iZombie Season 5 Episode 1 Review: Thug Death

iZombie remains one of the most politically-relevant shows on TV (and one of the funniest) as it launches its finale season.

This iZombie review contains spoilers.

iZombie Season 5, Episode 1

Over the past four seasons, iZombie has slowly and steadily moved from an entertaining murder-of-the-week dramedy to also being one of the most politically-relevant shows on TV. As it launches its fifth and final season, we return to a New Seattle that is much changed from the Seattle we first visited in the show’s pilot. Much like the slow, often scary changes we’ve seen in the real-world, iZombie‘s setting has lost much of its sense of stability, resulting in acts of violent desperation that have become frighteningly more common in real-world America.

The action in the Season 5 premiere picks up six months following the events of the Season 4 finale. Major is still in charge of Fillmore Graves, a zombie-run military corporation that has enacted a kinder martial law on the city—but it remains martial law nonetheless. When a video showing a human woman being mauled and presumably killed by two zombies goes viral, tensions between the living and the dead become even more strained within the city.

read more: iZombie Season 4 Finale Review

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As is the case with most marginalized groups, it is the zombie population who is the most vulnerable. Zombies may be in charge of Fillmore Graves, but New Seattle is the only zombie enclave in the United States. If the U.S. military wanted to bomb them, they could, even if it would mean killing the human population that mostly populates the city.

Relations between humans and zombies living within New Seattle aren’t without hope, mostly because of our core group of characters, who got a headstart on wrapping their brains around the zombie “issue” and what it is like to have loved ones across species borders. Peyton, who is effectively running the city now that the mayor is dead, sees Liv, Clive, Ravi, and Dale as a task force of sorts across the city’s departments. She asks them to get to the bottom of the mysterious murder before things get worse.

Of course, things do get worse. Leader of the Concerned Humans Imposing Common Sense and small business owner Dolly Durkins attempts to light the powder keg that is New Seattle by going on Frost Bites to debate Peyton about the state of human-zombie relations. For Dolly, zombies shouldn’t have any rights. They all deserve to die. She is afraid of them, and her fear has radicalized her and caused her to radicalize others.

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As the episode progresses, we find out that Dolly is the leader of a terrorist group. A grieving man, who has lost both his wife and child in some undefined way to the zombie outbreak, shows up at her taco stand, ready to be the Concerned Humans’ suicide bomber. Dolly gives him a van loaded with explosives, tells him he is a hero, blessed God, and leaves him to drive into a Fillmore Grave checksite, killing four soldiers.

Meanwhile, Liv and Clive continue to investigate the murder that has put everyone on high alert. The search leads them to a park outside of the city, but there is no sign of a body: just a seemingly grieving boyfriend who beats them to the punch. Given that the murderous incident was accompanied by a zombie woman distracting a nearby anti-zombie grocery store clerk, there appears to be more to this incident than meets the eye.

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Did the woman who was seemingly murdered run her car into the zombies’ car on purpose? And, if so, for what purpose? Was she in cahoots with the men? And does the missing woman’s boyfriend know more than he is letting on?

For now, some measure of stability in New Seattle is being held, in no small part because Blaine was able to restore his steady stream of brains into the city, which was threatened when the border agents he was regularly bribing saw footage of the human woman seemingly being murdered by zombies. Blaine kidnapped the five border patrol agents, threatening their loved ones and presumably killing the one who refused to be coerced into cooperating again.

read more: The Long Shot Review

That man may be the only objecter right now, but he represents a problem for the zombie population if he is a harbinger of things to come. Right now, Blaine is living like a king inside of the New Seattle, untouchable for a Major and Fillmore Graves who actively need him to keep the zombie population fed. He is the epitome of the real world’s one percent, living a ridiculously luxurious life while others suffer. 

As Candy tells Don E., who is the one who is doing the day-to-day work that is holding down the business, “it was beauty killed the beast.” A sign of things to come for Blaine? It doesn’t seem like he can end the season and the series in power, but what will be the thing to bring Blaine down? Presumably, it will be Liv. They have been in a power struggle of sorts since Blaine first changed her in Season 1.

There have points when they have seemed to be frenemies, but Liv has never forgotten who Blaine is and she, like so many others whose lives have been changed without their consent by a greedy Blaine, deserves justice for all of the pain Blaine has caused her—even if she ultimately chooses the life of a zombie over the life of a human.

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And how is that cure coming? Season 5 introduces an outside pharmaceutical facility that is teaming up with Ravi to research zombie-ism and a possible cure. When an eager and brilliant young doctor makes the connection between Freylich Syndrome (the illness that Isobel had) and the zombie cure, Ravi only barely convinces her to keep her findings from the rest of the research group, as it will most likely mean people hunting down the roughly 300 kids who live with Freylich Syndrome for their brains and the zombie cure that comes with them.

If you read my review’s opening paragraph and didn’t now the show, iZombie might sound like a depressing watch, but it impressively isn’t. Unlike most of the topical dramas on TV, iZombie isn’t dour, self-serious, or disheartening, which is a minor miracle. Rather, it is consistently funny, with some of the best quips and one-liners on TV. It’s going to be sad to see it go after this final season, but, if this first episode is anything to go by, it is going to go out with a bang.

Additional thoughts.

Another ongoing storyline picked up from last season? Liv’s role as the Renegade, smuggling people into the city so they can become zombies and avoid death. Now that Peyton knows, she is helping her friend with the heavy duty of deciding which cases Renegade will risk everything for. In this episode, it is a teenage boy with a brain tumor who is also in the foster home of a pedaphile. When one of Renegade’s men goes to meet him in Seattle to bring him back to New Seattle, he brings his two younger foster sisters with him, who eventually get caught hiding in the bathroom of the bus heading into the city. (Thanks, random bus dude who totally told on them.)

Clive and Dale are pregnant and pretty much the happiest people in all of New Seattle, which isn’t a hugely competitive category, but their delight is still pretty wonderful to see.

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Rather than Liv, Ravi is given the thankless job of having to act the personality of a brain he eats. This is one of the show’s narrative devices that usually doesn’t work for me. Firstly, because it is so often a problematic cariacture. (Here, he is a London street thug, grossly trying to stake claims over Peyton throughout the entire episode.) Second, the rules of how much the brain affects the eater have never been consistent. (Here, Ravi struggles to regain control of himself in order to convince the new doctor that she shouldn’t share the Freylich Syndrome news.)

“I was kind of hoping for a latte.” “Seattle.”

That was a jarring cut between the bomb going off and Lisa’s distraught boyfriend drinking coffee at the police station. I have a feeling this episode was really short on time, and had to make a bad decision here. Otherwise, they probably would have held on the aftermath of that tragedy a bit longer? Or maybe it was worse when they did and then made the cut to the slightly-humorous police station scene.

“When we’re hungry, we can be real scamps.”

“Gotta read that fine print.”

“Heartbreaking. It’s a word I don’t use lightly—in fact, it’s a word I don’t use at all.”

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“I’m gonna kill your loved ones—be they young, old, human, canine.”

I feel like other people would have access to the chat that went along with Ravi’s conference call? Like, it doesn’t seem like a secure place to share secrets…

Kayti Burt is a staff editor covering books, TV, movies, and fan culture at Den of Geek. Read more of her work here or follow her on Twitter @kaytiburt.

Rating:

4.5 out of 5