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Question about this week's Dollhouse, "Gray Hour" and discontinuity/plot holes:

In the pilot episode DeWitt said... that Echo's value trumped the cost of the mission and seemed far more concerned about the Active as an asset than about the cost to the reputation of the Dollhouse by Echo's failure. Boyd had to argue with his two bosses about the importance of fulfilling the "mission" even though circumstances had changed for the worse. Note: the mission in this case was retrieval of a kidnapped child.

In episode 1x04, the Dollhouse is faced with an almost identical situation: Echo is caput and the engagement has been compromised. Note: the mission in this case is the theft/re-theft of a historical artifact. But unlike last time, DeWitt is visibly distraught over how the failure of the mission affects "the reputation" of the Dollhouse--success or failure is more important than Echo's value as a company asset (doll.) Although the clients in this second incident are more powerful than the businessman of the pilot episode (they are implied to be the actual govt of Greece), I don't see how the failure of one mission is substantially more traumatic than the other--hell, in the pilot, the client himself got grievously injured during the fallout. That has to be more damaging to your reputation than simply failing a theft.

Can anyone explain/rationalize why A is more important than B in one episode but B is more important than A three eps later?

Date: 2009-03-08 01:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kittyb90.livejournal.com
I probably don't pay as close attention as you do, so maybe I missed something, but I had assumed they planned to neutralize Echo on this one because the police were going to capture a mind wiped active, and they couldn't take the chance of anyone figuring out what she was or something.

I also thought that Boyd had to argue with them to allow Echo to complete her mission in the first episode because they were embarassed by her failure not worried about her health. They didn't have faith that she could complete the mission but Boyd did.

My reading of things could be completely wrong, of course. I do watch the show with a two year old running around, so maybe I missed some of the finer points. :-)

Date: 2009-03-09 04:46 pm (UTC)
ext_10182: Anzo-Berrega Desert (Default)
From: [identity profile] rashaka.livejournal.com
I agree with your first comment, disagree with your second (I saw them equally concerned about her potential value-loss and the failure.) But neither of those points answers my question of why the heel-turn.

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