Stranger in a Strange Land
- Episode aired Aug 12, 2022
- TV-MA
- 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
8.8/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
The Martian crew debates how to save the life of one of their own.The Martian crew debates how to save the life of one of their own.The Martian crew debates how to save the life of one of their own.
Photos
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaPresident Wilson's statement that "we didn't do these things because they are easy but because they are hard" is paraphrasing a speech by John F. Kennedy on September 12, 1962 where he said "We choose to go to the Moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard."
- GoofsThe North Korean cosmonaut is listening to music in his capsule when the batteries in his tape recorder start to die. A close-up of the cassette shows the tape hub visible through a transparent shell. The next shot of the recorder shows that the tape in it is a different design, with a label that covers most of the face of it.
- Quotes
Jim Bragg: I won't allow you to destroy the Republican Party.
Ellen Waverly: Maybe it needs a little destroying.
- ConnectionsFeatured in For All Mankind: Glasnost (2023)
- SoundtracksDrifter
Written by Marshell Edward Baker, Robert Adrian DeCocq
Performed by Baker & DeCocq
Featured review
What can I say. It was absolutely amazing.
I don't usually write reviews on IMDb, As I always feel like I can't describe the words in the best professional way possible, but here I just had to do it. This was absolutely an amazing final episode.
I watched it at 02:04 UK time, Constantly refreshing the page, so I feel like it safe to say I was among the first hundred, or internationally thousand people to watch the episode today.
It was absolutely worth doing straight away. They've given us a final episode over an hour and 20 minutes long. They definitely needed it. It didn't feel slow, or rushed at all. If anything it just felt so short because your enjoyment means it's still just flus by.
After the massive shock ending from episode nine, without giving away spoilers, episode 10 opens with answering the question of what actually happened in the first place, but not from the perspective of earth.
After the world does find out, it feels like there is a missed opportunity emotionally and internationally on the drama side to actually see how the planet would react to this incredible news. But on Mars it feels like it's still done really well. The believable emotional depth for what the astronaut had gone through both with following protocol and his own drive still felt deep and not at all two-dimensional. This I feel will be critical going forward in season four, as the story will be taking an even greater international and interconnected form when it comes to cooperation on Mars.
Is the episode isn't just one that deals with the fall out of the ending of episode nine, but has its own drama which even surpasses that.
That is what makes the story so brilliant. As soon as something good or incredible is happening, something else is always happening on Earth to then suddenly steal the light or flip everything on its head, usually for worse. But in the future who knows.
Episode 10 and is much like the ending of season two. Another time skip with a hint to the future but a huge amount of context that leaves you mouth open in shock on the edge of your seat.
Once again we are going to have to wait probably over a year to see what happens next, and I think all of us who have become hooked on the masterpiece series of For All Mankind will be eagerly waiting to see what next happens on Earth, and Mars.
I watched it at 02:04 UK time, Constantly refreshing the page, so I feel like it safe to say I was among the first hundred, or internationally thousand people to watch the episode today.
It was absolutely worth doing straight away. They've given us a final episode over an hour and 20 minutes long. They definitely needed it. It didn't feel slow, or rushed at all. If anything it just felt so short because your enjoyment means it's still just flus by.
After the massive shock ending from episode nine, without giving away spoilers, episode 10 opens with answering the question of what actually happened in the first place, but not from the perspective of earth.
After the world does find out, it feels like there is a missed opportunity emotionally and internationally on the drama side to actually see how the planet would react to this incredible news. But on Mars it feels like it's still done really well. The believable emotional depth for what the astronaut had gone through both with following protocol and his own drive still felt deep and not at all two-dimensional. This I feel will be critical going forward in season four, as the story will be taking an even greater international and interconnected form when it comes to cooperation on Mars.
Is the episode isn't just one that deals with the fall out of the ending of episode nine, but has its own drama which even surpasses that.
That is what makes the story so brilliant. As soon as something good or incredible is happening, something else is always happening on Earth to then suddenly steal the light or flip everything on its head, usually for worse. But in the future who knows.
Episode 10 and is much like the ending of season two. Another time skip with a hint to the future but a huge amount of context that leaves you mouth open in shock on the edge of your seat.
Once again we are going to have to wait probably over a year to see what happens next, and I think all of us who have become hooked on the masterpiece series of For All Mankind will be eagerly waiting to see what next happens on Earth, and Mars.
helpful•814
- djwhyatt
- Aug 12, 2022
Details
- Runtime1 hour 22 minutes
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