Tag: Nassau

  • Black Sails Season 2 Episode 3 Review – XI

    Black Sails Season 2 Episode 3 Review – XI

    Flint faces a dilemma upon his return to Nassau.  Eleanor needs help from an unlikely source.  Rackham seeks to repair his reputation.  Vane uncovers an unexpected prize.

    (Summary provided by starz.com)


    REWATCH REACTION

    I’m starting to slow down in my rewatches, because even though the show gets better and better, there are so many betrayals and heartbreaks to watch again, and my heart hurts in anticipation!  I’m actually missing the days of season 1 when we were too busy being introduced to characters to kill them off (mostly).

    BEST FLINT MOMENT

    Just, every look he gives Miranda while flirting and realizes she sees beneath his proper exterior is. so. hot.

    TODAY’S RUNNER UP

    Eleanor!  This is such a good episode between her and her father figures.  The scene when Flint arrives, and she rushes to him with a genuine smile on her face in order to publicly embrace him?  MY HEART.  Even when she realizes he doesn’t have the gold, she says, “I’m so very glad you’re alive.”  Later, she sneaks a message to Mr. Scott so that they can talk, and for a few lines they are genuinely happy to see each other and catch up.

    As lovely as it is to see Eleanor happy, she earned her spot here for how she stands up to Flint.  Lesser men and women would cower beneath his fury, but she defends her actions in giving up the fort to Vane.  When Flint realizes she’s strong enough to oppose his strength, he switches tactics and goes for vulnerability.  Kudos to him for being honest about killing Gates (“What did you do?” “What was necessary.”), but it doesn’t work.  He wants her to make the same decision, to kill someone she loves for the sake of their mission.

    But the person he wants her to kill is doing a lot toward showing his own love for her…but more on Eleanor and Vane in the Fragmented Thoughts section.

    LOL MOMENT

    This episode starts with a joke, when Thomas shows James a pamphlet about piracy and says the problem in Nassau is “a problem most insidious.”  James looks for a moment, then suggests, “Illiteracy?”  I love these boys and their shared subtle humor!

    WELL-FORMED THOUGHTS

    Miranda:  In my experience, there is an inverse relationship between the degree of one’s happiness and the concern one suffers for what the neighbors think.

    Miranda:  I think you’re someone who’s very good at managing how you’re perceived, and perhaps getting what you want without anyone knowing how you did it, or perhaps if it ever happened at all.  Perhaps–
    James:  Don’t tell me propriety has worked its evils on you too, now.
    Miranda:  I was going to say that perhaps you’re more concerned with whether or not people talk about what you and I may be doing behind closed doors more than with what we actually are doing.

    Thomas and Miranda offer James a world in which one can take the things that make one happy without worrying if it is the “proper” thing to do.  At that time (and this time, honestly) an open marriage was something to be feared, scorned, or punished.  Yet Miranda knows James well enough to see that he isn’t as interested in social conventions as his naval uprightness implies.  She sees some of the “darkness” and “wildness” that was shown to us in the last episode.  But where those qualities were condemned by Hennessey, Miranda encourages them.  She invites him to leave propriety behind and take what will make him happy.  The fact that we see them so unhappy together in the present day makes us ask all sorts of questions that I cannot wait to see answered.

    FRAGMENTED THOUGHTS

    • I’m still in love with Thomas’s confidence that the problem in Nassau is not the pirates but the corrupt governors.  His idealism is so sexy!
    • James’s realism is also sexy, but that’s because James is still looking so good in these flashbacks.

    James:  Put a man on an island, give him power over other men, and it won’t be long before he realizes the limits of that power are nowhere to be seen.

    • Silver is officially popular!  The scene where Dooley insists that they return to Nassau despite the incredible danger of sailing into harbor in a Spanish ship seems to imply that the democratic pirate government is flawed.  A popular vote, after all, allows dumb men to make potentially devastating decisions.  If their captain were anyone but Flint, I think I’d be suspicious of this.  As it is, I’m all for Flint as Pirate King…it’s a little unnerving how much I’ve drunk from his Koolaid.
    • Vane’s men need better wigs.
    • I loved seeing Miranda and Eleanor together!  It must be weird for Eleanor to see evidence of Flint’s domesticity and to hear him called “James.”  She’s SUPER suspicious of the power Miranda seems to hold over Flint, and while that’s warranted, I’m still annoyed at how rude she was to imply Miranda is unremarkable.

    Miranda:  Every man has his torments, demons born of past wrongs that hound and harass him.  You perceive the effects of Captain Flint’s demons, echoes of their voices.  But I know their names.  I was there when they were born.  I know the things they whisper to him at night.  So you can believe me when I tell you that within his chorus of torments none of them look or sound like me.

    • The scene between Max and Vane is beautiful.  Her suppressed fear of him is so sad considering the last night she saw him, he was letting his men abuse and assault her.  Max seems to be implying that it is weak of Vane to want to protect Eleanor from Ned Lowe, but like, Ned is a brutal psychopath?  I don’t think you have to still be hopelessly in love with someone to not want to see them raped and tortured (though…he totally is).  “I found a way to stop caring about her.  Would you like to know how?”  “No.”
    • ❤ Eme and the other former slaves are working and finding places in Nassau!
    • UM, I too would invite myself into James’s apartment if he answered the door shirtless and with messy hair.  This is a painful scene in some ways, though, as the power dynamic between James and the Hamiltons is driven home.  He is so obviously pained at her attempts to compliment his small and undecorated room.  Later, we see class rearing its head again when he says the Hamiltons are wealthy and secure enough to scorn propriety – James doesn’t have that luxury.
    • They are SUPER good at flirting.  Wow, their faces!
    • Fandom seems very married to the idea that Vane is Loyalty Personified, but I don’t really see it.  In this episode, he restores Jack and Anne to influence, abandoning loyalty to the crew they murdered, and NOT because of loyalty to them, but because he got what he wanted from Max.  Which!  I love!  Because I like my Black Sails characters morally complex.  But why is fandom so determined to see a Vane that I cannot?
    • As Flint remembers his past with Miranda, it inspires him to make a gesture of reconciliation by bringing La Galatea to her.  But when he arrives at her house and sees her giving piano lessons, it’s clear that there is no place for him there.  He leaves the book instead, and my heart breaks because he cannot have everything that he wants.
    • Ned Lowe is DEAD, and I rejoice!  Vane is such a badass, and I was very impressed by his subtle dig implying that Ned not only will submit to Vane (“you know your place”), but that he’s one of the only captains that will do so.  This scene plays out so beautifully, leading us to assume that Ned has the upper hand, but Vane was playing him all along!  I’m so impressed that this show had the balls to kill off such a charismatic, terrifying character after just three episodes.  It shows that they know how strong their central characters truly are.
    • After seeing Ned’s head on a stick, Eleanor goes to Vane to reward him with sex.  Half of me is annoyed by this trope, but the other half of me is genuinely touched.  This is the most intimate they’ve been during and after sex, and the fact that Vane watches her sleep does things to my heart. I am NOT a believer in their relationship as something healthy, but there’s just enough good there to convince us why they would keep returning to each other.
    • Speaking of surprisingly lovely sex scenes, Anne’s mostly unspoken invitation for Jack to join her and Max is really sweet.  Despite Max wanting to get between Anne and Jack (“did he see you come up?”), Anne refuses to play these power games and asks for everything she wants.  And in asking for everything, she gives up everything, disrobing for the first time.  It’s a vulnerable moment for anyone, but especially for Anne, who lets Max (and us) see her back full of scars for the first time.
    • Flint’s final speech resonates VERY hard after knowing some things that are going to happen to him in the near future:  “I know how you must feel, how desperate you must be to go home and be embraced by Nassau again.  But I’m here to tell you, that place no longer exists.  It has been taken from us by a madman, held hostage by threat of force that no one on the island seems able to resist…Nassau was unable to resist him, but we have yet to have our say.”

    Not done reliving the episode?  Listen to Daphne and Liz’s podcast at Fathoms Deep!

  • Black Sails Season 2 Episode 2 Review – X

    Black Sails Season 2 Episode 2 Review – X

    Flint gives Dufresne some advice.  Silver must make himself indispensable.  Eleanor is asked to depose a captain.  Rackham gets ambitious.

    (Summary provided by starz.com)


    BEST FLINT MOMENT

    This episode IS Flint.  We see him at his most brilliant and most ruthless, and we learn from the flashbacks that he has always held these two traits.  It’s hard to remember that his actions intentionally resulted in the death of a LOT of innocent men when it is so damn satisfying to watch this play out:

    DeGroot:  What are we waiting for?  Why aren’t we moving?  Give the order, Mr. Dufresne.
    Logan:  Why the fuck are we waiting for him?
    DeGroot:  Because he’s in charge here.
    Logan:  No one is in fucking charge here!
    Flint, coming from nowhere:  You have to sink her.

    It is GLORIOUS to watch him step into command, bringing order to the chaos.  The men hesitate only a moment before obeying.  Captain Flint is back!

    TODAY’S RUNNER UP

    Jack!!!  This is one of my all-time favorite moments of his, and honestly, favorite moments of the whole show.  It is our first real glimpse at how complexly Black Sails is going to handle love, sex, and romance, and my first time through I was completely blown away.  In a lesser show, Anne’s confusion, Jack’s insecurity, and Max’s ambition would have led to a power struggle that would destroy them all.  Instead, Jack defuses the situation and basically says, “Alright, if there’s to be a threesome, let’s make this threesome legitimate and profitable to all of us.”

    Not just profit, though.  His love for Anne runs deeper than sex or jealousy, and it’s so so beautiful.

    “Darling, I can understand why you wouldn’t want to tell me about this, but please know that all I have ever wanted for you is to be happy.  Come to bed when you’re through.”

    My heart.  ❤

    LOL MOMENT

    I didn’t laugh at loud in this episode, but I did find Silver’s first failed attempts at ingratiating himself into the crew, and Flint’s subsequent confusion/concern, quite amusing.

    WELL-FORMED THOUGHTS

    The theme of the episode (and show, really) is “strange pairs” that can “achieve the most unexpected things.”  Thomas is the one who says this, referring to himself and James.  Thomas sees their vastly different worldviews as an asset, something that will make their combined efforts stronger.

    We cut immediately from this flashback conversation to Flint and Silver.  Silver reveals that his only interest is in the gold, and that he doesn’t like being on the crew or being at sea even.  His motivations are selfish, but his goal of walking away from piracy is exactly Flint’s dream of leaving the sea behind until he finds someone who thinks an oar is a shovel.  Flint sees this, and pushes Silver to be better, to prove his usefulness to the crew.  Throughout the episode we see their differences – Silver explicitly says he doesn’t care if people hate him so long as they need him, whereas Flint desperately cares what others think of him (this will be revealed even more fully in future episodes).  Silver will put up with being ridiculed, but FlashbackFlint gave men a beatdown for insinuating an insult.  They are very different men, but strange pairs can achieve unexpected things.

    I also think we see in this episode how “strange pairs” applies to Eleanor and Vane (though they share characteristics and have different goals, which makes me skeptical of their partnership), Silver and Randall (same goal of surviving, different ways of doing so), and Jack/Anne/Max (same goal of profit, confusing sexuality issues to be navigated).

    FRAGMENTED THOUGHTS

    • Billy is alive!  And being tortured very dispassionately by a British officer.  Civilization hurts you with a polite smile on their face.  This is, I think, more cruel.
    • Thomas is a dreamboat, insisting that the pirates of Nassau are merely a symptom of systemic problems in the British empire.  He is a man of deeply held values, and I love him.  He’s also clearly impressed by Flint’s ability to immediately list the numerous changes necessary to make Nassau a healthy colony.  And Flint, in turn, is stunned by Thomas refusing to be intimidated by this list (“Are you sure three ships would be enough?”)
    • We’ve long known that Flint is brilliant when it comes to manipulating battles, but we see in this episode that he is equally as good at manipulating people.  When he asks if Dufresne has read any of the books in the captain’s quarters, I think this is his last attempt to see if there is any reason to respect the man.  Dufresne fails, and Flint takes him out.  It is so satisfying to watch Flint tell him how “lettered men are harder to keep in line and more resistant to persuasion” WHILE he is manipulating and persuading him.  He uses flattery, vulnerability, and subtle criticism (they’ve been losing wind for hours and Dufresne hasn’t noticed) to thoroughly ensnare Dufresne’s pride.
    • The best thing is, Flint’s advice is sound.  Dufresne SHOULDN’T have attempted to take a prize.  If he’d gone back to Nassau to regroup as Flint suggested, he would still be captain.  But Flint knows that Dufresne’s pride will win over his good advice.  God, he’s brilliant.
    • In the tavern flashback, we learn that no matter how far James has fought his way up the ranks, his Navy peers still see him as a social climbing son of a carpenter.  It’s especially ironic to hear them talk about his supposed selfish motivations for keeping his assignment when we’ve just seen him try to talk Thomas into firing him.
    • It’s very interesting to me that Max implies that Jack has long known that Anne is attracted to women.  I didn’t notice this the first time through, and it helps explain why his later acceptance of their being in bed together, though still difficult for him, is not quite as shocking as it might have been.

    Flint:  What was that?
    Silver:  I am convincing the crew to allow me to remain with them.  As we discussed.
    Flint:  Is that what you’re doing?

    • In an interesting flip, it is Flint who assumes his crew are too adult to fall for Silver’s ploy, and it’s Silver who cynically assumes they’re little better than boys.
    • I skipped Mr. Meek’s beheading this time through.  It is one of two violent acts that are just too visceral for me to watch.
    • The Vane/Eleanor stuff is very interesting this episode!  He shows up to a meeting, and he constantly tells her that “If you aren’t strong enough to protect your own interests, then I urge you to stop behaving as though you are.”  I’m a little confused by this.  According to his role in the Consortium, isn’t he SUPPOSED to be the muscle?  Why does he keep acting as though he’s doing them a favor?  Or is it her personal power, as shown in her bodyguards, one of whom is murdered by Ned Lowe?
    • I did really love their last scene together in which Eleanor is vulnerable with Vane.  She admits that everything she has, personally and professionally, is very fragile.  “You want me to believe that you have some manner of concern for me.  Then show it.”  But along with the vulnerability, she also offers Vane the “mysterious asset” on Ned’s ship, thus insuring that she can never be sure if his actions are motivated by love for her or for profit.
    • “If you’re trying to impress me, it isn’t working.”  Liar!  Flint is attracted to nothing more than persistence.  Silver stands up for the fourth time, accepts a beating, and finally finds the line in the sand…the poor dairy goat.
    • In the moment of Silver’s triumph, he looks to Flint for validation.  Later, when the merchant ship strikes a flag of surrender, Dufresne also looks to Flint in his moment of triumph.  Whether positive or negative, everyone wants Flint’s approval.
    • I love Flint teaching Silver the intricacies of piracy.  It’s good exposition for us, but I think it also shows that he now sees Silver as someone deserving of instruction.

    “My concern for you is over that which cannot be known.  That thing which arises in you when passions are aroused – good sense escapes you.  All men have it.  But yours is different.  Darker.  Wilder.  I imagine it’s what makes you so effective as an officer.  But when exposed to extremes, I could not imagine what it is capable of.  And of greater concern, I’m not sure you do either.”

    • Civilization sees darkness and wildness and says to suppress it.  Pirates (as embodied in Ned Lowe) say to embrace it.  Is there a middle way?  **
    • Dufresne realizes that he was played by Flint too late – he’s lost the captaincy.  As much as I enjoy Flint’s success (that jacket!), Dufresne isn’t wrong.  Flint chose to put his crew in danger, and he chose to slaughter an entire ship full of innocent merchants and sailors in order to retake control of his ship.  This is…not good.  Again and again, the show asks us this question:  “What level of loss is acceptable as you fight to achieve your dream?”

    ** SPOILERS FOR SEASON FOUR

    Any character talking about darkness makes me think of Flint’s speech in 410: “In the dark there is discovery, there is possibility.  There is freedom in the dark when someone has illuminated it.”  I think this is the middle ground.  Avoiding the dark and wallowing in the dark are both unhealthy.  Wading into the darkness with the goal of illuminating it?  That is where change is possible.


    Not done reliving the episode?  Listen to Daphne and Liz’s podcast at Fathoms Deep!

  • Black Sails Season 2 Episode 1 Review – IX

    Black Sails Season 2 Episode 1 Review – IX

    Flint and Silver face judgment before the crew.  Vane enjoys his new position on the island.  Max confronts Bonny.  Eleanor faces a new threat.

    (Summary provided by starz.com)


    REWATCH REACTION

    Season two is my favorite, and rewatching its first episode only reminded me of how right I was to think so!

    BEST FLINT MOMENT

    Annoyed that Silver of all people volunteered to take the ship with him, Flint insults his only partner, takes off his shoes, and starts swimming to take the Man O’ War all by his goddamn self.  His insane determination is so charismatic, and no one can resist its pull.  Least of all Silver, who sighs and takes off his jacket to follow.

    TODAY’S RUNNER UP

    Silver!  The partnership between Flint and Silver that began in 108 is flourishing here.  They are SUCH a great team.  Despite being so different (or because of it), they work together incredibly well, filling in each other’s weak spots and pushing each other to do more and be better.  For MUCH more flailing about their scenes together, head down to the Fragmented Thoughts section.

    LOL MOMENT

    This is such a funny episode!  The dynamic of Desperate Silver trying to win over No Fucks Left to Give Flint is constantly hilarious, culminating in the truly masterful scene in which both of them are caught by the Spanish crew.  Just minutes after assuring Flint that he has no reason to distrust him, Silver sells him out in exchange for gold and freedom.  Flint’s face goes gloriously twitchy as he chair-hops over to murder Silver with…his face?

    Silver bails, and then RETURNS TO THE RESCUE!  Flint gives Silver a quick strategy lesson, at which point:

    Silver:  So I actually have to fight him?
    Flint:  Well, what the fuck did you think was gonna happen?

    Silver’s face, and Flint’s voice crack of exasperation KILL ME.  Like, mad cackling into my hands at these fools.  I love them so much.

    WELL-FORMED THOUGHTS

    We get our first flashbacks to Flint’s past, and I am here for it.  Finally, after a season of watching a man pursue a vision so fiercely that it compels him to murder his closest friend, we are starting to find out what led him here.

    It is in these flashbacks that we see a very different Flint – in fact, in 1705 that’s not his name at all, but James McGraw.  He’s very cleaned up and VERY attractive, and in his conversations with Thomas Hamilton, we see his role reversed.  Thomas is the idealistic one with plans for redeeming Nassau, and James is the one declaring how impossible that plan is.

    We also get our first glimpse at Civilization proper, a London of beautiful buildings, clean clothes, and nice manners.  As per the show’s theme, the ugly underbelly of this facade is quickly revealed when James takes Thomas to view a pirate hanging.  He knows that piracy flourishes because it benefits the British empire to create a monstrous enemy to fight against (“Civilization must have its monsters.”)  In order to eradicate piracy, the empire must change, and James doesn’t believe this is possible.

    Their conversations reveal another theme: complementary partners.  Thomas is idealistic but with no experience (he’s never even been to a pirate hanging before, despite his deep interest in the pirates of Nassau).  James has a lot of experience, but no ideals.  Time will tell how this partnership will work out, as it will also address the success of the present-day complementary partnership between Flint and Silver.

    FRAGMENTED THOUGHTS

    • Another season opener, another pirate boarding from the perspective of the boarded merchant vessel.  Contrasted with season 1, however, this one is very ominous and silent, since the merchant captain is prepared to surrender peacefully.  I love his assertion that pirates are “men, not monsters,” and in most cases he would be right.  But unfortunately this episode introduces us to Ned Lowe, a madman who terrifies me and slaughters everyone for the prize of a mysterious woman connected to “Lord Ashe.”
    • I love the look of annoyance on Flint’s face as he stares at the Man O’ War.  You can literally see him thinking, “Well, shit, I’ve just had a brilliant idea.  I guess I can’t let them kill me just yet.”

    “Even if it weren’t for the soldiers, even if it weren’t for the guns, there’s a fucking warship watching over every inch of the bay.  A fucking warship that has already killed half your number, a fucking warship that would prevent any approach to that beach via the sea.  There’s simply no way of stealing that gold.  But there might be something else you can steal.  The fucking warship.”

    • Everyone HATES Flint, and it is amazing to watch them fight against how annoying it is that he is still so brilliant.
    • In our first flashback we get so much information about James McGraw/Flint!  He’s “a son of a carpenter.  No record of any formal schooling and yet, more literate than any three boys I knew at Eton.  You are a rising star with a bright future in the Admiralty.”  Our man James is meritocracy personified, fighting his way up the ranks through sheer brilliance.
    • Eleanor and Vane are still trying to prove who’s on top.  Vane’s line about “If your friends aren’t capable of protecting themselves, I’d argue that they aren’t worth protecting” is VERY essential to his character.  He’s attracted to strength, and has no time for weakness.
    • I’m less enamored with his constant attempts to make Eleanor see how similar they are.  While they definitely share strength and an attraction to it, he’s wrong about her priorities.  He wants her to be as in-the-moment and selfish as he is, but her desire for profit includes a desire for peace.  I love her outburst, “Stop telling me what you think I think!”  Yeah, girl.  Be your own self.
    • The scene between Flint and Silver alone on the beach is one of my all time favorites!  “You shit.”  “Um.  Beg pardon?”  LAUGHING FOREVER.  Silver’s genuine surprise that Flint intends to singlehandedly take a Spanish Man O’ War, and Flint’s genuine surprise that Silver is surprised.  I love them!
    • During the flashback to the pirate hanging, Flint gives his oft-quoted speech that ends with “in most cases a man trying to change the world fails for one simple and unavoidable reason: everyone else.”  Which makes me wonder:  SHOULD a person change the world if no one else wants it?  Who gets to determine which causes are worth changing the world for?
    • Poor Jack.  “I used my wits to build the name.  Jesus Christ, what’s become of my name?”  He’s being beaten, pissed on, and called “Jack Rackham, Crew Killer.”  Poor Jack.

    Flint:  You almost got us killed!
    Silver:  Almost.  Almost!

    Silver:  You are truly amazing, you know that?  We’re both better off now than we were two minutes ago, yet you’re angry about it because it didn’t happen your way.  Might you consider for a fucking moment that your distrust of me is completely unwarranted?  I warned you about Billy.  Was I right?  I found you over Mr. Gates’s body, and did I do anything but defend you?  When you were sinking to the bottom of the sea, who do you imagine it was who dragged you onto that beach?  Brace yourself, but I’m the only person within a hundred miles of here who doesn’t want to see you dead.

    • Eleanor is such a good businesswoman, dealing with bloody cargo and unhappy quartermasters, confronting the brothel crew about leaked information.  Max super doesn’t care, and I think enjoys showing Eleanor how much power she now has.
    • Max is hella brave. She’s obviously genuinely afraid of Anne, but she trusts her instincts enough to know that Anne’s anger is rooted in something deeper than resentment.  The confidence it must take to kiss someone who has you at knifepoint on the assumption that they are secretly attracted to women is amazing.  It’s also super hot.
    • The FANTASTIC scene where Silver rescues Flint through being a coward!  And after they save each other back and forth, they barricade themselves with three pistols, Flint’s sword, and Silver’s…tiny knife.  Hahaha, this episode is seriously so funny!
    • And then the Walrus crew comes to their rescue!  Yay!  And they sail away in their fancy new Man O’ War.
    • Ugh, I hate that Ned Lowe is actually pretty charismatic.  AND TERRIFYING, YIKES, that speech about how he feels no remorse about the horrific things he does?  Yikes yikes yikes, I don’t like him.
    • Another flashback, and we see James meet Miranda for the first time!  They form the Thomas Appreciation Club while watching him give money to a poor mother and son.  Flint is still unsure whether Thomas’s amazingness is for real, but Miranda assures him it is.

    “Great men aren’t made by politics, Lieutenant McGraw.  They aren’t made great by prudence or propriety.  They are, every last one of them, made great by one thing and one thing only: the relentless pursuit of a better world.  The great men don’t give up that pursuit.  They don’t know how.  And that is what makes them invincible.”

    • Flint is seeming pretty invincible in this episode, surviving a crew’s rage and taking over an enemy ship.  Does this mean he’s a great man?
    • The last scene between Flint and Silver is one of my favorite things that they do:  honestly tell each other their motivations and concerns about the other.  Silver tells Flint that he would have betrayed him had their interests not aligned.  He is clearly in awe of Flint, but he doesn’t pretend that this makes him a blind follower.  And I think Flint appreciates this, both the being known (hell yeah, he’s going to take back his captaincy) and the being honest.

    Not done reliving the episode?  Listen to Daphne and Liz’s podcast at Fathoms Deep!

  • Black Sails Season 1 Episode 8 Review – VIII

    Black Sails Season 1 Episode 8 Review – VIII

    The hunt for the Urca is on.  Everything changes for Eleanor.  Bonny and Rackham’s sins come back to haunt them.

    (Summary provided by starz.com)


    REWATCH REACTION

    This episode is FANTASTIC, and my notes while rewatching it become increasingly caps lock-y, culminating in a brief mental breakdown because of my love for Flint.

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     BEST FLINT MOMENT

    Literally every scene with Flint in this episode is Top Notch, but I’ll highlight one in particular:

    After aligning the ship to fire on the Spanish Man O’ War, Dufresne accuses Flint of “tyrannical crimes” against his crew.  When no one will obey Flint’s orders to fire, he strides down the stairs to light a cannon himself.  Dufresne SHOOTS HIM, at which point he CRAWLS along the deck to light the cannon.  Even though the fuse is taken from him, it does not stop this from being the sexiest display of determination I have ever seen.

    TODAY’S RUNNER UP

    Silver!  I suppose it is fitting that in Gates’ last episode (RIP), we see Silver stepping up to be Flint’s right hand man.  Their partnership is the show’s central relationship, and I think this is really the first time we see how powerful they are when acting together.

    It’s just one thing after another:  When Silver walks in on Flint after he’s just murdered Gates, he immediately sides with Flint, no questions asked about what has just happened.  Then Flint hides and tells Silver what to say to the Spanish ship.  Silver later tries to talk Dufresne into being calm, and when that is unsuccessful (leading to the aforementioned Flint being shot and unable to light a cannon), it is SILVER who shoots at the Man O’ War and makes the fight inevitable.  Finally, when Flint allows himself to sink, it is Silver who pulls him out and makes sure his wound is bandaged (this is explicitly addressed in episode 1 of season 2, but it’s implied here).

    In the previous episode, we saw how desperately Flint needed an ally that shared his vision.  Although Silver shares this vision only so far as it pertains to him acquiring some gold, they are undeniably a good match.  Both smart men who can create new plans in an instant, they are formidable when working together.

    LOL MOMENT

    Jack’s finally got the brothel in order thanks to Max, and Mrs. Mapleton is unhappy to see her profits decreasing.  When she threatens to expose his past misdeeds, Jack pauses before saying, “Well, Mrs. Mapleton, that sounds like gross insubordination to me.  That, coupled with the graft you’ve been responsible for, leaves me with no choice but to terminate your employment here.”  And later, when he and Max are basking in their victory, he says, “Please don’t judge me, but I really enjoyed that.”

    WELL-FORMED THOUGHTS

    We’ve got to talk about Flint murdering Gates, yeah?  WOW, is that not any easier to watch, even knowing it’s coming.  This is mostly because the previous scene between Flint and Gates, in which they share a drink and laugh about old Craig who drank a bottle of piss, is so much weightier when you know what’s about to happen.  I love the ambiguity of the scene:  does Flint think things are okay between him and Gates?  Is he hoping a boy’s night drinking will MAKE things better?  Or do they both just truly realize that they might die the next day, so they may as well set politics aside and have a good time?

    But it’s not enough.  When Gates sees that the Urca isn’t where they thought it would be, he’s done.  Flint is mad, thinking that Gates means to see him hung as a pirate.  But he is FURIOUS when he realizes that Gates wants something worse for him:  to be sent with Miranda to Boston.  This is DEVASTATING to me, because in his attempt to do something “better” for Flint, it shows just how little Gates understood him.

    As Daphne and Liz always say in their podcast Fathoms Deep, this is the scene in  which people really get sold on Black Sails, because how can a show present us with a scene of a man murdering someone he called friend…and we’re left pitying the murderer??  God, Toby Stephens is amazing, and the writing is just gut-wrenching.  “Please, please don’t do this.”  “This is not what I wanted, I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I’m sorry.”  And after it’s done, he is so protective of Gates against Silver, and even strokes his cheek!

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    All this, and we’re left wondering, “What could POSSIBLY be fueling this man to do such heinous things that even HE obviously finds heinous?”  Hehehe, we’ll have to get there in season two!

    FRAGMENTED THOUGHTS

    • Just in time for the season finale, we’ve got a ton of boobies again. I guess this is meant to show us that Jack is running the business well again?
    • I want more scenes of Silver as Caretaker for a curmudgeonly Randall.
    • After Silver successfully tells Flint the final piece of the schedule, he says:
      Silver:  Now that I’ve fulfilled my end of our bargain, I’m just wondering where you and I stand.
      Flint:  Keep wondering.
      Silver leaves, and then FLINT GRINS.  I am so in love with this Flint who enjoys messing with his crew (see also: “Billy, who?” which I think I have successfully proven had to have been a joke).
    • Eleanor is still surrounded by men, but instead of them fighting against her, they’re all on her side.  It’s very cool to see her varying reactions to their praise:  With Hornigold, she couldn’t care less.  With Vane, she is mildly impressed by his observations (but not fully – I think his assertion that she doesn’t want fathers telling her what to do should be enlarged to include MEN telling her what to do, which includes you, Vane!).  But with Mr. Scott?  She’s genuinely touched.  And that’s because Mr. Scott knows her and validates her.  That scene between them is entirely lovely.
    • “There are no legacies in this life, are there?  No monuments.  No history.  Just the water.  It pays us, and it claims us.  Swallows us whole, as if we’d never been here at all.” This is a gorgeous observation by Gates, though it unfortunately only highlights how different his perspective is from Flint’s.  While Gates lives in the here and now and expects nothing different, Flint is determined to live bigger and bring about change for himself and everyone else.
    • Runner up for the LOL segment:  Jack and Anne saying, “Fuck you, Jack” in tandem.  Poor Anne has caught FEELINGS for Max and doesn’t even know what they are yet. I can’t wait to find out with her!!
    • Flint’s inspirational speech is so great, and when they see the empty bay, the disappointment is heart-wrenching.
    • During this rewatch, I’ve been able to be more objective about my feelings for Flint (this might not be obvious, but trust me).  Honestly, I can see why people are terrified of him.  Beloved, powerful people keep dying around him.  I mean, Dufresne and DeGroot were scared Gates would betray them, but then Flint CLEARLY murders him and carries on as though nothing has happened, and they’re left believing that no one is sacred to that man.  They don’t know Flint’s history or plans.  I get why they want him gone.
    • HOWEVER, Dufresne really has the most appalling timing.
    • I think his decision to read Gates’ letter is half sincerity, half annoyance that Flint took his information (don’t say tobacco from St. Augustine) and twists it to his own purposes.
    • Vane is a selfish bastard.  The loyalty he extols (poor Jack and Anne!) is very small – it doesn’t extend to anyone beyond his crew even while the rest of Nassau is learning to band together.
    • I do love the ambiguity of why he took the fort.  Is it to prove his power?  Is it to piss off his enemies?  Or is it to give Eleanor the defense she needs to run Nassau effectively?  Because this is Black Sails and our characters are wonderfully complex, I think it’s all three.
    • RANDALL SAVED SILVER AND IT WAS SO GOOD.
    • Dufresne is an idiot!! It is physically painful to watch him make decisions too slowly.
    • OH SHIT, that is the only reaction to watching the Man O’ War turn and open her gunports, and OH SHIT OH SHIT that is carnage like we have never yet seen.
    • Oh my GOD, the sadness of Flint watching his ship and his crew be destroyed, slowing fixing his hair, letting himself be blasted overboard and then sinking, sinking, sinking.
    • Max and Eleanor finally have a real conversation, and it is so sad.

    Max:  You have nothing to be sorry about.  I was standing between you and your dreams for this place.  You did what you had to do.
    Eleanor:  I thought you said this place was just sand.
    Max:  Sand has its virtues.  On sand, nothing is fixed.  Nothing is permanent.  Fates change so quickly.

    • And then we get Flint, alive and shirtless, wondering why this is so.  It’s because the Urca crashed in a storm the night before, and everyone is at least smart enough to realize that FLINT IS THE BEST and they need him if they’re going to get their gold.
    • He is looking SO GOOD standing there in his tight black pants, billowing shirt, and loose hair.  Toby Stephens has ruined me.
    • That’s the end of the first season!  Shaky at first, steadily better, and ending with SUCH a great twisty finale!  Can’t wait to keep going – season 2 is my favorite!
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    I MEAN.  I am HERE for this outfit,

    RHETORICAL QUESTIONS

    • What happened to Gates’ body?  😦  I hope they went back to the Walrus to find him and give him to the sea.

    Not done reliving the episode?  Listen to Daphne and Liz’s podcast at Fathoms Deep!

  • Black Sails Season 1 Episode 7 Review – VII

    Black Sails Season 1 Episode 7 Review – VII

    Flint tells Gates the truth.  Randall puts Silver in a bind.  Eleanor suffers a loss.  Max comes to Rackham’s aid.  Vane enters the fight of his life.

    (Summary provided by starz.com)


    BEST FLINT MOMENT

    This whole episode is Best Flint Moment!!  I’m going to discuss what we learn about Flint in more depth in the Well-Formed Thoughts section, but his conversation with Miranda deserves to be here.  He is at his most vulnerable with Miranda (consider this scene compared to his tightly-wound conversation with Gates), and it’s beautiful to watch him fall apart.  

    Flint:  What was your intent?  What was it?  To destroy everything we have tried to build here for the last ten years?  Or was it just to embarrass me?
    Miranda:  To show you a way out of all this.  To free you.
    F:  A way out?  Have you no memory of how we got in?  Of what they took from us?
    M:  What does it matter now?
    F:  What does it matter?  (Sidenote, HIS FACE HERE)
    M:  What does it matter what happened then if we have no life now?  Because there is no life here, there is no joy here, there is no love here.
    F:  WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT?  What do you think I’m out there fighting for but to make all those things possible here?
    M:  You’ll fight a war so we can make a life?
    F:  You don’t get one without the other, my sweet.
    M:  No.  You’re wrong.  I sent that letter to show you that you’re wrong.  There is a life in Boston.  There is joy there, and music, and peace.  The door is open.  I’ve opened it for you, and it requires no war, no blood, and no sacrifice.
    F:  It requires an intolerable sacrifice!
    M:  To accept a pardon?
    F:  To apologize!
    M:  Apologize?  Who will you be apologizing to?
    F:  TO ENGLAND.  They took everything from us, and then they call ME a monster?  The moment I sign that pardon, the moment I ask for one, I proclaim that they were right.  This ends when I grant them MY forgiveness, not the other way around.
    M:  This path you’re on, it doesn’t lead where you think it does.  If he were here, he’d agree with me.

    Oh my GOD, this scene is devastating.  It was beautiful the first time I saw it, intriguing with all my confusion, but now that I know what Flint is talking about, WOW.  Wow wow wow.

    Wow.

    TODAY’S RUNNER UP

    Silver!  From his reunion with Flint (coughing to Eleanor to remind her to be his defender) throughout his almost-accusal by Randall, he is scrambling to stay alive.  I continue to enjoy his unsuccessful attempts to charm Randall, and it is very telling that it is only when Silver is vulnerable, honest, and thinking of someone else’s benefit that Randall sides with Silver and takes back his accusation.  This is Silver’s first opportunity to grow past his compulsive selfishness!

    LOL MOMENT

    Definitely Silver’s wondering aloud at whether Randall is a half-wit or a genius, only to be answered with…a massive fart.  LOL, Randall.  I love you.

    WELL-FORMED THOUGHTS

    We get so much good Flint material here, both in revelations as to his motivations and in revealing his vulnerabilities.  In three scenes (with Gates, Miranda, and Eleanor), we see him searching for a partner who shares his vision.

    First, with Gates:

    Flint has kept many secrets from Gates, and now that Billy is a casualty of those secrets, Gates is done.  It’s telling that for as close of friends as they seem, Flint hasn’t told Gates much of his story.  In a last ditch attempt to win Gates to his vision, Flint tells him of his plan to sequester part of the Urca gold so that Nassau can be stable.

    Flint:  I’m quite serious.  Who loses?  Absent their worst instincts: their pride, their greed, their suspicion, in the light of pure reason, who says no to this?  They’ll be rich men in a safe place rather than dead thieves on a long rope.

    But it’s too late.  Flint opening up about a piece of his grander plan is just one more secret Gates doesn’t want to hear.

    BlackSails-107_1134

    Second, with Miranda:

    I quoted the whole scene above, and I love it all.  Contrasted with Gates, Miranda KNOWS all of Flint’s plan (though we still don’t), and apparently shared it at one time.  The fact that she has given it up and wants to move with him to Boston is therefore a much bigger betrayal.  While Miranda has emotionally moved on to the point that she can say, “What does it matter?”, Flint is still living in the trauma of what happened ten years ago.  This too feels like abandonment and betrayal to him.  Flint is overwhelmed by all this, so he goes to the tavern to get drunk.  It is there that he finds a new visionary partner.

    BlackSails-107_2001

    Lastly, with Eleanor:

    These two betrayals by his closest friends has led Flint to doubt himself, and it must be bad because he opens up about it with Eleanor.

    Flint:  Tell me we’re not crazy, you and I.
    Eleanor:  Crazy?
    Flint:  To put ourselves through all of this, when the outcome’s so uncertain.
    Eleanor:  The outcome is only uncertain for those who disbelieve.  I believe in this place, and I believe if there’s anyone who can do what’s necessary to make it something better, it’s you.

    This is exactly what Flint needs to hear.  He needs someone to believe in him and to stand beside him.  His reliance upon a partner is his greatest weakness and greatest strength, and I’m so excited to watch the series while tracking Flint’s highs and lows as compared to the state of his partnerships.

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    FRAGMENTED THOUGHTS

    • So far we have seen people question Flint’s loyalty (as it pertains to his crew), but he’s clearly VERY loyal to Miranda at least.  He consistently defends her against those who want her to answer for her letter.  She wasn’t wrong in a previous episode when she assured Lambrick that Flint would never hurt her.
    • My favorite sex scenes in this show are the ones with really bad sex!  Love the mundane relationship sex between Anne and Jack, who can’t keep it up because he’s busy worrying and thinking.
    • Dufresne was elected quartermaster by the crew, and it was so cute watching Gates and Flint giggle together about Dufresne “chewing a man’s throat out.”
    • Mr. Scott and Eleanor reuniting was bittersweet.  Eleanor is so self-focused on what seems like his betrayal that she doesn’t even show concern that he was sold as a slave.  When he points out his true relationship to her family, she is touched.  So much so that she manages to free all of the slaves from the Andromache and find them paid work.  Yay Eleanor!  It is tragic that now, when they best understand and support each other, they must part ways.  Eleanor is pissed, but I think Mr. Scott is right.  They can’t sustain this healthy relationship if they continue to work together.
    • Flint does NOT handle being accused by Gates very well.  It was totally uncalled for when he, in turn, accused Gates of being a bad father to Billy.  It was a low blow to hurt Gates, though I also think he was displacing the blame he feels himself.
    • Flint really is shocked that his crew would think he sees them as expendable.  This makes what will happen in the next episode extra heartbreaking.
    • Also re: Flint’s lack of self-awareness, he extols “the light of pure reason” with Gates, but his conversation with Miranda reveals that he operates almost entirely upon emotion.  I don’t think he realizes that about himself.
    • Flint kisses Eleanor on the forehead, just like he did to Miranda a couple episodes ago.  Hm!
    • Um, also, while Flint is being accused of keeping secrets “for the good of the crew,” Dufresne, DeGroot, and Other Guy are doing the exact same thing!  They know that if they brought Silver before the crew, he would be hung and the Urca location would be lost.  So instead they act alone!  Which is, I think, the right decision.  So why are they all so hard on Flint?  Because they don’t trust him.  😦  TRUST HIM, YOU FOOLS.
    • Jack is really bad at running a brothel, so Max steps in to show him how it’s done.  While this ought to feel empowering and awesome, I don’t love how she goes about it.  In an attempt to distance herself from her past and her shame, Max 1) slaps a coworker and 2) says, “In my experience, if you do not discipline a whore she will always take advantage.”  Which is just…very dehumanizing?  I’m all for Max rising in station, but I don’t love that it comes at the expense of others.
    • There’s a mutiny against Flint, not just to oust him as captain, but to kill him!!  NOOO.
    • Finally, Vane!  This episode gives us a fascinating glimpse into his past, and while I don’t fully understand it, it’s clear that he’s conquered his demons and literally risen from the grave a stronger man.  It was bizarre to see him stutter and avoid eye contact, and I love the vulnerability that returning to the place where he was a child slave brought out of him.
    • This is the first we see of Vane’s lack of self-preservation in the face of a cause he believes in.  Even when the slave master knows Vane was a slave, he gives him the men Vane needs to take Nassau.  This could be enough, but a “good” slave master is still a slave master to Vane, so he gives a rousing speech of freedom to the men and is “killed” as a result.  But not for long.
    BlackSails-107_3050
    He looks really good for a recently dead guy.

    Every episode is stronger than the one before it, but this is where I get REALLY emotionally involved in this show.  It’s full-blown obsession from here on out, and I can’t WAIT to rewatch it all again, though hopefully at a slower pace than my first time through!


    Not done reliving the episode?  Listen to Daphne and Liz’s podcast at Fathoms Deep!

  • Black Sails Season 1 Episode 6 Review – VI

    Black Sails Season 1 Episode 6 Review – VI

    The costs of chasing the Andromache continue to mount.  Eleanor needs Silver’s help.  Billy wants Gates to confront Flint.  Bonny takes a stand.

    (Summary provided by starz.com)


    REWATCH Q&A

    Q:  Why doesn’t Mr. Scott help the slaves on the Andromache?

    A:  He says it’s because Flint’s plan to pursue the Urca gold and establish a self-ruling Nassau will lead to Eleanor’s death, and I think he’s telling the truth.  But I also think he’s hurt by Mr. Guthrie’s betrayal, and feeling rather hopeless.

    “I know what he says.  He says in Nassau a slave can be free, get a job and a wage.  Maybe for him, he’s strong.  A few others.  The rest of you, don’t kid yourselves.  You are cargo in Nassau or otherwise.”

    BEST FLINT MOMENT

    Flint didn’t really have a fists-in-the-air moment this episode, but he did look HELLA FINE when he went to investigate the slaves’ secret flag message.

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    TODAY’S RUNNER UP

    Anne!!  FINALLY our girl gets her moment to shine.  From the first time we see her guarding Max’s tent against Asshole Pirate (I accidentally learned his name this episode, but I refuse to use it) until she jerks her hand away from Max and says, “I didn’t do it for you,” she gets some CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT!  She feels so strongly about protecting Max from further rape that she even teams up with Eleanor, a pairing that is quite formidable.

    Why did she do it?  We know from a previous episode that Anne has experienced sexual assault in the past (and Jack warns her that her actions might end with her in the tent being abused with Max), and she likely feels guilty at her role in putting Max there in the first place.  Is there something more?  Time will tell, and I’m thrilled to finally know her a little bit more.

    LOL MOMENT

    No real laugh-out-loud moment in this episode.  It was excellent, but pretty bleak.

    WELL-FORMED THOUGHTS

    From my actual notes:

    • YASS slave revolt!!!
    • YASS pirates helping!!!
    • YASS awesome slave woman!!! (later discovered her name is Eme)

    This episode gave us smart, ambitious, fierce African men and women!  I loved the conversations between Mr. Scott and Eme as she tried to convince him to help their efforts to escape.  I loved the reality of his hopelessness, but more than that I loved Eme’s insistence that even if they are not all free in Nassau, it is still a better option than remaining chained.

    The fake-out (“Mr. Scott NO – Mr. Scott YES”) was handled so well, and it pained me to realize that this was probably the first time he’d ever killed a man.  Later when Eme is given the narrative privilege of killing Captain Bryson and she exchanges a look with Mr. Scott?  WOW.  She is everything.

    I also really loved the unspoken cooperation between pirates and slaves, beginning with a white flag, then a dropped iron peg.  The scenes in which the pirates rhythmically chop the hull to pieces to cover the sound of the slaves escaping their chains actually made me cry.  And although the pirates could have left the slaves to fight the Andromache crew alone, they burst in to fight together!!  It’s SO GREAT, and I *ahem* am so excited for similar events in the future.

    BlackSails-106_1740

    FRAGMENTED THOUGHTS

    • This episode is DARK – thematically and visually.  It all takes place at night, and the scenes’ darkness feels pretty oppressive at times.  I’m ready for some sparkling blue water again, please!
    • I didn’t realize in the last episode that one of the pirates Eleanor chooses for the consortium is Tits Pirate, and I love it.  He is excellent in this episode, countering everyone’s pessimism with a bleary, “I don’t know.  Perhaps you need to have a little more faith in people.”  And he’s proven right!
    • We get a real sense of what kind of couple Jack and Anne are in this episode, and the kind they are is Awesome.
    • Anne plans to murder eight of their crewmen without Jack’s knowledge, but her plan includes him backing her up.  This is the first instance of the blind faith they have in each other, and it never fails to make me feel all the Feelings.
    • “When you and Miss Guthrie were plotting this little coup, when she asked you, ‘Well shit, Anne, what makes you think old Jack will go along with this plan of ours and not plead the truth to his men as he’s most certainly going to feel duty-bound to do?’  What did you say?”
      “I told her given the choice between them and me, you’d choose me.”
      “That’s very fucking touching.”
    • Jack/Anne, proving you can be touching and sweet without being sickeningly sentimental.
    • Miranda and Pastor Lambrick talk again, and we get more information about her life with her husband.  It’s also super interesting that she’s betrayed Flint but is completely sure that he will not harm her.  And then, you know, the sex.  I still don’t know how to read this.  Is she trying to shame him?  Free him?  Is she just lonely?  Her face as she holds him looks pretty happy, but I just can’t understand why she wouldn’t go for literally anyone other than him.
    • The melody that’s been paired with Max several times throughout this season sounds so much like the hymn “What Wondrous Love Is This” which includes the really haunting verse: “When I was sinking down, sinking down, sinking down / When I was sinking down, sinking down / Beneath God’s righteous frown, Christ laid aside his crown for my soul, for my soul.”  The imagery definitely fits Max’s story so far, but I’d love to know if Bear McCreary intentionally chose this melody to be her song!
    • Silver realizes that Eleanor helped Anne for two reasons:  to rescue Max, and to reassure the pirates revolting against her that she is not to be taken lightly.  I’m appreciating Eleanor so much more during this rewatch!
    • Flint shows that he definitely does know the names of his crew members, which means that scene in episode 1 where he said “who’s Billy” was indeed just him fucking with Billy.
    • Speaking of Billy.  RIP.  I would feel worse about it, but he doesn’t know how to leave well enough alone!  Gates was COMPLETELY right that this was neither the time nor place to be investigating a mysterious letter whilst in battle.
    • POOR GATES.  Billy was a son to him, and his face during the burial at sea definitely showed he has his doubts about Flint’s role in Billy’s death.  Flint’s face is giving nothing away, but we have to wait to know how this will all pan out!

    ACCUMULATING QUESTIONS

    • Who was that other man (not Jack) with Anne when she murdered Asshole Pirate and friends?

    Not done reliving the episode?  Listen to Daphne and Liz’s podcast at Fathoms Deep!