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The Wertzone
SF&F In Print & On Screen
Saturday, 16 January 2077
Support The Wertzone on Patreon
After much debate (and some requests) I have signed up with crowdfunding service Patreon to better support future blogging efforts. You can find my Patreon page here and more information after the jump.
Wednesday, 13 May 2026
Person of Interest: Season 4
A powerful new AI has been created and allied with the United States government. However, Samaritan has its own agenda and no interest in being shackled by human control. Meanwhile, the Machine has gone undercover, trying to resist Samaritan or align its goals with humanity. With this becoming less likely, the Machine's operatives - living incognito for fear of discovery - have to take the fight to Samaritan where they can, whilst also dealing with a burgeoning gang war in New York.
Person of Interest's fourth season marks a significant shift in the show's format. Our erstwhile heroes are living under cover identities they cannot endanger without immediately being detected and eliminated by the Samaritan AI and its operatives. This forces them to have to act within the normal confines of their job at all times, even when dealing with their regular "persons of interest." This adds an interesting new tension to the show.
This tension means our characters can't go in all guns blazing as much as they did in previous seasons, and helps with the problem last season that our team was too overpowered, between Finch's elite hacker skills, Reese's formidable military abilities, Shaw's exceptional infiltration skills and Root as an even eliter hacker and competent combatant and AI-assisted assassin, not to mention access to two highly competent police officers (before one of them was killed off). Our crew have to be more circumspect in Season 4, forcing the writers to be more creative.
The result is probably the strongest run of episodes in the show's history. The already exemplary cast is expanded by the addition of some pretty big names (either at the time or in the years since) including Cara Buono (Stranger Things), Winston Duke (Black Panther), Wrenn Schmidt (For All Mankind) and Jamie Hector (The Wire), who are all superb. John Nolan (uncle of showrunner Jonathan and his director brother Christopher) continues to impress as semi-antagonist John Greer, and Enrico Colantoni has a bigger role as recurring frenemy gangster Carl Elias. Camryn Manheim also continues to be superb as "Control," this season moving from enemy to extremely reluctant, situationally-dependent ally.
What is interesting is that format encourages both greater serialisation and a renewed focus on the person-of-interest-of-the-week cases, an unusual move in a show with a continuing storyline in its penultimate storyline, when you'd expect the serialisation to have completely taken over. Instead, the threat of Control or the growing war on the streets between Elias and new kingpin Dominic often take a backseat to whomever the person of interest is.
This has several benefits, most notably it encourages the main storyline to be less convoluted than if it had had to fill 22 episodes. The show notably eliminates several factions this season to make the main storyline much clearer: The Machine versus Samaritan, who is allied to the US government, but some government officials are very uneasy about the deal they've made.
The gang war storyline could threaten to be formulaic, but it is elevated immensely by Winston Duke and Jamie Hector (here playing the right-hand-man rather than the boss, which prevents too many comparisons with his epochal turn as Marlo on The Wire), whose formidable charisma makes the Brotherhood are force to be reckoned with. The show also cleverly integrates the gang war into the main storyline with Samaritan, in a way it never managed with the HR storyline which dominated the first two-and-a-half seasons and threatened to become tedious. This storyline is better-handled and better-paced, being wholly contained within this one season. There's also a number of short arcs revolving around new recurring characters, and some PoIs from previous seasons return in clever ways.
The season also features several of the show's very best episodes: The Cold War features the first direct confrontation between the Machine and Samaritan, whilst If-Then-Else has the team trapped and the Machine has to run tens of thousands of simulations on their best way of escaping. The what-if nature of the episode is tremendous fun, allowing the characters to have several moving/dumb-as-hell death scenes. One sequence, where the Machine cuts the detail of the simulation to move things along faster, resulting in the characters becoming paper-thin descriptions of themselves, is the funniest thing the show has done so far. A twist ending prevents the episode from being too lightweight.
The back half of the season suffers a little from losing one of the regular castmembers due to behind-the-scenes circumstances beyond their control, which makes some episodes feel a bit clunky, with the introduction of some recurring characters clearly meant to just stand in for the missing one. It's not a major problem and some of the new characters are interesting, but it is a slight bump in the road. As we get to the end of the season it throws up another one of the show's best-ever episodes with Terra Incognita, where Reese has to investigate one of Carter's cold cases, resulting in the return of Taraji P. Henson in flashback sequences. The two-part season finale is also huge, packed with big plot twists and revelations that are quite satisfying.
Person of Interest's fourth season (*****) is potentially its very best, with excellent ideas and plot twists being undertaken by a cast at the top of its game.
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Thursday, 7 May 2026
Wintersmith by Terry Pratchett
Wednesday, 29 April 2026
Judge Dredd: The Complete Case Files - Volume 04
Mega-City One, 2102. A Psi-Judge has made a dire prediction. Mega-City One will be annihilated in the coming decades if the "Judge Child" is not found and returned to the city. Judge Dredd has located the child, but he has been whisked off into deep space by hostile forces, resulting in the Justice Department having to fund Dredd on a long, expensive trek across settled space in search of the child...with the fate of Mega-City One and perhaps Earth itself hanging in the balance.
The fourth instalment in Judge Dredd's Complete Case Files turns the comic into something a little unexpected: a full-blown space opera. Having traversed the Cursed Earth, saved Mega-City One from an insane tyrant and brought law and order to the Moon, Dredd is now representing humanity and Earth on the interstellar stage as he goes in search of the titular Judge Child. At 26 issues, spanning a full half of a year (and half this collection), the story is a proud epic to follow up on the Cursed Earth and Day the Law Died sagas, but again it's somewhat episodic, an excuse for the writers to come up with increasingly crazy characters, planets and aliens for Dredd to come up against with the search as a framing device.
It's still a reasonably good story and a somewhat iconic one, introducing the Angel Gang and Judge Hershey, who will go on to be a key player in future stories spanning decades (including a sequel in this very volume, where a serial killer starts trying to pick off the survivors of the mission). The ending is interesting but a bit under-explored, and it has to be said that the sudden shift back into standalone adventures and short arcs is a bit jarring, especially when some of these can be best described as "bonkers whimsical." A story about an evolution virus escaping in Charles Darwin Block and "devolving" the inhabitants into angry monkeys is vaguely entertaining, if a bit obvious. A recurring storyline across multiple stories sees Mega-City One gripped by yet another craze, this time for plastic surgery to make people incredibly ugly, which of course makes the creator of the first "Ugly Clinic" insanely wealthy and ripe for criminal exploitation.
The second major story arc, though considerably shorter, is Pirates of the Black Atlantic, in which a pirate group based in the Black Atlantic off Mega-City One's coast causes absolute havoc, even going as far as getting their hands on a nuclear missile, forcing Judge Dredd to storm the vessel. The story itself is slight, despite the devastation inflicted, but more importantly is the ending, in which it turns out that another faction was manipulating the pirates, and Dredd exposing them only delays their plans, not halts them. But that's a story for Volume 05 to pick up on.
The remaining stories have Dredd teaming up with an alien reporter, dealing with pop stars and stopping a graffiti craze in Mega-City One, resulting in the first appearance of Chopper, the Midnight Surfer, a key Dredd character who will recur many times in future stories.
The volume is interesting in being basically made up of a huge epic, several short arcs and a whole bunch of standalones, mixing the approach of previous volumes, where Volumes 01 and 03 were standalones and Volume 02 contained two massive sagas, an approach also favoured in Volume 05. I would say that the Judge Child story, though well-conceived with some great characters, feels a bit slight. The massive build-up to a limp ending is a classic case of storytelling bait-and-switch (albeit one with some further pay-offs down the road), and the story really only ends up being memorable for the secondary characters it introduces. The standalones are a mixed bag, but there's a lot of interesting worldbuilding going on and some good laughs (Walter the Wobot also continues to be a low-key presence, which I am thankful for), as well as a few more, briefly thoughtful moments. The collection ends up being interesting, but it is really the calm before the absolute storm that is Volume 05.
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Monday, 27 April 2026
Person of Interest: Season 3
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Friday, 3 April 2026
Judge Dredd: The Complete Case Files - Volume 03
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Person of Interest: Season 2
Harold Finch and John Reese continue to use the predictive powers of the Machine to help people in trouble, but a new factor has entered the equation: Root, a skilled hacker with an evangelical belief in the Machine. Whilst Root goes deep undercover to track down the physical location of the Machine, New York becomes a battleground between the feuding criminal gangs, the police and HR, a shadowy cabal of corrupt police officers and public officials.
Person of Interest's first season was a solid, if slow-burning, introduction to the series. It set up the central characters and premise, and gradually complicated the premise as the series drove on. Serialisation was embraced only slowly, as some apparently one-off characters became recurring allies, enemies or potential frenemies, with the main focus remaining on the mystery-of-the-week.
Season 2 basically continues this format, although serialisation is embraced a little bit more. It takes two episodes for the cliffhanger ending of the first season, where Finch is kidnapped by Root, to be fully resolved and this makes for a great storyline pitting talented actors Michael Emerson and Amy Acker against one another, whilst Reese (Jim Caviezel) tries to keep up on the still-incoming numbers with the help of Detectives Fusco (Kevin Chapman) and Carter (Taraji P. Henson). Along the way they acquire a dog, Bear, who quickly becomes an integral part of the team, and help a conman named Leon, played by Emerson's Lost colleague Ken Leung, who becomes a reluctant ally.
The throughline of Season 2 seems to be "let's make the team bigger," with some episodes seeing Finch, Reese, Fusco, Carter, Leon and returning ally Zoe (Paige Turco) joining forces to deal with cases, which can be a bit jarring after the more claustrophobic first season which was basically the Finch 'n' Reese Show. Most episodes don't require this level of all-hands-on-deck though, so the show develops multiple subplots such as a new love interest for Carter, Beecher (Sterling K. Brown) and a new criminal conspiracy storyline involving Carter, Fusco, returning occasional frenemy Elias (Enrico Colantoni) and the shady Alonzo Quinn (The Wire's Clarke Peters). In fact, the acting firepower of the season is impressive, with Peters and Brown particularly impressing.
The show does a good job of developing these subplots whilst keeping the main storyline ticking over, with a surprisingly light touch. I was expecting Root to play a much bigger role this season but her appearances are sporadic, and more impactful when they do take place. The stories-of-the-week are quite entertaining, though at times they do feel they're feeding off a big book of TV stock premises, such as the main character and a female lead having to go undercover in suburbia to uncover a hotbed of murder and mayhem, or the mob hitman who falls for his target. Still, these stories are usually well-executed.
The season takes a huge upward swing with its sixteenth episode, Relevance, which introduces Sarah Shahi as government assassin Sameen Shaw (with as sterling guest turn by Ebon Moss-Bachrach as her partner), whose number is picked up by the Machine. Uniquely, the story is told from Shaw's point-of-view exclusively, with Reese and Finch showing up without much warning. The clever script plays with and breaks the conventions of the show, and Person of Interest's tendency to pull its punches to keep the mass audience happy goes out the window. Shaw is a sympathetic and wronged character, but she is also resourceful and ruthless in a way that makes even Reese look amateurish. Shahi's performance is absolutely outstanding, and the twists and turns in the plot make this easily the best episode of the first two seasons. Making Shaw a regular after this (though it takes a few episodes for her to come back) is a no-brainer.
The season ends with an impressive two-parter which blows open a lot of the show's premise. We learn what's been going on with the Machine in the presence, and what happened to Reese and Ingram after turning it over to the US government. Root makes her long-awaited move and the value of having Shaw on the team becomes clear, with the show building to a big cliffhanger, even if maybe it hedges its bets a little so as not to make a return to the status quo impossible.
Still, Person of Interest's second season (****) is a sharp improvement on the first season's promise. Expanding the cast is a good idea which brings more storylines and ideas into play, and the show admirably mixes some good serialised plots with some inventive episodes-of-the-week (though there's a few rote ones as well). The show's improvement in quality impresses. The show is available on physical media and streaming worldwide.
Thank you for reading The Wertzone. To help me provide better content, please consider contributing to my Patreon page and other funding methods.
Wednesday, 1 April 2026
Citizen Sleeper
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New China Miéville novel gets cover art and blurb
China Miéville's enormous new novel now has cover art and an expanded blurb.
"From the bestselling, award-winning master of uncanny fiction comes a defining work, twenty years in the making – a deeply moving, decade- and continent-spanning epic of grief, global tumult, and grim conspiracy.
"Maur’s life has been shaped by an unbearable loss. But in the aftermath of what is an apparently ordinary tragedy, deeper, stranger questions arise . . . Their answers may lie within the dark heart and darker history of an old soldier who shares Maur’s obsessions – and is violently pursued by the same unknown, unquiet forces.
"So begins The Rouse, a book unlike any other: at once a sprawling saga of a bloody century, and the intimate story of two lives, their loves, regrets and secrets – and a terrifying journey into infinite mystery."
The Rouse, all 1,264 pages of it, is currently due for publication on 17 September 2026.
Tuesday, 31 March 2026
Blogging Roundup: 1 November 2025 to 31 March 2026
The Wertzone
News
Ultra-long web saga The Wandering Inn to get physical releases starting this autumn
Peter Jackson to produce yet another frankly unnecessary Lord of the Rings film
Hulu passes on Buffy the Vampire Slayer sequel series after shooting a pilot
Red Dwarf co-creator returns to franchise after thirty years with new novel
Royal Shakespeare Company confirms launch of Game of Thrones: The Mad King for Summer 2026
Pinnacle Entertainment launches Deadlands 30th Anniversary Kickstarter
Baldur's Gate TV series in development at HBO from Last of Us team
Hugh Cook's epic Chronicles of an Age of Darkness series returns to print
Brandon Sanderson's Cosmere setting picked up for adaptation by Apple TV
New Malazan novel, Legacies of Betrayal, slated for October 2026 release
Creative Assembly announce Total War: Medieval III, confirm another game announcement for next week
Tor Books passes on completing JV Jones's Sword of Shadows series, author to pursue self-publishing
Mass Effect TV series to be an original story set after the original video game trilogy
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