Episode Report Card DeAnn Welker: C+ | 236 USERS: B- YOU GRADE IT Mirror, Mirror on the Wall
By DeAnn Welker | Season 4 | Episode 6 | Aired on 2009.10.19
In a hurry? Read the recaplet for a nutshell description! Finished? Click here to close.Peter's taken Hiro to the hospital by the time this episode begins. He quickly realizes he needs a Hiro, and leaves Emma to talk to him. He tells her Hiro can tell her everything she needs to know about abilities. Peter then borrows Hiro's power, and goes to find HRG. Claire's there, and she offers her blood, but HRG says her blood would only make a tumor worse. Good thing he knows of a healer, a kid they brought in and then wiped and abandoned. When Peter and HRG arrive at the kid's home, everything's dead, including his parents. Apparently his healing power has turned into a killing power. When he shoots Peter, HRG quickly talks him through becoming a healer again in time to save the star of our show. Peter gets the kid's power and hops on a plane back to save Hiro. HRG stays behind to help our new healer, Jeremy. So, great, yet another character. Because we don't have enough of those already. While Peter's gone, Hiro helps Emma come to terms with her power. Since that's what he was sent for, he then teleports away and is gone by the time Peter returns. Hiro's on his way to the Burnt Toast Diner to save Charlie. Do you think we might actually get to see Jayma Mays on Heroes again?
In the other storyline of the episode, Samuel's wondering why the memories that are manifesting in Sylar aren't his (he asks to be called Nathan and remembers shaking a lot of hands -- he thinks he may be a politician). Samuel asks Sylar if he wants to know who he really is, and when he says he does, some guy named Damien takes Sylar into a House of Mirrors and shows him all of the murders he's committed, starting with his mom and including Elle and Charlie. Sylar's horrified that he's a monster and doesn't want to be like that anymore. Samuel says he doesn't have to be, and that he was only like that because the world didn't accept him and made him that way. Samuel just has one request before they get all peaceful, though: Kill Warden Leo, who's at the carnival (at Samuel's request, of course). He pretends it's because the whole carnival is in danger until Leo's dead, but it's really a test. Sylar meets Warden Leo in the House of Mirrors and gives him a good electric jolt, but can't kill him. That's when Edgar shows up and slices him to bits with his knives. Lydia the Tattooed Lady has the hots for Sylar, though, and it's making Edgar crazy, especially since this pansy, non-killer version of Sylar is useless to whatever machinations Edgar has dreamed up for the "family." But Samuel assures him they'll make a better Sylar and he'll be theirs. I wonder what this means for the Sylar in Parkman's brain? Parkman who?
Matt wasn't the only one missing this week (again). We also got no Tracy (again). No Mama Petrelli. No Ando (again). No Nathan (unless you count a momentary blip when Sylar shifted into him for a split-second). And only a glimpse of Claire. Good thing they're adding all of these new characters, though.
Want more? The full recap starts right below!Previously: Emma created some sort of earthquakey, laser power that cut through her wall, thanks to her rainbow of sounds. Peter picked up her ability, but she didn't know what he was talking about. Hiro planned to undo the wrongs he's caused. He told Kimiko he was dying and then disappeared, arriving an episode later in Peter's apartment. Mama Petrelli wants HRG to be the man with the plan, but he's depressed at how he's never done anything good in his life. Sylar didn't know who he was, and the cops figured out he's a murderer. He got away, and ran straight into the arms of Samuel the carnie leader.
We open with narration from Samuel -- the new Mohinder -- as Sylar takes off his shirt to look at his wounds in a mirror. Samuel wonders what a man is without memory: a ghost? A body in search of a soul? Cut to Nathan's office, with a mini Empire State Building figurine, a ticking clock, and a picture of Nathan and Peter on the desk. Is this our way of saying goodbye to Nathan for good? Samuel continues wondering -- "With no compass to guide us, how can we know if our destiny is to obey the good? Or obey the demons that whisper in our ear?" -- as we first see Peter sitting next to an unconscious Hiro in the hospital and then Emma looking fearfully at the giant crevasse she left in her wall. I imagine she's thinking, "Now I'll never get my deposit back!" Samuel goes on about how a blank slate hungers to be written upon as we move on to HRG on a computer. He finishes with, "The body thrives, when the heart has a mission," as we pan up Hiro's hospital blanket and across the words "Chapter Five: Tabula Rasa." Not exactly the most original episode title (see Buffy, Lost, and various others.
Hiro wakes up and Peter wonders how he's feeling. Hiro doesn't answer, so Peter reminds him that he collapsed and asks if he remembers. Hiro doesn't exactly say yes, but he surmises that Peter must have brought him to the hospital. Or, you know, called an ambulance. After all, I don't think he's carrying anyone anywhere with that lame seeing-sounds power he's been dragging around. Although, I guess he could have borrowed Hiro's power and teleported them both to the hospital. Peter tells Hiro that the doctors told him Hiro's very sick. And it's so appropriate for the doctors to tell Peter this, right? Hiro says he knows he has a brain tumor and is dying, but he didn't want to admit it would happen so soon. Peter thinks that perhaps Hiro was brought to him so that Peter could help Hiro through this time since he's helped a lot of people at the end of their lives (back when he was a hospice nurse). Hiro says maybe, but maybe not, since destiny's mostly been sending him to places where he needs to undo wrongs. Now, first off, why would Peter act like destiny brought Hiro here instead of him coming on his own? Peter wouldn't know that Hiro's lost control of his power, would he? So shouldn't he have assumed that Hiro came here on his own? Anyway, Hiro thinks maybe destiny brought him here to fix a problem in Peter's life. Peter says his life is perfect (except for the emptiness inside, the Sylar brother, the evil mother, the fact that he can no longer be the all-powerful hero he once was, and his unrequited crush on Emma), so it can't be that. He offers that maybe Hiro came here so Peter could fix him, since there are ways to heal sick people -- just not with doctors. Peter borrows Hiro's power (so he didn't have it before!) and takes off to get help. Before he leaves, though, he bumps into Emma. She wonders if he sent a cello to her apartment (he didn't), and then says there's something wrong with her ability. He brushes her off and says to talk to Hiro, who knows more about powers than anyone he can think of. To prove this, Hiro's reading a superhero comic book in his bed. I guess he carries that with him in case of sudden teleportation.