Don't Hate the Player
"Don't Hate the Player" is the sixth episode in the third season of the science fiction television series Warehouse 13. It originally aired on SyFy in the United States on August 15, 2011.
"Don't Hate the Player" | |
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Warehouse 13 episode | |
Episode no. | Season 3 Episode 6 |
Directed by | Chris Fisher |
Written by | Ian Stokes |
Original air date | August 15, 2011 |
Guest appearance(s) | |
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Plot
Claudia and Pete are preparing for a night of inventory. Pete tells Claudia that she should play her guitar at the venue sometime, when her phone rings. The call is from a frantic man who tells her Douglas Fargo relayed her number in case anything went wrong with the beta test. Claudia, Pete and Myka rush to Palo Alto, California to find Fargo and another man, Jerry, plugged into a machine. Gibson, the person who called Claudia, explains that it is a virtual game that malfunctioned; they are now stuck in the game. The men used Beatrix Potter's tea set (an artifact) to make the game work properly.
Claudia and Pete enter the game as characters, an elf and a gladiator, respectively, to rescue the two players. They discover the game is a medieval version of Warehouse 13, complete with a rhyming Artie who sends them on a quest to save a princess and a Leena character. They rescue Fargo from quicksand, only to meet an axe–wielding monster who traps them in the game by taking their controllers. Deciding the only way to escape the game is to finish it, they set out to rescue the princess. The game, however, does not end when they save the princess, a ditzy version of Claudia. As they discover at this point, Jerry is whisked off by the monster.
Back in reality, Myka discovers that Beatrix Potter's tea set takes their fears and makes them real in the game. The monster is Jerry's ex-girlfriend, Hannah, to whom he was afraid to propose. Claudia's fear finds her in a mental institution where a doctor tells her she imagined the Warehouse and everyone in it. Ultimately, Myka and Claudia realize the players can only destroy their own fears. Claudia turns an electroshock device on her doctor, and they track down Hannah and send her in so Jerry can propose to the monster, ending the game.
In the 'B' plot, Artie and Steve Jinks investigate a mysterious suicide at the request of FBI agent Sally Stukowski. A new painting in the gallery is a lost Van Gogh, which Artie thinks is an artifact because "death follows it." Later that night, Jinks and Artie break into the gallery, only to find Stukowski waiting for them. They replace the Van Gogh with one they have copied, then discover the painting is activated by a puff of air after Stukowski sneezes on it and she and Jinks are thrown across the room by a violent wind. The device used to disable the alarm fails, sounding the alarm. Stukowski escapes with the original Van Gogh before the doors shut, leaving Artie and Jinks to be arrested by the police.
After their arrest, Stukowski realizes Artie and Jinks are from the police and returns the painting. Once Artie and Jinks leave, Stukowski receives a nod of acknowledgement from a mysterious stranger (Sasha Roiz) and is later seen reporting to an unseen man in a wheelchair. Back at the Warehouse, small fly-like robots emerge from the painting and fly off without explanation. The episode ends with Claudia playing the guitar in the club, as a slow-motion montage of the cast plays on screen.
Crossovers from Eureka
Warehouse 13 is part of Syfy's shared fictional universe: Don't Hate the Player is one of three episodes with characters crossing over from Eureka. Douglas Fargo (played by Neil Grayston) is a main character in Eureka.
Artifacts
- Beatrix Potter's tea set – drinking the tea from the set stimulates the precuneus section of the brain, causing the drinker to live his worst fears.
- Vincent van Gogh's missing painting, A Stormy Night – when a gust of wind (such as Sally Stukowski sneezing) touches the canvas, the depicted storm comes to life and blows gale-force winds from the painting.
- Studio 54 Disco Ball (unused as artifact) – used to chain "Leena of the Eagle People" to the ground. Not its primary function.
- "Memory Paper" from Johannes Gutenberg's printing press – Artie uses a sheet of this paper to create a replica of the Stormy Night painting. Per Artie, the replication properties of the paper are so precise that "not even Van Gogh himself would know the difference."
- Steampunk Password Cracker – frequently used piece of Artie's travel bag; in this episode, Artie uses it to disable the security gate in the art gallery.
- Eclipse – disables security and alarm systems for forty-two minutes and fifty-nine seconds, the length of time in which a portion of the moon is darkened rotating away from the sun. (It is also the length of Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon.)
- Nanotechnology insects – tiny robots which Sally Stukowski planted in the canvas of the Stormy Night painting before returning it to Artie and Steve. Once the painting is hung in the Warehouse, the insects break out of the painting and infiltrate the Warehouse computer system.
Music
- "Where is My Mind?" covered by Allison Scagliotti
- Gerald Fried's 'Kirk's fight music' from the Star Trek episode "Amok Time"
Critical reaction
The episode received mostly positive reviews from critics and viewers. ScienceFiction.com praised it, summing up by saying, "It’s really no wonder at all why this is SyFy’s Golden Child scripted show!"[1] Robwillreview.com went as far as to comment, that this episode was part of "a season that has been full of fantastic episodes...the most purely delightful installment of the series we’ve had".[2] Io9 praised all of the many geek culture references in it and loved the video game idea. They described it as "enough nerd candy to give you geek diabetes. In a good way."[3] The first person shooter views were praised by most reviewers as "a brilliant move".[4] One negative review came from IGN, which wrote, "It tries, and fails, to be a fun video game homage." Other negative aspects included the effect used inside the video game, which was called "distracting".
All reviewers agreed that Allison Scagliotti "practically steals the episode". Her character performances, from the ditsy princess to the screaming, terrified mental patient, were highly praised. Most labelled her as the episode's stand-out performer. Even the highly critical IGN reviewer admitted that her guitar performance was "actually quite respectable".[5] Overall, most viewers commented that it was an excellent episode, with Scagliotti standing out.
References
- "'Warehouse 13: Don't Hate The Player' – Recap". sciencefiction.com.
- "Welcome robwillreview.com - BlueHost.com". robwillreview.com. Archived from the original on 2011-11-28.
- Charlie Jane Anders. "Warehouse 13 proves that nerd candy can be incredibly nourishing". io9.
- TV Freak. "Warehouse 13". TV Fanatic.
- "Warehouse 13: "Don't Hate the Player" Review". IGN.