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Losses are mourned and hidden powers discovered on an uneven Wheel Of Time

The show makes more a concerted effort to tell its own story, with mixed results

TV Reviews Wheel Of Time
Losses are mourned and hidden powers discovered on an uneven Wheel Of Time
Photo: Jan Thijs

I’ve spent a lot of time in these reviews talking about how faithful the Wheel Of Time show has been to its source material. Obviously, “faithful” is a subjective, not objective point; there have been plenty of omissions and diversions from the original text so far, and we can argue over how many of those changes were necessary. But the basic structure of the show is, on the whole, almost shockingly close to The Eye Of The World. As someone who grew up watching television shows mangle books I loved, maybe I’m overselling just how impressive that is. But the first four episodes have done a great job in reassuring me that yes, the people making the series have read the novels, and they likely even took notes.

Still, an adaptation can’t be entirely faithful. Different formats have different needs, and budgets, and as Jordan’s books spiral outward, it’s inevitable that the television version would have to find ways to streamline and adjust and find something like an essence in all that world-building. Eye is relatively straightforward as fantasy novels go, and most of “Blood Calls Blood” is still sticking to the book’s basic arc, as Nyneave, Rand, and Mat are reunited by a new friend, and Egwene and Perrin suffer horribly at the hands of the Whitecloaks. But the reason I’m opening with all this adaptation talk is that “Blood” also offers a subplot which is, as far as I can remember, completely original to the series.

It springs off the fallout from last week’s attack on the Aes Sedai camp, as the warder, Stefan, struggles to deal with the death of the sister he was bonded to. Once Moraine, Lan, and the others arrive at Tar Valon, Stefan talks with his fellow warders about his grief, and they make plans for him to be bonded again with an Aes Sedai from the Green aja. (There is a low-key but funny joke about how Stefan isn’t sure how he’ll handle being bonded along side two other men; I appreciate that the show has made an effort to establish gay relationships in this world, something notably absent from the novels.) He goes to Nyneave for a sleeping drug to help him get through the night, but it’s ruse; he drugs Lan and goes off alone to kill himself. The next day, we see the men and women of the Tower mourning his death.

It’s an effective enough sequence, especially that last bit, but I’m not really sure why the show decided it was necessary to spend this much time establishing the intensity of the bond between a warder and an Aes Sedai. It’s not immediately relevant to the current situation; the Dragon Reborn doesn’t enter into it, nor does the Dark One, and it’s not like any of the other main characters outside of Moraine and Lan have to worry about it. If Egwene and Nyneave become Aes Sedai, it’ll matter then, but that’s a long way down the road if it happens at all. And while the actor does a good job with the material, Stefan isn’t such a striking or unique character to justify this kind of narrative detour.

The only real answer I can come up with is that the show is still struggling to find the emotional weight it needs to really sell the conflict at its heart. It’s all well and good to talk about “Dark Ones” and “the end of the world,” but anyone who’s read or watched fantasy before is familiar with these concepts. The Wheel Of Time needs to find a way to make its world feel specific and real, and one way to do that is by telling smaller, self-contained stories within individual episodes that serve to provide texture to everything else. It’s just, in this particular case, it feels like a misfire. The season is only eight episodes long, and this is a lot of time to spend on someone who (unless they’ve made some major changes down the line) isn’t particularly relevant to the what happens next.

Far more useful in terms of building emotional stakes was Egwene and Perrin’s time with the Children of Light. While Rand and Mat have reached Tar Valon (another big change from the novels, one which completely cuts out the introduction of a major character), the Tinkers run into Eamon Valda and his Whitecloaks. Valda sees Egwene and Perrin in the group, and, recognizing them from before, demands the Tinkers turn them over. The group refuses, attempting to use passive resistance to give our heroes time to escape, but it’s all for naught, and soon Valda is slicing open Perrin’s back and giving Egwene an ultimatum: either she channels, and she dies, or she doesn’t channel, and Perrin dies.

Plotting-wise, this is all pretty abrupt. We’ve established Valda as a bastard, but the sudden escalation to “okay, I’m just going to cut on this guy for a while, you do what you need to do” feels like it’s slightly missing the point about the Children of the Light—they’re assholes, but they’re assholes with a code, and while Valda is worse than most, there are at least should be more justification here than just “Well, I’m pretty sure you can do magic, so fuck it.” It makes what could’ve been an interesting character into a one note villain, and while he exits the scene pretty abruptly here, I would’ve preferred if the episode had spent more time developing him and less dealing with Stefan’s grief.

But on a visceral level, this works just fine. Watching Perrin get brutally tortured is rough, and watching Egwene struggle to use magic to free them both has an intensity to it that the show has only found intermittently. It’s also deeply satisfying when she succeeds in tricking Valda, throwing a small flame at him to distract him while she burns away the ropes holding Perrin in place. Things get funky, though, when a sudden attack by wolf pack gives Perrin and Egwene the time they need to escape. This is an important part of Perrin’s character (there’s a reason his eyes turned yellow when Valda tortured him), but the actual wolf massacare borders on goofy, with some abrupt cuts and bad effects work that fail to sell the real impact of the event.

More than anything “Blood Calls Blood” feels like The Wheel Of Time trying to work around the inherent limitations of television, for better and worse. It’s clumsy, but it’s probably necessary; the show wasn’t going to survive if it didn’t start working harder at finding its own voice. And hell, in its way, the budgetary limitations of that wolf attack have their own charms. I can see being put off by it, and I’d be lying if I said I didn’t wish it had been better handled (or that I’m not worried about the show will deal with Perrin’s connection to wolves going forward), but the late ‘90s TV miniseries vibes gave me some pleasantly strong nostalgia feelings. Those feelings won’t carry the show for long, though, and fingers crossed it finds its footing soon.

Stray Observations

  • The only other major development of note is the introduction of Loial, a friendly ogier Rand meets while he and Mat are staying at an inn in Tar Valon. I’m not completely sold on the make-up work here, but the performance is charming and good-natured and a little dorky, which is pretty much the character to a T. Mat is still not doing great, and Rand is struggling to hold things together while his friend breaks down.
  • She doesn’t get a ton to do this week, but I continue to take a considerable amount of joy in Rosamund Pike’s performance. There’s just this low-slung confidence to her movements and her line deliveries that sells the material in a way few other actors on the show have managed so far.
  • Perrin confessed to Egwene that he killed Laila. Still the single strangest decision on the show to me, and one that has yet to really pay off in any meaningful way.

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