“Black Lightning” Episode 205 Recap: The One with the Hot Sex (and a Death)

You know when you sit down to watch an episode of television, and by the end you have more questions than answers? But, instead of feeling shortchanged or frustrated, you feel invigorated? Like the narrative could truly go in any one of a thousand directions – and all of those directions are a present just waiting to be unwrapped on Christmas morning?

Give the gays everything that they want.

That’s what this week’s Black Lightning felt like to me.

I’ll cut the bull right at the top: I am not convinced that Gambi is dead (maybe he is, the show is certainly moving forward as if he is). I am not convinced that we saw Grace Choi come in to her powers or if instead she’s afflicted by whatever illness seems to be spreading in South Freeland (more on that later). Hell, I’m not even sure if Jennifer is getting back with Khalil (just kidding! She totally is. And I hate the show for it).

Also, Anissa and Grace had sex! It was worth the wait.

None of last night’s plot points were gimmicky or unearned. Each one twisted and contorted on itself, slowly leaving me metaphorically watching the floor where the ceiling should be. This kind of “can’t tell up from down” mystery unveiling was out of step with the narrative structure that Black Lightning’s presented in the past. I hope they play more with it in the future. It built an emotionally resonant, engaging and exciting hour of television.

Frank Sinatra Swag

Let’s start with Gambi. The first family of Freeland’s favorite uncle is driving home when two SUVs pull up beside him at a red light. One of the men in those SUVs pulls out a machine gun and starts firing. A chase ensues, with Gambi weaving in and out of traffic as his car’s fancy schmancy computer tells him that his vehicle’s “structural integrity” is failing. His car spins out of control, flipping onto its side, and bursting in flames. Several eye witnesses watch as the unidentified men drive off – it’s yet to be said who they are but, Two Bits (in a delightful return for my favorite Freeland bootleg man) thinks it was a government hit job. I’m inclined to agree with him.

The entire chase plays out with Dean Martin’s “Ain’t that A Kick In The Head” crooning around us. It’s a song choice that thoroughly stands out against Black Lightning’s established preference for hip hop, jazz, and 1970s soul music. It’s also a perfect tribute to Gambi, whom Two Bits eulogizes as “the only white guy in Freeland other than the cops.” Gambi’s energy isn’t Jefferson’s or Anissa’s. He deserves his own soundtrack. If this is the last time we see him on screen, I’m glad that he got his moment to shine.

Fake News

Here’s the thing – deep in my bones, I just don’t think this is the last time we’re going to see the Italian tailor/ex-ASA agent. You know why? Captain America: The Winter Solider, that’s why. In the first act of my fifth favorite Marvel film, Nick Fury finds himself in the middle of a chase scene. Much like Gambi’s computer, Nick Fury’s car warns of rampant malfunctioning. Both men find themselves turned over in the middle of the street, their vehicle in flames, apparently dead. In Captain America, they even go far enough to show us Fury’s lifeless body. Guess what? He lived anyway. If the Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D have the kind of technology to fake an assassination and car blow up, then I have to believe so does the ASA.

When Henderson visits Jefferson to share the tragic news of Gambi’s death, he responds that Gambi isn’t dead until we see the body. I agree. Perhaps I’m wrong! Maybe my skepticism is overwrought. Anissa breaking the news of Gambi’s death to a blazed (Hey! Medical marijuana is for superheroes, too!) and heartbroken Jennifer was almost enough to turn me. Jefferson mourning the loss of his mentor and father-figure at the local bar, and even more evocatively at Gambi’s shop, almost turned me. Cress Williams’ performance was as fine as I’ve seen in his twenty year career. Black Lightning proceeds as if Gambi is dead. Still, we never see the body.

Reeling from Gambi’s death, Anissa turns to Grace. This is when things get really interesting, so let’s go slow.

Lesbian Catnip

First of all, Grace Choi has an apartment! It only took us a full season plus five episodes, but she’s becoming a full person! Progress!! Her apartment comes complete with an artist’s studio that has a canvas and easel already set up. There’s a pile of books on her coffee table and another book that she’s reading while propped on the couch, wearing cut up black jeans, heavy eye liner, and a flannel. If you were wondering if Grace Choi got even sexier since we last saw her, the answer is YES.

Anissa knocks on the door unexpected, tears in her eyes. She knows its selfish to just drop by, but her uncle died tonight. Losing him wrecked her. She roughly wipes the tears falling down her cheeks with the back of her hand. In the wake of her loss, she found herself thinking: If she only had one day to live, who would she want to spend that day with (other than her family)?

I mean, how could you not love this face?

Grace is already a goner.

Anissa could only think of one name.

Grace demurs, taken aback. What is she supposed to say in response to such a vulnerable confession?

Anissa didn’t expect her to say anything at all. The music behind them builds as Anissa pulls Grace in for a kiss. Slow, romantic, their hands searching for each other. First tentatively, then passionately, as Anissa walks Grace backwards to her living room wall. Grace exhales, and Anissa pins her hands above her head!!

Anissa Pierce: Honors Graduate from the Bette Porter School of Topping

The music may be soft, but they are hot. Sex is often about more than just sex. Their gasps, heavy breathing and messy kisses serve to remind each other that – on the night that Gambi died – dammit they are alive. Blissfully alive. Anissa bites her lower lip and leads Grace to the bedroom.

We catch up with them the next morning, bare except for their underwear, birds chirping and early sunlight breaking through Grace’s bedroom window (small side note: I love that Black Lightning doesn’t pretend that women lay in bed with their sheets up to their neck because of some antiquated, sexist notion of “modesty”). Anissa kisses her lover slowly, in the middle of her back, part worshiping her and part welcoming her to a new day. It’s gentle. Intimate. Alone in their own world.

That is, until Grace pops the bubble.

“This was a mistake,” she laments. Her back towards Anissa, as if she can’t bear to look her in the face. She turns around, “Anissa you know how I feel about you. And… I’m sorry about your uncle. I really am. But, I’m not your handbag. You can’t just show up and have sex with me when you’re feeling vulnerable and then disappear when your world is right-side up again.”

Anissa reaches out to stroke Grace’s face. That’s not what any of  this means for her. For what its worth, I believe Anissa. I believe that she’s going to step up to the plate this time, when it really counts. I also understand why, given their history, Grace is hesitant. Anissa’s played the field before. Grace doesn’t want to get caught up in her games.

Sunshine of my life

She pushes Anissa’s hand away, “My family… they weren’t exactly the most present people. I learned a long time ago to just depend on myself, not let anyone in. Then, you walked into my bookstore and… everything changed.”

She locks her eyes with Anissa’s, which are rimmed red with tears. She firms her voice: “If you can’t realize that you can do me real harm, I need you stay away from me. Can you look me in the eyes and promise me that you won’t hurt me again?”

Anissa can’t make that promise. To be fair, I don’t know if anyone who’s honest with themselves can. Even with the best intentions and the purest of hearts, sometimes love hurts. Being open with the softest, most tender parts of yourself means leaving yourself unprotected to the jabs and uppercuts of those you love most. It means trusting that they won’t hurt you, but understanding that sometimes – just sometimes – they will and not know it.

Yep. Time to order some coconut oil. I hear that solves everything.

Grace has a lot to protect right now. She leaves her bedroom, visibly upset. Once alone in the living room – her gorgeous tattoos starts to crawl! They literally shake and shimmer as Grace’s skin ripples up arms. She panics, reaching for a water bottle and searching for the pills in her desk drawer. As she gulps them down, the camera pans her neck. Her entire upper body is covered in some sort of markings. Scales? Camouflage? She looks at herself in the mirror as they fade away.

This is my second big question: Were we watching Grace’s superpowers take form? Her body’s reaction came in response to an emotional upheaval, not unlike the first appearance of Anissa’s or Jennifer’s powers. Grace is supercharged in the Black Lightning comic series. She’s gifted with superhuman strength, healing, and enhanced durability (she’s also part-Amazon and Wonder Woman’s cousin!). It was only a matter of time before those powers found their way to Grace’s depiction in the television series. While I don’t think that skin rippling or strange markings would be a side effect of super strength, I suppose the show could be taking her character in a slightly new direction.

Still, my first thought as the episode ended was that perhaps we weren’t looking at Grace’s powers at all. What if she’s sick? That theory involves digging deeper into Anissa’s day job.

And on Wednesdays, we play doctor!

Anissa’s accepted a position at Reverend Holt’s free clinic, and two of her first patients are a young pregnant woman and her boyfriend. The boyfriend is incredibly on edge throughout their appoint. Later, he shows back up at the clinic with holes all over his face! He begs Anissa to save his girlfriend and unborn child before collapsing dead! A silver liquid oozes out the holes in his body (it’s massively gross).

After tracking down the couple’s origin to South Freeland, Anissa is pulled over by a racist white sheriff. Then, I fucking kid you not, the sheriff’s skin starts moving! The special effects of his movement weren’t exactly the same as Grace’s. There’s a chance that ultimately they’re not connected. At the same time, it’s hard for me to believe that two plot points involving moving and deteriorating skin are 100% unrelated, you know?

“… That’s why Stacey Abrams should’ve conceded the Georgia Governor’s race”

Oprah hates you and so do I.

Here’s the other thing about Anissa being stopped by a racist cop in the middle of the woods outside of Freeland – it terrified me. It’s a little moment where once again Black Lightning amplifies the horror of being black in America. Thunder facing Syonide? No problem. Tobias Whale? She can take him in her sleep! Anissa Pierce getting pulled over by a white man with a badge on the outskirts of town? Suddenly I couldn’t remember how to breathe!

I’ve talked about it before, the rare joy of being able to relax into having a bullet-proof black lesbian superhero. Evil villains pose no threat to her. You take that same bullet-proof black woman and place her in front of a white cop, on an isolated road, in the middle of the night? The mind reels. He likely can’t kill her, but what if he had tried something? What if Anissa had been forced to protect herself? What would’ve come of her? Has self-defense ever worked out for black folks in this country? It has not.

Thankfully instead, the creepy white guy’s skin creeped all around his face. One look at him and Anissa said, “Oh hell nah” before whipping her car right out of there!

As the numbers clearly demonstrate, the Blue Wave wasn’t merely a splash. I wouldn’t call 100+ women elected to congress “a splash.”

Quick catch up on Lynn, she gets tricked by Dr. Inmate Jace to perform a dangerous experiment on the ASA Green Light subjects who remain comatose in their pods. As a result, nearly all the subjects die. Only 14 are able to be saved. An outraged Lynn makes good on her promise to have that sadistic doctor thrown right back in jail.

Really though, this episode belongs to Chantal Thuy. She’s been Thunder Grace’s loudest advocate on social media for nearly a year. With this episode, she finally comes into her own. Her performance of Grace continues to be layered, tough yet vulnerable. If you want to get to know the actress better, may I suggest this interview? I can’t wait to see where Chantal takes Grace from here.

Looking at my notes, next week is the mid-season finale! Then we’ll come back together after the holiday break, when Black Lightning makes the move (gasp!) to Monday nights starting in January.

What do you think? Is Gambi really dead? Is Grace Choi superpowered or facing a long, dark tunnel of illness ahead of her? Let me know in the comments! Oh, and drink some water. Stay hydrated. Love you.

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Carmen Phillips

Carmen is Autostraddle's Editor-in-Chief and a Black Puerto Rican femme/inist writer. She claims many past homes, but left the largest parts of her heart in Detroit, Brooklyn, and Buffalo, NY. There were several years in her early 20s when she earnestly slept with a copy of James Baldwin’s “Fire Next Time” under her pillow. You can find her on twitter, @carmencitaloves.

Carmen has written 700 articles for us.

14 Comments

  1. So I haven’t watched any Black Lightning episodes this season and was planning a BIG CATCH-UP during Thanksgiving…but SOMEONE put HOT SEX in the headline of a recap and now I’ve jumped down the rabbitthole!

  2. I admit, in that moment when Anissa was pulled over by that South Freeland police officer, I forgot for a second that she was bulletproof, I forgot that she was a superhero. Instead, I was just watching this young black woman — with a penchant for speaking her truth at inopportune moments — being confronted by a police officer who pulled her over for no reason. I was petrified.

    But then I remembered.

    What a profound sense of relief.

    Anyhow, that moment aside, I loved this episode…and, now that you mention it, Carmen, I’m a little surprised that this wasn’t the midseason finale. It left us with so many questions, it feels like it would’ve been a perfect way to conclude the first half of the season and have folks clamoring for its return…I can’t wait to see what they have in store for us next week.

    Oh, ThunderGrace, I love them so much. When Anissa showed up at Grace’s door, I was like, “Grace, don’t do it girl!” but even I was won over by Anissa’s charms. *swoon* I don’t think we were seeing the burgeoning of Grace’s powers, despite what so many on the interwebs have been saying…because it doesn’t make sense that she would be able to take meds and water to stifle them. I think ultimately when Anissa figures out a cure — I’m counting on her and Lynn to pool their talents — she’ll prove to Grace that she’s invested in taking away her pain, not causing it.

    Also? Gambi’s totally alive.

    • I was just talking with Heather Hogan about this! We both agree that whatever Grace has, Anissa is going to wrap Lynn in for finding a cure – which I think is going to wrap Grace more solidly in with the Pierce family and the central plot of the show. (Finally)

      I also think it’s possible that whatever Grace has can only be cured with Green Light and/or somehow the treatment of whatever she has will lead to her powers. I still think Grace’s powers are probably coming, I’m just not convinced that we saw them *last night*

      This episode TOTALLY felt like the midseason finale! In fact it was the first thing Heather asked me! I don’t know where we are going from here, but I am very intrigued to say the least….

      (I loved everything about your comment! I want to wrap up in it like a blanket! Is that doing too much? ?)

      • Is’t regeneration and increased healing part of Grace’s powers? I think her healing may be the key to finding a cure for the pod kids…maybe?

        • Yes, healing is one of her comic book powers! I’d love to see Grace help heal the pod kids!!!

          Here’s hoping! ??

  3. I’m a big fan of the way they’re handling Anissa/Grace. I’d rather see this push/pull of a slow burn rather than a big “We’re kissing, now we’re together!” moment. They’re both adult women with respective baggage! The way they keep coming together and falling apart feels more true to life and I think it’s going to make for a really satisfying resolution when they do finally get together for real.

    James Remar is credited for future episodes, so my vote is he’s still alive.

    • “They’re both adult women with respective baggage! The way they keep coming together and falling apart feels more true to life ”

      I was also thinking about this recently! I think it’s Anissa and Grace’s biggest strength, honestly. They are complicated and messy and real, their “love story” isn’t being told in a paint-by-numbers way. I love that about them.

  4. I’m with you. Gambi is not dead.

    Can I say I don’t believe Anissa? I think she wants to be ready to be with Grace but she’s not ready to be with anybody b/c she’s still very much about Anissa at this time. I would gladly be wrong but I think Anissa was talking to Zoe when she was walking out of the clinic.

    I think those were Grace’s powers manifesting. Maybe her powers are also tied to her emotions. I don’t think that pill took away or suppressed Grace’s powers as much as worked as an anxiety medication to control her freak out. Maybe Grace doesn’t understand her powers. I don’t think she’s sick. But the BL writers may choose to have her from South Freeland and the child of metas.

    and was I the only one that felt like they were portraying those kids from South Freeland as addicted to meth? I think you have two strain of drugs one which is greenlight and given to North Freeland and another given to South Freeland.

    • Ooooh, I’m very intrigued by the idea of Freeland having Green Light (which is an allegory for crack-cosine)and South Freeland having a meth equivalent!

      I agree that Anissa’s patients were definitely framed as addicts.

      So much potential in what comes next!

  5. Awesome recap.

    Happy that we got more ThunderGrace and that Grace is becoming more of a full person. It was so weird hearing her speak more than one sentence an episode. Haha

    I can’t wait to see where they take Grace’s storyline to. I hope they do her character right and well. I think her powers are manifesting.

    Next week isn’t the midseason finale. Episode 9 (or 8) is the midseason finale.

    Gambi is so not dead.

    • Thanks for the clarification! My notes are wrong, I’m going to update the end of the recap accordingly!

      Hahahaaha ha! It was so strange to see Grace on screen for longer than 2 minutes and 1 sentence! Heather Hogan was like, “Grace had more plot development in this one episode than she did in a whole season and a half!” And she’s completely right, lol

  6. I used to watch soaps, where they come back from the dead all the time, so I yelled at the TV “He’s not really dead”!

    What the everlasting fuck with those weird skin shimmers of Grace and white cop??? It was hard enough watching JS’s funeral home director do a live embalming or zombification or whatever that was last season. Stop disgusting me, show!

    I’m not into BDSM, so that GA scene was not hot for me, but YDY. The morning-after scene started out great, though. I will say I’m intrigued!

  7. I’m stoked that Grace and ThunderGrace are getting more development but I feel like not enough of it’s been onscreen – when Grace said Anissa knows how she feels about her, I was like ??? But I don’t!

    Also, pst, Carmen, this doesn’t have the recap tag so I couldn’t find it in the link from the top menu and, until I saw the recap for the new episode, I assumed this was just late D:

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