Barclay’s infatuation with Salt above anything else is not really given any time to develop, putting him on an instantaneous 0-100 escalation, but it’s Salt who suffers the most ignominies in the process, no longer presented as Barclay’s political equal and the advocate of War Between‘s most radicalized notions of the climate crisis, and instead flattened into a walking embodiment of the “born sexy yesterday” trope, thematically and narratively taken out of the picture for much of the show’s middle act once Barclay rescues her from UNIT detention. Multiple times in the series, both sides declare to each other that the titular war is coming, that it’s here, that it’s over, but we never really get to see that conflict, because Homo Aqua, after raising uncomfortably true concerns about humanity’s role in climate change, has to be first rendered unforgivably villainous—which is done in the bizarre opening sequence of the final episode that depicts a retaliatory act by Homo Aqua summoning, capturing, and eating every dog on the planet, a scenario that is raised within a matter of minutes and then never touched again—and then effectively eliminated as an ongoing concern, done so via an ill-explained engineered virus, dubbed “Severance,” that ultimately kills all but 10% of aquakind as quickly as it’s introduced in the back half of the show’s final episode. The extermination and capitulation of Homo Aqua are executed and resolved in the back half of the show’s final episode, giving War Between very little time to have its human players wrestle with the moral cost of what it’s done (a few brief, awkwardly inserted flashforwards imply that what remains of Homo Aqua will get its comeuppance on the direct individuals responsible for Severance’s deployment, but that’s about it).
Author: James Whitbrook
Published at: 2025-12-22 23:00:13
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