Kayti Burt

May 15, 2018

It's all tears and blood in an emotionally-charged iZombie that sees tensions boiling over in New Seattle. Spoilers ahead…

This review contains spoilers.

4.11 Insane In The Germ Brain

Killing off the adorably precocious teen girl with wisdom beyond her years, iZombie? Emotional manipulation, perhaps, but very effective.

Isobel never felt like a real person, not really. Her dying and death were too neat, too amiable with not even a hint of anger from Isobel. Her character would have benefitted a great deal from coming on earlier in the season as something other than the manic pixie dying girl, but Izabela Vidovic used her too-short time on the show to amazing effect. I’ve said it before, but this actress—previously seen on Supergirl and The 100—is going to be big. Arguably, if you’re a frequent CW TV watcher, she already kind of is.

Isobel’s death was one of a few plot arcs that came to fruition in this emotionally-raw episode. iZombie continues to be at its best when exploring the rising tensions amongst the human and zombie populations of New Seattle, and the water started simmering over the pot edge in Insane In The Germ Brain. When Don E. films one of Angus’ sermons and puts it online, zombies start to listen.

It’s a chilling moment, to see a popular figure spew violence-inspiring hate aimed to turn people against each other. It hits a little too close to home in a real-world climate where our president uses this kind of language and these kinds of tactics to similar effect. Here, iZombie begins to play it out to its inevitable extreme. Violence erupts. One of Tucker’s human friends tries to kill Angus, but Tucker, who has seemingly embraced his zombie-ism, saves Angus. He does not save his friend, however, calling him food when Angus asks what he is to him. New Seattle’s zombie population is desperate, and they are increasingly turning to Angus’ simplistic, hateful rhetoric to fuel their actions.

Desperation was the watch-word in more than one way in tonight’s episode. After Major took down Russ Roach and the brain black market ring he was a part of, Fillmore Graves is in celebration mode. But, when Major’s squad of teenagers let him escape, Chase Graves absolutely loses it, shooting two of them—one, fatally. It’s a shocking moment, even though we have seen Chase slowly unravelling under the pressure of trying to solve New Seattle’s brain shortage problem all season. It also feels like a turning point for Major who, thus far, has followed Chase Graves and Fillmore Graves pretty blindly. This is no doubt going to affect Major’s loyalty to the cause, which is good news for Liv and her smuggler friends. 

Meanwhile, Ravi met Peyton’s parents, just prior to Peyton’s work trip to D.C. I would have liked to see what Peyton was up to, trying to convince the human population outside of New Seattle that humans and zombies can peacefully co-exist, but it was also compelling to have the time devoted to Peyton’s loved ones suggesting she defect to non-New Seattle while she has the chance. Both Peyton’s parents and Ravi think it’s a good idea, but Peyton refuses. Right now, she is acting mayor of a desperate city that needs her more than ever. It would be a selfless choice to stay, and it’s so entirely Peyton. She is the best of all of us.

In other news, Bozzio broke up with Clive after accidentally overhearing a tape in which Clive admits to Liv that he can’t imagine a future with Dale because he wants to have kids. (iZombie covers all of its bases by including the detail that they’re not letting zombies adopt… though you’d think Dale and Clive could just snag one of the many zombie orphans off of the New Seattle streets.) Rather than talking to Clive about it, she breaks up with him, lying and telling him that she has met someone else.

I don’t think it’s in character for Bozzio to lie about her reasons for breaking up with Clive—she respects him enough to tell him the truth, and Clive respects her enough to accept any decision for her breaking up with him—but damn if that break-up hug didn’t get me. These two really love each other, and it just plain sucks that they have been torn apart by the zombie-human divide.

iZombie continues to struggle with balancing its more light-hearted plots—which somehow includes the murder-of-the-week—with its apocalyptic ones, but, in an episode as emotionally-charged at this one, it’s harder to care.

Read Kayti’s review of the previous episode, Mac-Liv-Moore, here.