The Expanse: Back to the Butcher (2016)
Season 1, Episode 5
8/10
The plot thickens
9 January 2016
Warning: Spoilers
This is going to be a long one. The plot thickens nicely in this episode.

Miller discovers more clues about Julie Mao. She was selfless and she toured the belt a few years ago. A ship called the Anubis was headed from Phoebe station to asteroid Eros. The Scopuli, which Julie was on, was apparently intended to intercept the Anubis, and take what it possessed. At that point, everything started going crazy in the outer worlds. Miller's theory is that the Anubis picked up something at Phoebe station that was incredibly valuable, valuable enough to kill a lot of people over. Where is the Anubis? And how and why did a fleet of advanced warships show up in the outer planets and start wrecking ships left and right? Also the apparent 'plan' by these strange forces to frame Mars is starting to work, as news programs suggest that popular opinion is beginning to pile up against Mars.

The chemistry between the four Canterbury survivors is pretty good, I like it. Not-sure-if-I-want-to-lead/a-bit-full-of-myself Holden, I'm-in-charge-with-a-full-head-of-steam Nagata, whatever-Nagata-says Amos, and quirky-unlucky Kamal who's fond of saying "Crap." when things go south.

We find out more about Fred Johnson, the director of Tycho station, with a checkered past that saw him massacre Belters on Anderson station (earning him the name The Butcher of Anderson Station). Now it appears that he is hard-core OPA, perhaps trying his best to atone for his past. He messages the Cant survivors, offering them safe haven, and the episode ends with them taking him up on his offer as they head for Tycho. Johnson is portrayed by the excellent Chad Coleman, who many will fondly remember as Tyrese from The Walking Dead.

There's a funny scene where Nagata has a run in with the Tachi's computer. Being a front-line ship, the central computer is so smart that it recognizes her as the engineering-type and displays the ship's engineering readouts to her without even being asked, which are perfectly right down the middle of course. This just frustrates her more. "There's nothing to fix." she complains. She pulls away a small patch of wall covering in defiance of the perfect Martian ship.

Coffee comes up a few times during the episode. Miller brews some up, and his friend comments that he's never done that before. It also comes up with the Cant survivors. If we recall, Holden has been pining for real coffee for a while now. In an earlier episode, we saw him flashback when he first met the Canterbury's navigator, whom he had a relationship with before she died on the Cant. The scene revolved around making a close coffee analog. He quickly brews some up in the Martian galley and sips it, and judging by his reaction it has to be pretty good.

We find out that Havlock survived his near-fatal encounter with local thug Kothari and a bolt-driver. Miller's reaction is quite odd. Usually, if a mentor's junior partner is nearly killed, the mentor takes it kind of personal and usually makes it his prime goal to find the scumbag responsible and deal with them. Miller doesn't, even with OPA big shot Dawes practically hands Kothari to him on a silver platter. Is there something in Miller's past that is influencing this odd behavior? Does he resent Havlock because he's an Earther? The episode ends with a nice cliffhanger and I'm certainly on the edge of my seat to find out what happens next.

One final note, I don't know if it's intended as an homage, but the shop that Miller visits near the end of the episode is called Tech Noir, which is also the name of the bar that Sarah Connor goes to in the original Terminator.

Some great writing and acting, especially Miller. Miller's "That's the LAST STUPID THING you get to say to me during this interview." or "I saw him in the morgue. He's mushroom food now....wanna join him?" were memorable.
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