Critics’ rating: 4 / 5.0
4
The hour begins with murder and ends with a clumsy family dinner, but Power Book III: Raising Kanan Season 4 Episode 3 is slow.
This is not a slow, but it is not a good one either.
It’s just a slower set-up time, hoping to bring us closer to the meat of the season.
Unique’s plan to tighten Raq and Kanan has already begun a very easy start, i.e., because no one figured out that he was still alive.
The fixture will be the second person to recognize unique people and tell stories alive.
Although revenge has been in mind, he also tried to get his feelings back from him, which is part of the reason he went to the restaurant.
When he was left to die, everything unique lost everything and he essentially had to start over. Using a large amount of products as well as money will allow unique debts to pay off some debts and start rebuilding yourself.
At least it should.
The unique vision is cast in the shadow of the constant escape from the constant demands of Raq, and the necessity of conversation between the two people within five feet of each other would be one of the most explosive moments in Power Universe history.
Lark will have a heart attack when she sees her unique face, but she will be even more shocked to learn that he has been ruining her business, and the season starts to feel like her whole life.
There is something different about Kanan’s Lak. She was more receptive to the status quo, which was far from the past Raq, who kept making terrible decisions to put Kanan under control.
Lack finally learned that she pushed Kanan to a point where there was no reward? Or is she using their business arrangements to find a way to get back to his life, whether he likes it or not?
It is almost impossible to give the benefit of doubt because she has done a lot of suspicious things over the years without paying attention to the underlying emotional consequences.
But maybe she used to try to atone for her sins.
When he got his sober chips, she was in Lou-Lou, the last place I expected her.
In Power Book III: Raising Kanan Season 3, Raq and Lou-Lou’s relationship feels irrevocably broken, but healing and sobriety help Lou-Lou in an incalculable way.
He is able to get out of the environment, talk about difficult emotions, and most importantly, to expand his grace.
Most of Lou-Lou’s drinking was to cover up the pain he felt. Even if his main angle under influence is Lark, it is a pain caused from many different angles.
He has a clear mind and has a lot of time to accompany him, and he is now in the place he really wants to move forward.
It was important for Lark to hear what he had experienced so that she could see and understand his progress and the breaking of his life. She did play a role in it.
I’ve always liked Marvin and Raq dynamics better than Raq and Lou-Lou because Raq is surrounding them and dominating her power over them, but she tends to treat Lou-Lou more like Kanan than brothers.
At different times, Lou-Lou had few agents throughout his life.
The best thing for both of them is to get Lou-Lou out of business and find something he might be proud of. If he had never had anything to do with his previous life, he never walked out of his armed forces with Lark.
I never shy away from not completely loving the musical aspect of the series because it is always far from everything else.
Power Universe likes to have many different storylines at the same time, which is usually OK, but the record label and music stuff always feels a little forced and untouched.
So far, neither B-Rilla nor his journey of telling the truth through music has been shaken. But it’s nice to see Lou-Lou with a focus and driving attitude.
It looks good to him.
Do you know that it looks pretty good to someone? Singing is her real, real self.
For the most part, Jukebox has been herself, but she is still a child and she feels the pressure of acting or being a person she is not for her peers or even parents.
Jukebox never struggles with her sexuality and knows who she is at the heart of, but that doesn’t mean she’s always in the environment where she is free to be herself.
Part of the reason she ended up leaving the army was due to how suffocating it was, which was spread all over her experience besides rampant homosexuality and violence.
Her decision was the best because she realized she would hide part of herself again to fit her surroundings. That’s not the person the jukebox wants.
I like the idea of jukeboxing and figuring out what she wants this season. It might be OK to go back to school now, maybe that’s the motivation she will eventually get to enforce the law.
Or maybe she will decide that it wasn’t what she wanted in the end, and we’ll see her in a different way, but the jukebox speed changed this season, seeing her relaxed herself more and not necessarily knowing what’s going to happen next.
One thing that all members of the Thomas family accept will not fall behind. In their own way, everyone is studying the future, and whether it is professional, personal or both, what that would be like to them.
I mentioned Power Book III: Improving Kanan Season 4 Episode 2 feels like calm before the storm because everything went too well to satisfy my preferences.
It’s not all sunshine and roses, but there’s certainly no bomb as huge as we’ve seen in the past seasons.
But only at this hour, uniquely ruined Lark’s business. Marvin lay directly on Lark’s face and the Hell’s dinner closed.
Thomas’s kids have a complex relationship with Joyce, which we see throughout the series, maybe nothing more than Lark.
Joyce’s “hard love” brand is more like disdain. She never missed any opportunity to let her children know that they were disappointed that she or not the one she needed.
As the only daughter, Raq felt about ten times more than her brother, so it was a tricky thing to hear Joyce die at a family dinner.
Her reaction was primitive and very real.
Lark often has complete control over everything, including how she feels, but she must be angry and scared at the same time, no matter how she feels about her mother.
Yes, everyone on that table is dead, but the approach to death is handled very differently when your blood involves yours.
The Thomas family is fun because it is so intimate and distant. They will die and protect each other, but they keep too much inside and not open to each other.
Joyce’s illness may force them to actually speak and be honest with each other in ways they have never had, but it may also start to become their failure.
They are known to always deal with the pain in the best way, and ultimately losing Joyce will be difficult to deal with.
Everything else you need to know


- Kanan and Krystal did not live together, but Kanan met the game in Krystal. She liked the rest of him the most throughout the series.
- We know almost nothing about O-Cee, but I do know that I’ve been fearing him in advance because unique will kill or torture that person, he doesn’t deserve it.
- It was great to see Marvin sign in on Amber. The entire Gerald business is indeed as messy as Marvin’s head.
- Speaking of Marvin, he had no one to blame except for doing things behind Lark’s back and lying to her. When she inevitably discovers these consequences, he will have to deal with them.
- I don’t think we’ve ever seen a jukebox smile, you know it won’t last, it’s both pathetic and terrible.
Well, guys, how do you think of this hour?
Is Lark’s reaction to Joyce News reasonable?
What will be next for uniqueness?
Leave all your comments below so we can talk about it!
You can watch Power Book III: Raising Kanan on Starz on Friday 8/7C.
Watch Power Book III: Raising Kanan Online
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