the suspense. It’s a bit of a white knuckle episode because things are so topsy turvy that there really is no telling how the dice are going to wind up. Snake eyes or craps? No. I don’t play dice and so I am not even sure if that vernacular is correct. But you get my meaning.
Luke awakens in the back of the sanitation truck that we saw him make his mortifying escape in at the end of “Blowin’ Up the Spot”. He soon encounters two police officers and has to do the dirty in order to not be captured. Meanwhile, Misty is mandated to go into therapy with a police psychologist and we get a little bit more insight into what makes her tick. A friend or relative who was abducted, raped, and murdered is what sent her down the path of being a cop. But her eidetic memory, her time playing basketball as a point guard, her lack of awareness in her partner’s corruption. All of these things play into the character that she is and they are all laid out, albeit slowly and with a lot of poking and prodding, on the interrogation room table. It is a slow unravelling that I can see many viewers seeing as boring. But I felt it was essential as one of the few characters at this point in the series who has not been dissected and decomposed into bare parts.
Diamondback shows himself to be the real crazy, and he and Mariah together are two wiggins-inducing Bonnie & Clyde villains. We’ve stepped up the sinister and turned it up to 11. While I felt he
Still, overall, this episode opened up some new branches for conspiracy theories, and helps solidify the new status quo. With only 4 episodes left, I’m left with a bit of worry that the production crew left themselves with a bit too much to be able to wrangle it all into decent closure by the series’ end. But I’m back on the edge of my seat with less vapid villains, a sense of a lack of control from everyone who thinks they are holding the remote in this particular dance, and Misty Knight returned to fully authorized justice-stalking status. Now I am ready for Luke to just be healed. We’ve had him limping around injured for two episodes and that’s about enough satisfaction for me to have seen him rendered vulnerable. I’m ready to have my Power Man back at the helm in this story.