‘Hell on Wheels’ season 4, episode 6 review: Common returns (and shines) in ‘Bear Man’
“Hell on Wheels” took a major risk with its new episode Saturday night. “Bear Man” was an expressive, emotional hour, and also one that really forced you to rely on visuals. There were no subtitles of Elam’s interactions with the Comanche or his rescue; as a matter of fact, it was almost 40 minutes before you started to get any real English dialogue in here at all.
This episode was anchored first and foremost by the makeup team, who effectively turned Common into a pretty gruesome sight as his character was still suffering from the aftereffects of that bear attack. He was scarred, one of his eyes was completely torn up, and there were deep gashes all over his face. His mental state was beaten just as much; despite his visions of Eva in a field (one that actually looks similar to the photo above), he couldn’t really piece everything together at first.
Eventually, he started to assimilate into the world of the tribe around him. He followed their beliefs that he was somehow magic and invulnerable due to surviving the bear attack, and he found a form of acceptance with them. There was a tenderness to some of these interactions that you don’t often see in depictions of Native Americans on television (we applaud that), and there were also some rituals that further accentuated Elam’s belief (or mere acceptance?) that he was a chosen one.
This is a difficult episode in some ways to figure out or label. What was Elam’s intention in using a white captive to make his way back to Cheyenne? There is that part of him in there that is still Elam, but there is also another part of him that is this new creation. For everyone heroic moment that he had came another where he was brutal, violent, and out of his own head. The scene, waiting at the railroad at the end, was particularly chilling. We know where Elam is going, but we still do not know all of his motives when he arrives.
“Bear Man” was overall one of the finest episodes of “Hell on Wheels” this season, though it does still feel like an incomplete story. Part of our divided opinion may also come from us still still struggling to figure out what we want the Elam character to be right now. We want to see that picture again become a reality, but we’re not sure he understands the meaning of Eva, or his old life, enough just yet. The one thing we do know is that Common gave quite possibly his best performance of the whole series. Grade: A-.
What did you think about this particular episode? Share in the comments.
Steve Simms
September 9, 2014 @ 8:17 am
The worst piece of crap episode ever created. Anyone who watched HellOnWheels the first time would never watch it again. Not a chance. Anybody on the fence would be out. They’ve had enough sketchy stuff this year but a whole episode just to set the uber ridiculous circumstances for Elam’s return should get a lot of people fired. 5 minutes would have been too much to bear.
HellOnWheels started as a revenge western then went sideways and then backwards with the Swede apparently dropping acid (which didn’t exist) killing people like Lilly. His character is great but to prevent the ongoing theater of the absurd, they shouldn’t have brought him back. The writers are clearly on acid. Let’s have the actual Brigham Young enlist the evil Swede to sabatoge the railroad! Why not? Let’s all take acid! The absurd peyote western where we make up it as we go like none other! The more asinine, the more absurd, the worse the hellhole that is Hell on Wheels.
Craig Allen thornwell
September 9, 2014 @ 3:42 pm
I agree!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I thought It was a revenge story to revenge his family. The Swede has been there far too long. Are the writers that dumb that they can’t create another villain and they must keep the same one for every season???? Elam coming back as a one eyed monster is the most terrible thing to happen to this series. Im done!
Karen Cohen
September 7, 2014 @ 7:02 pm
I can’t say I enjoyed seeing all of the changes in Elam, but I was awestruck by Common’s performance.
Diane Mercado
September 7, 2014 @ 2:13 am
Great episode