In the previous episode Detective Jane Porter’s (
Sarah Wayne Callies) insanely jealous boyfriend, Detective Michael Foster (
Johnny Messner), tried to kill Tarzan (
Travis Fimmel), but instead he ended up taking a high dive off a ten store building. Jane took Tarzan to his Aunt Kathleen (
Lucy Lawless) to keep him safe from his Uncle Richard (
Mitch Pileggi) who wants Tarzan for his controlling shares of Greystoke Industries.
Episode 3 “Wages of Sin”
This
episode opens with Tarzan trashing his room at his aunt’s place,
eventually breaking a window and escaping out into the night. Why is
acting like a complete ass to a person who is only trying to help him
you ask? Well maybe living in the jungle has given him claustrophobia,
but as Katherine mentions later, “
Do me a favor, if you do want to leave just…um…open the window.”
So we have Tarzan acting like a petulant child who doesn’t seem to like
the world he is now trapped in. Not very heroic but could be
interesting. This is not the adult Tarzan as written by Burroughs, but
more of a realistic take on a person with stunted maturity caused from
living alone for most of his life. The one problem with this is that it
makes it incredibly hard for us to understand Jane’s infatuation with
Tarzan. Sure he is a hunky guy with great abs, but is that enough to win
over a modern woman?
“I wonder if Tarzan would like to join my book club.”
Tarzan
stalks Jane to the funeral of Detective Foster, where he beats up a
bunch of Richard’s goons, and then he pops buy Jane’s apartment where he
finds her is less than thrilled to see him as she blames Tarzan for her
fiancé’s death, and she tells the jungle boy to beat it. Later at work
Jane and her partner, Detective Sam Sullivan (
Miguel A. Núñez Jr.),
are given the job of assisting the FBI in a kidnapping case concerning
the snatching of a small boy, but when the ransom drop goes south Jane
turns to Tarzan for help. Now how can Jane locate a wild man in New York
City, one who she had just told to get lost? Well she simply wanders
down the first alley she finds and calls his name. This works because he
is still bloody stalking her. I’m sorry this is not romantic, and
Tarzan’s attitude throughout this episode is borderline sociopathic.
“I need you to track a kidnapped little boy, and also STOP STALKING ME!”
When
Tarzan tracks the boy's scent all the across the city to where the boy
was held they only find the kid’s dead dad. As it turns out the father
was in on it, he had some major gambling debts, and all the family money
belongs to the wife. The police procedural element of this episode is
thin and generic, been used at least a half a dozen times on
Law & Order,
but the Tarzan tracking stuff is beyond stupid. That he could track
Jane across Manhattan I chocked up to them having some kind of psychic
bond, but now we see him sniff the child’s teddy bear and somehow be
able to track the scent through a concrete jungle. Now the Tarzan in the
book was an excellent tracker, but the idea of him being able to follow
a scent through New York City is ridiculous. Even if the smog and
millions of other wonderful smells of the city didn’t drown out this one
particular scent it would still rely on the kidnappers dragging the
child from abduction scene to their hideout by foot. Or is Tarzan also
capable of tracking a panel van through the city?
At most this would lead him to the nearest Toys R Us.
When Jane’s partner asks how she was able to find this location she responds with, “
I followed some leads”
which doesn’t really fly, mainly because she has no “leads” to back up
such a stupid statement, and also Sullivan isn’t an idiot. The only
person who could possibly have tracked that kid down would be Tarzan,
and when he interviewed the prep school thrill junkies from the last
episode they described being beaten up by a guy with long hair and bare
feet. So Sullivan knows that Tarzan is alive and that Jane has been
lying to him, and also this Tarzan bloke is somehow responsible for
Foster’s death. She asks Sullivan to trust her but he tells her, “
I will not lie for you.”
“I won’t lie for you, but also won’t immediately take this to the Captain.”
Jane
does eventually use actual investigative skills to track down where the
father’s partner has the kid, a junkyard owned by the mother’s family,
but it’s up to Tarzan to sniff out which abandon car the kid is stuck
in. This is apparently enough to seal Sullivan’s lips and he joins the
Tarzan cover-up conspiracy, because that’s how police officers think.
You help solve a crime it absolves you of one of your own. Makes perfect
sense to me. Tarzan eventually returns to his aunt’s place and while
wandering around the roof he discovers a skylight that leads to the room
he had as a child. Apparently this is the wing of the house that
Katherine closed off when her brother and his family went missing, and
she has touched nothing of it since. This is also supposed to explain an
overgrown greenhouse he finds, but I’m betting an uncared for penthouse
conservatory would just be full of dead plants after twenty years.
“Can I turn this place into my Tarzan Secret Lair?”
Only
three episodes in and the wheels of this show are seriously wobbling.
Jane is a wishy washy woman he doesn’t know what to do about these
feelings she has for this strange jungle man, while Tarzan himself is an
immature stalker who seems to have just fixated on the first woman he
ever saw. When Jane first encountered Tarzan in the original books by
Edgar Rice Burroughs she was a 19th Century woman from the upper crust
of society, so when she got all hung up on a “
Forest God” with
the body of a Michelangelo sculpture and the strength to defeat wild
beasts with his bare hands, you can understand her attraction. Yet this
modern retelling gives us a Jane who supposed to be a streetwise cop of
the 20th Century, a person who would probably give this Tarzan about as
much attention as she would a Chippendale Dancer.
Winner of this years Most Unlikely Couple Award is…Tarzan and Jane!
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