Dollhouse: "The Public Eye"/ "The Left Hand"

Welcome back! After a Dollhouse-free sweeps month in November, the show has returned with back-to-back episodes for three straight Fridays—a bounty for you and a torment for yours truly. (Though I like the continuity of digging into multiple episodes at once as opposed to having them parsed out for a week. If I were a patient person who didn’t have to write or have public opinions about television, I’d be tempted to watch all novelistic TV on DVD.) Before I get down to it, the single grade above reflects an average of the two, but for you ratings-hounds, I’ve included grades for the individual episodes below the write-ups. Moving on…
The Public Eye
Key line: “I think her bad guys are badder than my bad guys.”
So boom, right off the bat we’re thrown into the larger world of Dollhouse with “The Public Eye,” heading past the relatively cloistered environs of the L.A. branch and into the bigger, more insidious schemes of the Rossum Corporation and its many tentacles. And when we’re finally introduced to Rossum’s head honcho Matthew Harding (played by the reliable character actor Keith Carradine) and Adelle and Topher’s analogues at the D.C. division—Ray Wise as Howard Lipman and Summer Glau as Bennett Halverson, respectively—it’s frighteningly obvious where the real power lies in this operation. These bad guys are definitely badder than the bad guys we’ve used to seeing.
Having lurked in deep background for the first four episodes, Whedon regular Alexis Denisof steps into the fore as Senator Daniel Perrin, the crusading Kennedy-esque politician who has Rossum and the Dollhouse in his sights. With Madeleine—or the doll formerly known as Mellie/November—bravely emerging from retirement to blow the whistle on Dollhouse’s abuses, Perrin now has the ammunition to go after the shadowy operation once thought to be urban myth. And he seems like a true believer, too: Not one of the slick, crooked, opportunistic politicians we always see in TV, movies, and, okay, real life, but a straight-arrow willing to risk his neck to bring down a corporation he knows has tremendous power. (His wife Cindy even frets over the possibility of him getting assassinated during the press conference, though we learn not to take her at her word.)
In light of Senator Perrin’s righteous crusade, it was actually a little disappointing that he was not as he seemed. Then again, that was more than mitigated by the fact that he was not as he seemed in two completely fascinating ways: 1. He’s a doll, which was the sort of mind-blowing Dollhouse twist I should have been coming but didn’t (the Cindy factor threw me off). 2. The Perrin that’s been activated by Rossum really does believe what he’s saying and plays the role of crusader with utter sincerity conviction. It’s a rich, tragic irony that he’s really just a corporate tool, forced to lead a narrow public hearing on Dollhouse while distracting from (and further enabling) Rossum’s larger crimes against humanity. Then again, there are already strong suggestions that like a lot of dolls, his programming won’t entirely obscure his underlying will. He may be our D.C. Echo.
Of course, the Senator Perrin character unmistakably recalls the suggestible Raymond Shaw (Laurence Harvey) in The Manchurian Candidate, and like Raymond Shaw, Perrin cedes control not only to insidious corporate/political forces, but to the much stronger woman in his life. As Cindy, the gleaming Stepford-looking monster who turns out to be Perrin’s handler, Stacey Scowley can’t possibly be expected to muster the genteel wickedness of an Angela Lansbury, but she’s enjoyably brash and has a solid right hook. I hope the show explores her devotion to her job—after all, being Perrin’s sham wife for two years meant doing her wifely duties, which she painfully reminds him in the next episode wasn’t a picnic for her— but for now she’s a creature of pure malevolence.
“The Public Enemy” was a very solid episode, hampered just a little by having to do a lot of table-setting for more thrilling episodes to come. (See below.) Moving the show outside the L.A. Dollhouse and into the wider conspiracy means establishing new conflicts and new characters, all of whom are several times nastier than the somewhat ambiguous figures we’ve come to know in the regular cast. Cindy Perrin, Matthew Harding, Howard Lipman, and—oh sweet lord—Glau’s one-armed, sadistic techno-wizard Bennett Halverson now loom like a five-headed Big Bad, and viewers of the 13th episode of last season know where that’s ultimately going to lead.
Grade: B+