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The New Normal Episode 9 Vostfr FrBlood; Episode 1; Viki Pass Access. This episode is available only for Viki Pass subscribers. It will be available to everyone in. 9.1 (2458 ratings) Next Episode 2. Visionner sur New Lunar Republic. New Lunar Republic NLR. Episode 9 VF & VOSTFR. Applejack's 'Day' Off Episode 10 VF & VOSTFR. Keeping Up with the Kardashians Season 1. The New Normal Episode 9 Vostfr DragonAnd though it would be great to see Homeland pull back on trying to off its one consistently tolerable lead character . Not that they were getting anywhere with her, anyway. Carrie scoffs at the idea that Allison could be telling the truth about using Krupin as an asset, but Dar says he can’t ignore Allison’s sterling record at the CIA or the “scandal” the agency would be mired in if she did turn out to be a double agent all along. He tells Carrie about Allison’s “carefully curated intel” and then asks her to leave. The man’s a fan of theater metaphors . He doesn’t look relieved at the news, however: When Dar talks to him about Allison, Saul’s on Carrie’s side. Instead of handing her over to counterintelligence, Saul asks to talk to her alone to get her to confess. He tries, but Allison knows how to provoke him. As soon as Saul enters the room, she acts annoyed, saying he shouldn’t be the one who seems angry . Allison explains that she had reported her recruitment of Krupin to David Estes, who, as Saul points out, is “conveniently” dead. She says she kept the circle small because of Krupin’s importance. He says it’s strange she didn’t tell anyone else after Estes’ death. She says she was protecting a paranoid Krupin. When Saul gets up, she remarks that if that was all he wanted to ask, then the interrogation was too easy. But Saul’s not done. Saul pins her against the wall, throttling her neck and shouting at her until Dar has him taken away. Before Dar and Saul get a chance to go over what happened, a new threat emerges: The video Bibi recorded of Quinn has been released. In it Bibi demands recognition for the Islamic State by the U. N. Security Council and threatens “a European city” with sarin gas if this isn’t achieved in 2. The pair help the BND identify Bibi by revealing Quinn’s connection, but with so little time to contain the threat, Dar ends up bringing Allison out of her interrogation room and into the fold. She says she and Krupin can offer SVR intel, and Krupin abides, informing the CIA and BND that Syria does have enough chemical weapons to annihilate Berlin. WANT MORE? Keep up with all the latest from last night. Head here for more details. Meanwhile, Carrie, who had just asked Astrid for help tracking Quinn down nine whole days after his disappearance . She pleads with Saul to let her see the entire video, in case Quinn tried to signal her, and Astrid allows her inside. The two women watch as Quinn foams at the mouth, falls to the ground, and shakes. Carrie cries, and Astrid holds her hand, before telling her the floor tiles in the corner of the screen could be a clue. Yet, despite not getting a concrete clue from the video, this scene leads to more scenes between Carrie and Astrid, who have for so long been painted as mirrors of each other without ever sharing extended screen time together. As Sonia Saraiya over at Salon pointed out, Homeland has surrounded Carrie with Carrie- like women this season, with Astrid, Laura, and Allison representing different sides of Carrie. All are intensely good at their jobs (yes, even Laura), and all have been painted in opposition to Carrie . Not only do they both have histories with Quinn, but also the dynamics the two bring emotionally to their mission makes their interactions pop. I may be wrong, but Carrie’s headed into an assignment with a female equal: Fara was a protege, Martha was a superior, and, well, Jessica Brody was never Carrie- like to begin with. Anyway, this is all to say that it’s refreshing to see Carrie and Astrid working together and talking about Quinn. But it was necessary.) And so, having Astrid and Carrie team up is a clever, long overdue move. Plus, they’re the ones saving Quinn, the damsel in distress. NEXT: Can Quinn be saved by. He is now looking to file a civil suit against the government. The Foundation will cover his fees, and Laura and Jonas have him tell his story on camera about how he had unwittingly sold cell phones and SIM cards to radical Islamists and people with jihadi connections. It’s all very moving . He gets nervous but explains that Zayd had bought phones from him and they were in prison together. Laura urges him not to hide, and he finally admits that he talked to Zayd in prison but not about anything incriminating. One time, he said, he overheard Zayd talking about an attack in Berlin. Laura and Jonas are left speechless and quickly usher Faizad out. Jonas says that even though it could just be jailhouse chatter, they might have to turn him back in to the federal police. Laura, as stubborn as ever, says they have to protect him, not traumatize him all over again. The next day, after Bibi’s video’s been released and Otto returns, the two continue the debate until Laura brings up 9/1. She says that giving Faizad up would be just as counterproductive as the wars that were started in retaliation for 9/1. Muslim men are already being rounded up by the BND and CIA over the video. It’s a stretch, but it doesn’t matter; Laura’s already brought Faizad to the Foundation, where she assured him they would continue representing his case. Unsure of what to do, Otto dismisses his minions and calls Saul. He asks him to promise not to arrest Faizad and to treat him fairly when he brings him in to talk about what he knows about the attack. Saul agrees to the deal, but when Otto, Laura, and Jonas leave the Foundation, the BND grabs Faizad and takes him away. Hey, it’s still the BND’s turf, but good try, Otto. And yet, maybe the BND and CIA didn’t need Faizad’s intel. Back at the CIA Berlin Station, Saul and Dar report to the CIA director, only to be told that they can’t warn the people of Berlin of what’s happening, even though, as Saul points out, the threat is the biggest they’ve faced since 9/1. Not all is lost, though: Allison walks in and tells the two the BND has identified Bibi and will be feeding his photo into CCTV facial recognition. Saul’s not too happy to see her working again and excuses himself . Beautiful, too.” (Astrid gets the best lines.)As Carrie wipes away her cryface tears, the BND manages to identify which buildings have the floor tiles. And Carrie, remembering an old algorithm the CIA used in Baghdad to track suspects, uses it to figure out where Bibi frequents in the city and which of the 1,5. Bibi. With all that done in less than 3. BND computer screen (thanks, German technology!), Carrie manages to narrow down the possibilities of where Bibi and Quinn might be. But while they’re moving forward with the Quinn case, the Allison situation may have gone awry. She’s tailed by a CIA agent wherever she goes, but when she heads outside for a smoke, she makes eye contact with an old woman who’s walking her dog. The whole exchange could also be innocuous, but that seems unlikely: For now, my theories are a) the woman signaled to Allison about an extraction plan, b) Allison somehow reported her status with the investigation of her involvement with the SVR, or c) Allison actually signaled something not about herself but about the Berlin threat. Could the SVR be interested in the Quinn video, as well? NEXT: Bibi’s plan hits a snag. His plan, in the event that the U. N. The one problem: Kasim Qasim, who Bibi notices seems anxious. He tells his cousin to feel more certain, because no matter what happens, people will blame the government for failing to prevent terror, not the terrorists themselves. And yet, his master plan is still flawed. When one of his men finds the empty atropine cartridge, he checks on Quinn and realizes their guest is still alive after the gas. When Bibi’s informed, he insists on weeding out the traitor in the group and has them all open their hazmat packs to find who used their atropine on Quinn. One by one, they open their packs, and Qasim realizes his pack still contains a full atropine. Instead, the empty pack has been switched, and a man named Zaheer takes the fall. Bibi, too small fry of a villain to understand that it’s not really a great move to murder one of your own in front of the men you want to remain loyal, shoots and kills Zaheer. Later, on the way to the station, Bibi tells Qasim he switched the kits to protect him because he’s family. But, he warns Qasim, if he doesn’t follow instructions again, he’ll be killed just like Zaheer. Qasim looks rattled as he nods. Good thing they didn’t bring Quinn along. For the entire episode, poor Rupert Friend has remained where he fell in the glass chamber, because the jihadists didn’t want to let the gas out and figured Quinn would die soon anyway. He doesn’t, of course, and stays alive just long enough for his two girlfriends Carrie and Astrid to make it to the building he’s in. When they spot blood on the floor, they fear the worst but find Zaheer’s body covered in plastic sheets. They figure out that the cell was here and had left before they arrived. While Astrid takes a photo of the body, Carrie searches the rest of the building and finds the chamber. Thinking he’s dead, she crouches and cries against the glass, until Quinn moves a finger. Quinn, officially saved by floor tiles, is taken to the hospital, where Carrie and Saul watch over him. Now that the kill order’s gone . And as Carrie and Saul wait for Quinn to heal, they look stricken. It’s not hard to imagine what they’re thinking: With Allison getting into Dar’s good graces, Berlin about to be attacked, and their best terrorism janitor hurt in the hospital, it’s all just a bit, as Saul put it earlier, “unbelievable.” Actually, forget “unbelievable,” Saul. Instead, it’s more like: After all, it’s Homeland. |
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