TV Review: HOW TO GET AWAY WITH MURDER: Season 3, Episode 7: Call It Mother’s Intuition [ABC]

Jack Falahee Matt McGorry Aja Naomi King Alfred Enoch How To Get Away With Murder

How To Get Away With Murder Call It Mother’s Intuition Review

How To Get Away With Murder: Season 3, Episode 7: Call It Mother’s Intuition isn’t the most stellar episode but it builds up a suitable amount of suspense for next week’s reveal.

What Thursday night’s show has going for it is that the multiple storylines covered in it are all interesting in their own ways: where it fails is that none of them really coalesce together into something bigger. On its own this wouldn’t necessarily be a bad thing, but in the context of the season’s framing device it can’t help but detract from the quality of the episode. Due to the serviceable quality of the stories however, the show manages to impress on several occasions.

The most noteworthy example of these stand-out moments is when the Keating Five, panicked that the police might come after them due to Wes (Alfred Enoch) providing false information after Annalise (Viola Davis) lied to him, blow up on her. One by one, they call her out on her posturing, with Laurel (Karla Souza) saying there are times she feels like prison would be preferable to what she’s doing now and Michaela (Aja Naomi King) confessing to feeling sick that there is a part of her that still admires her.

Compared to what Wes does though, their comments are almost celebratory: fed up with her lies and evasions, he brokers a deal with law enforcement to “take her down”. Whether this means Wes is the member who gets killed next episode or not will remain a mystery until next Thursday.

Leave your thoughts on this How To Get Away With Murder review and this episode of How To Get Away With Murder in the comments section. Readers seeking more TV show reviews can visit our TV Show Review Page, our TV Show Review Twitter Page, our TV Show Review Facebook Page, and our TV Show Review Google+ Page. Want up-to-the-minute notification? FilmBook staff members publish articles by Email, Twitter, Tumblr, Google+, and Facebook.

Exit mobile version