Submitted for your approval: an episode entirely without metaphor. The statement itself is a bold one for The Twilight Zone , considering the original series had some of its best episodes with you-can’t-say-that-on-television masked by way of the tropes of science fiction, horror, and westerns. Yet “Replay” succeeds without metaphor, and eminently so. Indeed, in so far as commercials can spoil a story (hint: they can, exceedingly so), the shape of “Replay” was tipped loud and clear: racial profiling, and more, received by African-American mother Nina (Sanaa Lathan) and son Dorian (Damson Idris) at the hands of the droll and decidedly white Officer Lasky (Glenn Fleshler). As for what was shown in previews, the episode is just that: a ponderance on American racism, casual and powerful and sometimes both. However, the episode, directed by Gerard McMurray, is also very much more. As someone who likely will never be pulled over by a profiling police officer, the episode was for me a vivid,
There is no second object being tracked. The descriptive audio says "a dot blinks beyond Ellis Ave." That's a singular dot, and from SWORD's point-of- view the Vision is beyond Ellis Ave. The second dot seen on the computer screen is a pull-out window showing zoomed in detail of the first dot. Look carefully and you'll see this rectangle expand separately when Darcy maximizes the map on her screen. It is not a rectangular object outside the Hex, it is a rectangular computer window. It even says "vibranium" at the top.
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