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La Brea Recap The Heist Season 2 Episode 5 La Brea Recap The Heist Season 2 Episode 5

La Brea

La Brea Review – The Heist (205)

LA BREA -- “The Heist” Episode 205 -- Pictured: (l-r) Eoin Macken as Gavin, Natalie Zea as Eve, Jon Seda as Dr. Sam, Josh Mckenzie as Lucas, Zyra Gorecki as Izzy -- (Photo by: Sarah Enticknap/NBC)

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Destination: the glass building that sticks out like a sore thumb in 10K B.C.

Purpose: to save Riley and Josh. 

That was the extent of the mission on La Brea Season 2 Episode 5, but it took several men and women, including Paraa’s village, to even set it in motion.

The hardest part was executing the heist on The Exiles, a dangerous group that enslaves prisoners in order to mine black rock that’s used to power the facility that allegedly houses the time machine. 

I love that Gavin acknowledged that the success of this whole mission hinged on whether or not Aldridge gave them good info. There’s a lot riding on the simple act of trusting a woman who hasn’t always proved to be entirely trustworthy… or forthcoming with the information that she has. But so far, she hasn’t steered them wrong either. She knew the plan since she was part of creating it along with Silas, Caroline Clarke (Gavin’s birth mother), and Gavin’s father, who remains unknown at this time. 

Infiltrating the Exiles and stealing their product proved much harder than initially presumed simply because Virgil, one of the prisoners who managed to escape, ran into Gavin’s group heading toward the caves and informed them that they were shipping prisoners out to a new location that he described as “hell on Earth.”

Since the mines were swarming with guards and the prisoners were in dire need of help, the team was required to split up into two groups: Sam, Gavin, Izzy, and Eve were tasked with staking out the Exiles and figuring out a plan to steal the shipment, while Levi, Scott, and Luke needed to go free the prisoners before it was too late. I love that even with limited manpower and resources, this group of people has a “leave no man” behind policy.

They are all sacrificing to save each other, which is honestly a beautiful thing. They make group work, and group projects, look good. 

And they were all a source of strength for each other in the dark times. 

Eve and Gavin help Izzy when they fell through a booby trap that was riddled with large and hairy spiders. As someone who also hates spiders, personally, I thought the scene was unnecessary. Izzy’s fears were completely valid, especially since these weren’t your average household spiders—these guys meant harm!

Luke supported Scott by giving him the confidence he needed to help free the prisoners even though their survival outcome looked rather bleak. Their friendship has really blossomed into something so genuinely sweet and heartwarming. Luke is definitely not the character he started as—the prehistoric era softened him up, in all the right ways, while toughening him up at the same time. 

Scott opened up about his experience as a young boy, unable to save his drowning brother. He wasn’t there for the person that needed him most, which was the reason he always took the easy route and relied heavily on his vape pen as a crutch for his debilitating anxiety. But Luke helped him see that he could redeem himself by being there for the people that needed him most, and he didn’t need the vape pen at all. Scott is a badass hero, but honestly, thank god that Levi got to Paraa and the villagers in time so that they could interfere and help Luke and Scott out of a bind.

Teamwork makes the dream work, baby.

Paraa and Ty’s new relationship bliss didn’t last long. He went off to live in her village, accepting his fate that he was never going to get out of this time period, but they were immediately summoned and dragged back into the mess.

Turns out, when Paraa said her husband was dead, she meant “dead to her.” Her husband, Taamet, the leader of the Exiles, is very much alive. Long story short, he led a rebellion against her village and was forced to leave. He doesn’t let a grudge go, so she’s confident he’s going to come for all of them as a form of retaliation for stealing the shipment of black rock and freeing all of the prisoners. So, while they got the rock and found the glass building, they, unfortunately, aren’t in the clear. Hopefully, when that day comes, Paraa can talk some sense into him. None of these people actually belong in this timeline so the least he could do is look the other way. 

It also brings up a bit of a logistical question because if there is no one left to mine the rock, how do they expect to power up the time machine to get everyone that doesn’t belong in this timeline back home? I guess we’ll cross that bridge when we get there. 

The heist allowed for some family bonding between Gavin, Eve and Izzy, and there was a lot of finger-pointing. 

Basically, Izzy blames her mom for the family falling apart, which isn’t entirely fair as Gavin’s alcoholism and visions also played a role. It’s easy to say that they don’t anymore since they were warranted, but it’s harder to actually put the pieces back together, especially since Eve has developed feelings for Levi that she can’t just wish away because she wants her family to be a unit again. I know that’s hard for Izzy to understand since she’s never been in love, but Eve owes it to everyone, including herself, to follow her heart. It’s easy to just say someone messed it up versus acknowledging that there were a series of issues that led to the ultimate demise. 

Gavin is a bit more understanding, but he’s still putting pressure on Eve by telling her he’s not going to give up trying to make it up to her and putting the family back together. He’s trying to make up for what he did, which is nice, but it’s also stressing Eve out more because it’s making the decision that much harder. There was a brief moment between them where sparks fly, but honestly, there’s no denying the love that she and Levi have. Did you see how he flew in there to save her when the Exiles were attacking? And yes, Gavin would’ve done it too, but Levi once again beat him to the punch. Levi just keeps swooping in and being Eve’s knight in shining armor, which is making it much harder for Gavin to stand out. 

I honestly wouldn’t want to be faced with this choice because both men are great in their own way. Eve knows that eventually, she will have to make a choice and no longer allow this pain to fester and chew away at them, but she can also argue that there are more pressing issues on the horizon.

Though, if I’m being truthful, Gavin seems like the logical choice using your head while Levi is the one you make when you follow your heart. 

Who are you rooting for?

The whole mission was to save Josh and Riley, but in 1988, they were going above and beyond to preserve the timeline by deterring Gavin’s biological mom from interfering and messing everything up by adopting him. Everything needs to stay as it was so that nothing changes and there are no ripple effects. It was even a risk for Caroline to have a face-to-face meeting with Gavin before encouraging him to go with her co-workers; what if that tiny seemingly insignificant changed everything?

Thankfully, it doesn’t seem like it did, and Caroline got to have one final moment with her son. It’s likely also comforting to know that he turns out okay. After all, the grandson standing next to her is proof of that. 

We also get a little more of Caroline’s backstory, which is crucial to understanding the sinkholes and Gavin. As expected, Gavin/Isaiah was born in the future. The family went to 10K B.C. to experiment trying to save their world, but they ended up doing more harm than good, so she left him behind in the past while she traveled to 1988 to fix those mistakes since that’s when the first theoretical experiments about time travel started and she needed the data. 

The plan is to go to 10K B.C. and stop them from happening once and for all, which means the time machine has to exist. 

But will she be able to do it before the next tidal wave? And how can Gavin help?

I keep wondering why Silas is making things so difficult for Gavin if he knows the plan. Why won’t he just help his boy get his family back? Why didn’t he take him to the glass building and explain everything? Maybe he doesn’t want him to actually get to the time machine because he needs him to stay in 10K B.C. until Caroline arrives. 

Who else is working in Lazarus? Why haven’t we met Gavin’s father yet? Can Caroline be trusted?

What do you think Eve should do? And how will they handle Tameet? Are you still as invested in the show as you were before?

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    Lizzy Buczak is the founder of CraveYouTV. What started off as a silly blog in her sophomore year at Columbia College Chicago turned her passion for watching TV into an opportunity! She has been in charge of CraveYou since 2011, writing reviews and news content for a wide variety of shows. Lizzy is a Music Business and Journalism major who has written for RADIO.COM, TV Fanatic, Time Out Chicago, Innerview, Pop’stache and Family Time.

    La Brea

    La Brea Season Finale Review – The Journey

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    La Brea Season 2 Finale Review Episode 13 and 14 The Journey

    Gavin, Eve, and co. found a portal—and then lost it—all within the span of a two-hour season finale of La Brea

    The series had an intriguing premise at the beginning, but it’s becoming so far-fetched now that it’s starting to become a little too difficult to keep up with time periods, character motivations, and shady organizations. 

    La Brea Season 2 Episode 13 picked up shortly after the Lazarus building explosion, and while most everyone was under the impression that it ruined any shot of finally getting back home, it turns out, Lazarus wasn’t all that important anyway. Everyone knows that if you’re going to dabble in time travel in the prehistoric ages, you need a few backups or so.

    Moore’s diary, which was a key find thanks to shady Aaron, was the key to finding a second portal—one that he built in a secret location to protect it from those with more nefarious intentions… like Kira and James. Both of them somehow survived the explosion and were just waiting for the perfect moment to strike. 

    However, Gavin and the rest of the key members from the clearing were able to use the coordinates that Veronica figured out to get to the portal first. Naturally, their journey involved plenty of hiccups along the way, which was to be expected. 

    Upon reaching the “X marks the spot,” they found several dead bodies that were mangled by some kind of animal—we later learn that it was likely a giant lizard. They find a girl named Petra lurking around the area, but she’s not much help since she doesn’t speak English. That is until Scott realizes that she’s just pretending not to understand the language, but when he asks her to give him some insight into who his mother was, she promises to tell him everything she knows if he’ll help her find her. 

    She also shows him a picture of military barracks in 10,000 B.C., which is strange. The locket belonging to her mother features a symbol that Scott recognizes as he was on his way to interview with the company the day that the sinkhole changed his life. He laments that it cannot be a coincidence—and he’s right—and we later see that Levi has the same symbol tattooed on his arm, which leads me to believe that he has something to do with this new situation unfolding. I don’t think that Petra is his daughter, but I do believe her “mother” is Levi’s wife, and she’s out there somewhere. I think he also knows that’s the case, which is why he wasn’t all that torn up about blowing up Lazarus aside from the fact that it threatened Ty’s cancer treatment. 

    La Brea Season 2 Finale Review Episode 13 and 14 The Journey

    LA BREA — “The Journey Part 2” Episode 214 — Pictured: (l-r) Eoin Macken as Gavin Harris, Jon Seda as Dr. Sam — (Photo by: Sarah Enticknap/NBC)

    The strangest part about this show is how many shady organizations might have a hand in what’s going on. There was Aaron, James and Kira, who may not even be on the same page anymore, and now there’s whatever is happening with Levi and these new people they’ve uncovered—it’s hard to keep up, and it takes away the sort of innocence of the series. 

    James is the true definition of a villain. He pretended to want to be a better person when it mattered, but after Lazarus was destroyed, his true colors came to light. He didn’t care that Gavin was dying, and when he was better, he didn’t hesitate to knock him over the head to get what he wanted. Family meant nothing to him, which is frustrating because all this time we were told that family was the only thing that mattered to James. 

    Gavin fought back, pulling the trigger as he knew he had no other choice, and in his last moments, James revealed Gavin has a sister, who was not going to be happy with his decision. Honestly, why is everyone so cryptic on this series? Would it have killed anyone to mention this little tidbit ahead of time? I doubt the sister is Kira, so I’m guessing that it’s Levi’s wife/Petra’s “mother” who has been running some kind of military operation down here. 

    James’ ego has caused a world of problems, but when he ambushed Gavin and tried to use the portal for selfish reasons—completely disregarding everyone else around him—he actually destroyed it in the process. The malfunctioning system opened up several auras from different time periods, which is going to be so hard to keep track of, but it also sucked Eve into some unknown era. Where did she go? And how will everyone find their way back to each other now that the whole thing has been blown? And why is everyone so careless around these portals that should be so rare?

    James destroyed everyone’s shot at getting back home once again, and now they have to share the land with new creatures including a T-Rex. Was that scene totally ridiculous? Yes. Have I been waiting for this moment? Absolutely. La Brea meets Jurassic Park sounds thrilling.

    There was also a side mission to rescue Gavin after he was impaled fighting off a lizard while protecting Eve. He knew that his vision of her death was about to come true, so he risked his own life to save hers, however, Eve found a loophole, using the newfound portal to go back in time to leave him a warning so that he would survive the ordeal. It’s a bit of a cheat, yes, but can we blame her? She couldn’t just let her husband die. On the other hand, if they all just chose to go initially, they may have thwarted so many other problems.

    Elsewhere:

    • Riley and Josh finally made up—it’s about time! There’s too much to lose to waste time fighting and holding grudges.
    • Riley found out that her parents were on the verge of divorcing before the sinkhole. It’s a random storyline that doesn’t really track since Sam has been so eager to go home to his wife but whatever. 
    • Veronica is pregnant with Lucas’ baby. He was adamant about staying in this era because he’s clearly thriving here, but his fears of going down the same dark path back home are just that—fears. He’s not the same person anymore. 10,000 B.C. changed him for the better. 
    • Sam also got Katherine’s number, and I have to question her addition. Is she Petra’s mother? I know there are probably a lot of people trapped down there but why did she join the expedition all of a sudden?
    • I can’t even comprehend how they got all those materials down there to build not one but two portals. 
    • Ty finally got his cancer-curing meds and that’s honestly the only thing that matters.

    What did you think of the season 2 finale of La Brea?

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    La Brea

    La Brea Review – The Wedding and The Swarm (211 & 212)

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    La Brea Season 2 Episode 11 and 12 Recap The Swarm and The Wedding

    La Brea Season 2 Episodes 11 and 12 was a blood bath, with two significant characters meeting their demise and a question mark lingering for many of the main characters inside the Lazarus building when it exploded to smithereens. 

    Since La Brea is likely ending with a shortened third season, the creative forces behind the show might feel a little more comfortable killing off some of the bigger characters, especially as death on a time-travel show is never really final. 

    By the end of the episode, the two casualties, that we know of, so far, include Gavin’s mother, Caroline, and Veronica’s sister, Ella/Lilly. And both of the deaths are genuinely surprising as it feels like neither of the characters lived up to their fullest potential. Caroline had so much promise, and so much went unsaid as the focus was on her tireless work to stop her husband’s master plan and right her wrongs when it came to her son. It was a heartbreaking loss for Gavin as he just met his mother only to lose her once again without getting any closure or many of his lingering questions answered. They never had time to get to know each other because Project Lazarus was top of mind. For a show about time, it really hones in on what a precious resource it is. 

    As for Lilly/Ella, well, she was one of the original people in 10K B.C. alongside Gavin. She knew him when they were children, she traveled to 1988 with him, and then she came back to the prehistoric era to save Veronica, and for what? She should’ve played a much larger role in the grand scheme of things, but unfortunately, she was reduced to a minor character whose only useful purpose was to prop up Veronica. And don’t get me wrong, I love Veronica’s character growth, but it truly shouldn’t have come at the expense of her sister. Ella/Lilly just feels so underutilized, it’s aggravating.

    La Brea Season 2 Episode 11 and 12 Recap The Swarm and The Wedding

    LA BREA — “The Swarm” Episode 212 — Pictured: (l-r) Rohan Mirchandaney as Scott, Veronica St. Clair as Riley, Lily Santiago as Veronica — (Photo by: Sarah Enticknap/NBC)

    The thing I did like about her death is that it was caused by the elements, which we don’t see often. 10,000 B.C. is a dangerous and rocky time period, so it’s unbelievable that so many people who were just dropped down there not only survived but thrived. The fact that there was only one epi-pen was just cruel—and that’s all I’ll say on the matter. 

    Veronica has been through so much trauma, much of which she’s still working through, and now she has to add losing her sister to the list. At least she has Lucas, who really came through with an adorable date at nature’s hot springs along with wine and pop tarts. I have no clue how anyone has managed to hold onto pop-tarts that long when food was scarce, but I’m not going to raise unnecessary questions.

    Veronica and Lucas also found Silas, bleeding out after getting shot over the notes Caroline found in Moore’s cave, which seems to be a blueprint for how to get home. I don’t know if they mean anything now that the Lazarus building is no more, but we’ll have to wait and see.

    We didn’t have to wait long to find out who shot Silas because it was the same person who killed his daughter, Kira, the woman that seemingly undermined James and took over Project Lazarus to do “right” by it. She claims to see the big picture of saving the world whereas she thinks James is too caught up with fixing his mistakes and traveling back in time to get a redo with Gavin. 

    The problem is that can’t trust either of these people or what they claim. For all we know, James and Kira could be in cahoots with this plan. James said he needed Gavin’s handprint to unlock the system, so maybe there was some kind of failsafe implemented to prevent James from launching Project Blue Moon. And that means Gavin just walked right into his trap. 

    Things get even fuzzier because Levi was on a mission to destroy the Lazarus building at all costs—and he was willing to fight anyone who tried to stop him. Poor Sam was knocked unconscious when he tried to talk some sense into Levi. Gavin also couldn’t get through to his best friend because the trust between them was broken when Gavin learned that Levi attempted to enlist Eve to go behind his back and kill his father. 

    I get where Levi is coming from since he believes James is the source of all of his pain. We learned that not only did Levi lose his wife, Marisa, because of the sinkholes, but his daughter didn’t survive either. Levi wants revenge, which is understandable but upsetting. He was always the level-headed one, and to be quite frank, I was hoping he’d come from 1998 with new insight about Project Lazarus and James. I didn’t want Levi to be working from only a place of deep hurt, I wanted him to have a valid reason for attempting to blow everything up, with concrete evidence that James directly caused the deaths of his loved ones. 

    La Brea Season 2 Episode 11 and 12 Recap The Swarm and The Wedding

    LA BREA — “The Wedding” Episode 211 — Pictured: (l-r) Chiké Okonkwo as Ty, Tonantzin Carmelo as Paara — (Photo by: Sarah Enticknap/NBC)

    The only person that got through to Levi was Izzy, who felt as though she owed it to be there for him during his time of great pain. He was her light and support during the darkness following her accident, and thus, she fought like hell to bring him back from the brink. It was sweet considering that she previously felt as though Levi ruined her family. It almost feels like 10 years also passed for Izzy because she’s so much more observant and proactive despite being told to stay in her lane. I was kind of surprised by how passive Eve was about the whole situation. She’s clearly sticking by her decision to give things another try with Gavin, but considering how much Levi meant to her just a few days ago, she should’ve been as adamant about helping him as her daughter. 

    Unfortunately, once Levi set everything into motion, it was too late to undo it, and when he tried, all he did was speed up the timer on the explosives.

    Fans didn’t get to see much of the action inside of the building once the clock started racing, instead only seeing the whole thing go up in flames, which begs the question—did anyone get out alive and survive? 

    Levi, Izzy, Gavin, and Ty all made a break for it, but Eve and James were in another room entirely. I don’t think Gavin would leave his wife behind after going to such great lengths to prevent his vision from coming to fruition, but James did knock her out right before so it’s unclear what state she was in. That poor woman has suffered so many concussions at this point.

    In blowing up the building, Levi destroyed Ty’s chances at curing his cancer, which is honestly, inexcusable because Ty is an angel, right alongside any shot of getting back home. Prioritizing the greater good is necessary, but these poor people whose hopes of seeing a timeline with electricity were just dashed. Levi figured he had nothing left to live for, but what about everyone else? I doubt all hope is lost—where there’s a will, there’s a way, so maybe there’s still a chance, but without a proper portal, it’s going to be a lot more difficult. 

    That being said, at least James can’t go back to a past timeline and effectively erase Eve’s family from existence, so that’s a win.

    You would think, as previously mentioned, that the elements of 10K B.C., and the dangers lurking within and beneath, would be the most threatening, but it turns out, a group of desperate people is more volatile than anything, no matter what time period. 

    Other Prehistoric Thoughts

    • Does anyone else think Kira is Levi’s daughter in the future or something? I can’t shake the feeling that there’s a deeper connection here, and I’m not exactly convinced that his family died. He said a sinkhole caught them by surprise and his family didn’t survive, but did he see the bodies? For all we know, both his wife and daughter are roaming the nearby villages as we speak. Maybe they’re even at one of the villages that Paraa was rounding up to help search for Ty. 
    • Ty and Paraa’s wedding was beautiful, and you have to give it to them for finding a path forward amidst a pretty bleak situation. Who else can say they’ve experienced a wedding in 10,000 B.C.? Unfortunately, it ended on a rather devastating note—neither of them deserved it. 
    • Everyone changed out of their usual outfits for a brief moment! Yay wardrobe truck. I’m still thrown by how put-together and clean they still look without plumbing, electricity, and more, but good for them. 
    • We got more clarity about Aaron’s connection to 10K, and according to Silas, he was a computer engineer at Lazarus who stole the journal and traveled to the present day, which is where he kidnapped Veronica and Lilly. Lilly was already connected to this timeline, so I’m guessing Veronica will also play a larger role. I wonder where the coordinates she deciphered will lead to. Perhaps another portal?
    • Gavin chose to trust James, despite everyone’s reservations, but in the end, James proved to be an unchanged man with selfish intentions. And the absolute disrespect that he had for Eve was sickening.
    • Why do I suddenly want to taste alcohol made from fermented corn?
    • Sam’s serious convo with Josh was cute. I know Josh felt betrayed that Riley kept the Moore finding a secret, but I do think he overreacted because of how secrets ruined his family. He didn’t even give Riley a chance to explain her side, nor did he consider the impossible position she was put in. Life is too short to fight over these kinds of things!
    • Those yellowjacket wasps were absolutely terrifying. 
    • Scott taking charge once again was one of the best moments! He came out, guns a-blazin’, to get rid of the wasps! Ten points for creativity. What would they do without him and his knowledge?
    La Brea Season 2 Episode 11 and 12 Recap The Swarm and The Wedding

    LA BREA — “The Swarm” Episode 212 — Pictured: Rohan Mirchandaney as Scott — (Photo by: Sarah Enticknap/NBC)

    What did you think of the episode? How will it all pan out?

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    La Brea

    La Brea Review – [SPOILER] Returns (210)

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    La Brea Recap Season 2 Episode 10 The Return

    La Brea Season 2 Episode 10 brings back a major player into the fold—with a twist, of course. 

    The episode, aptly titled “The Return,” kicks off with an unidentified person making his way through a portal, and while the show tried to keep the identity under wraps as best as possible, the return isn’t that much of a surprise if you’ve been paying attention—the boots were a dead giveaway. 

    Levi, played by Nicholas Gonzalez, is a fan-favorite character, so honestly, it was almost a given that he’d find his way back to 10K B.C. at some point despite choosing to stay behind and make a life for himself in 1988. And that’s fine because everything else surrounding his return is an absolute game-changer. 

    When Gavin crosses paths with Levi, he’s shocked to see that his former best friend doesn’t exactly look the same as when they left him in 1988—his hair is grayer and he’s aged a bit. And that’s when Levi drops the bombshell that while it has been a few days for Eve, Gavin, and the rest of the people trapped in 10K B.C., it’s been over a decade for Levi who came from 1998. 

    I had to take a moment to process that. 

    Levi remains rather cryptic about what brought him back to this time period, simply explaining that during his time away, he joined the DOD and hasn’t stopped trying to find a way to bring everyone home. He knows more than he’s letting on, but when Gavin presses, he simply says that he’s trying to finish what he and his wife started in an attempt to honor her memory, which includes bringing his friends, and the people he considers family, back home. 

    Yeah, I said wife! It’s just bombshell after bombshell. And these new developments are total game-changers that I did not see coming. There’s not much I can predict when it comes to La Brea, but this may have been the twistiest twist of all. Since ten years have passed since he last saw them, Levi assures Gavin that he didn’t come back for Eve—that relationship, for him at least, is way in the past. But while Levi had time to come to terms with their split, grieve the loss, and move on and start anew, Eve hasn’t had that luxury; it’s all still fresh for her. She may have chosen her family, but feelings don’t just fizzle out like that, so this is going to put their now-platonic relationship in a really interesting place. It’s almost as though one person moved on while the other is holding on. Will feelings bubble up? Will she feel betrayed that he moved on? Will they work better as friends fighting toward a common goal?

    Things only get more complicated when Levi visits Eve, who is still battling a concussion from her fall in the cave, and informs her that he lied to Gavin about the real reason he came back—Levi’s mission is to kill James! And he needs Eve’s help. 

    This puts Eve in yet another very tricky spot because Levi is a man that’s asking her to choose him over his husband.. again. But he’s not doing so selfishly—he’s doing it because he has to know that it’s the key to solving this mess and saving thousands of people. Levi’s decade spent working with the DOD and gathering intel and information means that he’s probably the most informed person in 10K B.C. And from the looks of it, he may even be an expert on James as he seems pretty sure that eliminating him is the key to all of their problems. 

    Eve is also a good person who wants to do the right thing, so her gut will likely tell her to trust Levi, but lying and keeping secrets won’t bode well for her relationship–whatever it may be now–with Gavin. Gavin isn’t overly trusting of James, but James claims to have what he wants—the key to Eve’s survival. Gavin will do anything to keep his wife alive, so if trusting James is that thing, he won’t let anyone stand in his way. As for Eve, killing James potentially means signing her death sentence. 

    Therefore, Levi’s question is a loaded ask—and one that Eve has to consider very carefully. 

    I do hope that by putting a target on James’ back, we finally get to know more about the man that we’re dealing with. Who is he? I feel like he has to be someone we already know and met. Maybe it’s someone from the Clearing? Or possibly, someone that Levi rubbed elbows with back in 1998? I know James is technically from the future, but Levi seemed to give off the vibe that he knew James on a closer, more personal level. How do you think James fits in? He has to be more than just Gavin’s dad. 

    While I know Eve and Gavin’s kids, especially Izzy, don’t really feel the love for Levi these days, I have a feeling that Izzy is going to be the one that lends a hand as she doesn’t seem too keen on trusting James either. It’s strange considering she’s the one who let it slip about Gavin’s vision in front of her grandfather in the first place, but she’s also giving off the vibe that she’d do anything to distance the family away from this man, so I think she might be Levi’s unsuspecting ally. 

    Hopefully, Levi will shed a lot more insight into the situation at hand now that he’s back because again, he has to have a considerable amount of insight into what’s going on having a decade of research under his belt. 

    I love that this return allows Levi to stand on his own as a character rather than just the man who was Eve’s love interest. He’s an integral part of figuring out this vast mystery now.  

    The hatred for James seems to run deep, even within his own glass tower. Kira, James’ right-hand woman, left Ty a cryptic note on his legal pad, urging him not to trust James and to find out about Project Blue Moon. At first, I was skeptical and thought maybe it was a test as Kira always seemed so dedicated and loyal to James, however, after her and Ty’s chat outside of the building, it seems that her concerns are genuine, especially after they pieced together that Blue Moon was Gavin/Isaiah’s childhood book. 

    James has seemingly hinted at wanting another chance at being a father to Isaiah, so it’s possible that he convinced Gavin not to destroy the portal because he hopes that he’ll be able to go back in time to when he was a little boy and do right by him. And obviously, that’s problematic for everyone, including Gavin himself. If James gets away with it, it would not only erase Gavin’s family but everyone’s existence and eventually, Ty’s path toward becoming cancer free. The fact that Kira underscored this to Ty, however, makes me skeptical once again.

    The problem with time travel is that if it falls into the wrong hands, it can do a lot of damage. 

    If/once Gavin gets wind of this, I would assume he’d want nothing more than to help Levi stop his father. At least, that’s my hope. 

    It does seem like everyone has their own agenda in 10K B.C., including Caroline, who has disappeared with the pages she found with Riley in the cave. It’s unclear if Caroline knows all about James’ plans, if she wants to help him realize them, or if she’s hellbent on stopping him regardless of what Gavin says. But it turns out that they don’t even need the pages Caroline found because the confrontation with the Exiles—thanks a lot, Virgil (I know, I know, he was just trying to save his wife)—unearthed Aaron’s journal, which completed the equation that James was seeking all along. 

    Now, I have a lot of questions about this, and I never thought that a seemingly inconsequential character in the first episode was going to be so deeply connected to the mystery. Obviously, like Veronica and Ella, I want to know how Aaron got his hands on them or how he knew what he was trying to solve. It’s clear that he’s been in this timeline before or is somehow connected to it considering the pink flowers (the same ones from Gavin’s vision). Is he from the future? Did he have visions like Gavin? Ella and Veronica both recall Aaron specifically going to La Brea that day and almost wanting them to be there when the sinkhole opens up, which would mean their involvement isn’t random. Was he in cahoots with someone—possibly Kira?—to fall into the sinkhole so that they would have the equation/the key to getting home? How else would she know about the journal?

    Maybe this is all just a huge science experiment? At this point, anything really is possible.

    There are plenty of questions that we still need to address, but the plotline also allowed us to see Lucas step up to the plate as a leader (he’s a natural) and do what was best for his people, while Veronica got closure on her toxic relationship with Aaron, which allowed her to finally take the next step in her romance with Lucas—moving in into his car. I love that despite the situation and circumstances, healthy relationships are still able to flourish. From the darkness, something beautiful is born! 

    Having everyone dealing with hardships at The Clearing has made for some incredible character growth, particularly when it comes to the aforementioned Lucas and Veronica, along with Scott. When we first him, he couldn’t get anything done without his weed pen, but now, he’s throwing insults at the Exiles as they hold a spear pointed at his heart. 

    And not only that, but Scott actually killed Tamet in self-defense of his best friend Lucas. I know it’s going to take a toll on him, but the point is, Scott did that! He had it in him to defend himself and his loved ones when they were under attack, and that’s just beautiful.

    It’s also revealed that Kira sent the Exiles, not James, which once again puts her whole character into question. Is she on the right side of history? Is she a sleeper agent planted here by the DOD? Can we trust her? Or does she want Aaron’s book because she has nefarious intentions of her own? As I mentioned before, when time travel is involved, no one can be trusted. 

    • I’m glad Virgil wasn’t a traitor for the sake of it. His wife’s life was at stake, so he did what he had to do. I can respect that, even if it did put everyone in the Clearing in danger. If he was just upfront with Lucas, it would’ve fared so much better than allowing the Exiles to ambush them.
    • Izzy’s morse code mirror idea is genuinely so smart. And Josh’s realization that the Girls Scouts are badass was so cute. 
    • Riley couldn’t keep Caroline’s secret from her dad, and it was not going to end well.
    • Gavin leads with his heart, so when he realized his family was in danger, he was willing to risk it all to go and help them. It’s a good thing Levi is back and is a little more practical. He knew Izzy had it handled, and their best chance of success was getting the Exiles while they were trying to grab the journal. 

    What did you think about the episode? Do you feel the action starting to ramp up as we barrel toward the end of the season? 

    And how do you think this will all pan out? Do you have any promising theories? Share them in the comments! 

    What Happened to Levi on ‘La Brea’?

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