Broken Hearts and Coronets: Chuck Gets a New Handler on "Chuck"
Have I mentioned lately how much I love Tricia Helfer?
The Battlestar beauty turned up on last night's episode of Chuck ("Chuck Versus the Broken Heart"), written by Allison Adler, where she played the deadly Agent Alex Forrest, a ruthless NSA agent assigned to conduct a 49B appraisal of whether Chuck and Sarah's feelings for one another had impacted their ability to successfully perform their jobs.
Whereas Chuck and Sarah often take a more, uh, thoughtful approach to their work, Alex is all blazing guns, tranquilizer darts (hell, she even takes out an elderly nurse at the hospital), and stripper moves. She would argue she gets the job done and is proactive rather than reactive (and she makes a quick admirer in Casey); she's stealthy, effective, and, well, rather heartless.
Which makes things far worse when General Beckman removes Sarah Walker from her assignment as Chuck's handler and replaces her rather quickly with Alex herself. She won't be holding hands with Chuck (literally or figuratively) and they certainly won't be talking about feelings or anything remotely not related to national security.
Helfer was so fantastic as Alex Forrest in this week's installment that I wished she would have stuck around on Chuck for longer than one episode. In this single episode, she managed to test our heroes' allegiances and relationships with one another in a compelling and meaningful way; it was great to see Chuck saddled with a handler who wasn't going to baby him or care about whether he was okay and I loved the simpatico interplay between Alex and Casey. Two peas in a pod, those two, as they clean their guns, take a no-nonsense approach, and remain hilariously unflappable.
I'm glad, however, that Alex and Sarah didn't have a smackdown over Chuck but the tension between them remained just under boiling throughout the episode. And for her part, Sarah didn't take her dismissal lying down. Instead, she went out of her way to offer Chuck a proper goodbye, breaking into his apartment to leave him a note, and using government resources to track down Chuck's missing father. If that's not the definition of friendship--or of love--I don't know what is. She's proven time and time again that she does care for Chuck in her own way and that their relationship isn't a liability at all, as Alex indicated, but a strength. It's Alex who's easily fooled by Chuck's tracker watch in the courtyard fountain, Alex who wants to blow up the bank vault where Chuck and Zamir are holed up (getting high off of nitrous fumes, I might add), Alex who seduces Captain Awesome and drugs him, and Alex who's quick with her gun but less quick to let down her formidable defenses.
And I'm glad that Casey supported Sarah in this episode. Not in a "I've got my gun drawn and I've got your back" sort of way (which he does, unfailingly every week) but he proved he really did have her back in front of General Beckman, making it clear that Chuck is right about Sarah: she is resourceful, efficient, and, yes, she does care about her assignment. She also happens to be the best damn partner he's ever had. (Sniffle.) Could it be that Major John Casey has a heart, after all? This episode proved just that.
What else did I love? The bait-and-switch with Alex at the Orange Orange at the beginning; Jeff and Lester possibly destroying Ellie's belief in her fiance from some totally inappropriate pictures (even if it was 100 percent clear that Devon was passed out in all of them); Alex's stripper routine and her strip search of Devon; the scene at the trailer with Chuck and Sarah (was that an almost-kiss there?); Morgan describing Ellie's scent as "sugar cookies"; Devon calling Morgan "General Beckman" and Morgan's bewildered reaction; the video conference software in Chuck's television triggered several times by Devon; the return of the "Ex Machina" comic; the use of "Harry Lime" as a pseudonym (Third Man shoutout!); Jeff's sister and the, uh, less-than-appealing strippers; the kidnapping dry-run at the beginning; Devon denying Alex's advances because of his love for Ellie; the weapon-cleaning scene; Chuck cutting himself with the scapel and his fight in the vault with Mohammed Zamir... and his nitrous-induced camaraderie. Which did allow him to learn the location of an Osama bin Laden-type.
All in all, this was another fantastic episode that built on the tension and provided yet another link in the increasingly rewarding overarching mythology of the series. (Also, Adler is quickly becoming one of my favorite Chuck writers and her writing once again shone this week.) While Alex Forrest might be out the picture, Chuck and Sarah aren't out of the woods yet and I imagine that what the creators have in store for this duo will truly put the would-be couple to the test.
My only wish? Please, NBC, do us a favor and pick up this winning series for another season. Or do I need to send Alex Forrest after you?
Next week on Chuck ("Chuck Versus the Dream Job"), Chuck's dreams seemingly come true: his father (guest star Scott Bakula) returns to his life and he lands a dream gig at the computer company run by genius Ted Roarke (guest star Chevy Chase), which naturally means everything is going to come crashing down around poor Chuck.
The Battlestar beauty turned up on last night's episode of Chuck ("Chuck Versus the Broken Heart"), written by Allison Adler, where she played the deadly Agent Alex Forrest, a ruthless NSA agent assigned to conduct a 49B appraisal of whether Chuck and Sarah's feelings for one another had impacted their ability to successfully perform their jobs.
Whereas Chuck and Sarah often take a more, uh, thoughtful approach to their work, Alex is all blazing guns, tranquilizer darts (hell, she even takes out an elderly nurse at the hospital), and stripper moves. She would argue she gets the job done and is proactive rather than reactive (and she makes a quick admirer in Casey); she's stealthy, effective, and, well, rather heartless.
Which makes things far worse when General Beckman removes Sarah Walker from her assignment as Chuck's handler and replaces her rather quickly with Alex herself. She won't be holding hands with Chuck (literally or figuratively) and they certainly won't be talking about feelings or anything remotely not related to national security.
Helfer was so fantastic as Alex Forrest in this week's installment that I wished she would have stuck around on Chuck for longer than one episode. In this single episode, she managed to test our heroes' allegiances and relationships with one another in a compelling and meaningful way; it was great to see Chuck saddled with a handler who wasn't going to baby him or care about whether he was okay and I loved the simpatico interplay between Alex and Casey. Two peas in a pod, those two, as they clean their guns, take a no-nonsense approach, and remain hilariously unflappable.
I'm glad, however, that Alex and Sarah didn't have a smackdown over Chuck but the tension between them remained just under boiling throughout the episode. And for her part, Sarah didn't take her dismissal lying down. Instead, she went out of her way to offer Chuck a proper goodbye, breaking into his apartment to leave him a note, and using government resources to track down Chuck's missing father. If that's not the definition of friendship--or of love--I don't know what is. She's proven time and time again that she does care for Chuck in her own way and that their relationship isn't a liability at all, as Alex indicated, but a strength. It's Alex who's easily fooled by Chuck's tracker watch in the courtyard fountain, Alex who wants to blow up the bank vault where Chuck and Zamir are holed up (getting high off of nitrous fumes, I might add), Alex who seduces Captain Awesome and drugs him, and Alex who's quick with her gun but less quick to let down her formidable defenses.
And I'm glad that Casey supported Sarah in this episode. Not in a "I've got my gun drawn and I've got your back" sort of way (which he does, unfailingly every week) but he proved he really did have her back in front of General Beckman, making it clear that Chuck is right about Sarah: she is resourceful, efficient, and, yes, she does care about her assignment. She also happens to be the best damn partner he's ever had. (Sniffle.) Could it be that Major John Casey has a heart, after all? This episode proved just that.
What else did I love? The bait-and-switch with Alex at the Orange Orange at the beginning; Jeff and Lester possibly destroying Ellie's belief in her fiance from some totally inappropriate pictures (even if it was 100 percent clear that Devon was passed out in all of them); Alex's stripper routine and her strip search of Devon; the scene at the trailer with Chuck and Sarah (was that an almost-kiss there?); Morgan describing Ellie's scent as "sugar cookies"; Devon calling Morgan "General Beckman" and Morgan's bewildered reaction; the video conference software in Chuck's television triggered several times by Devon; the return of the "Ex Machina" comic; the use of "Harry Lime" as a pseudonym (Third Man shoutout!); Jeff's sister and the, uh, less-than-appealing strippers; the kidnapping dry-run at the beginning; Devon denying Alex's advances because of his love for Ellie; the weapon-cleaning scene; Chuck cutting himself with the scapel and his fight in the vault with Mohammed Zamir... and his nitrous-induced camaraderie. Which did allow him to learn the location of an Osama bin Laden-type.
All in all, this was another fantastic episode that built on the tension and provided yet another link in the increasingly rewarding overarching mythology of the series. (Also, Adler is quickly becoming one of my favorite Chuck writers and her writing once again shone this week.) While Alex Forrest might be out the picture, Chuck and Sarah aren't out of the woods yet and I imagine that what the creators have in store for this duo will truly put the would-be couple to the test.
My only wish? Please, NBC, do us a favor and pick up this winning series for another season. Or do I need to send Alex Forrest after you?
Next week on Chuck ("Chuck Versus the Dream Job"), Chuck's dreams seemingly come true: his father (guest star Scott Bakula) returns to his life and he lands a dream gig at the computer company run by genius Ted Roarke (guest star Chevy Chase), which naturally means everything is going to come crashing down around poor Chuck.