SEAL Team Season 7 Episode 8 Review: Appetite for Destruction

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SEAL Team Season 7 Episode 8 Review: Appetite for Destruction


Critic’s Rating: 4.5 / 5.0

4.5

We’re two episodes out from the series finale, and things are finally beginning to take shape.

Jason was out for blood on SEAL Team Season 7 Episode 8, which gave Ray even greater pause about his looming retirement.

“Appetite for Destruction” is an intense hour that still finds time for the team’s softer side and goes to great lengths to mold the future.

(Pablo Arellano Spataro/Paramount+)

Old-School Bravo Behavior

The latest op provides an opportunity for Lisa to join Bravo in the field and gives Drew his first taste of Bravo at its best.

Drew has only heard tales about Bravo and Jason Hayes. Sure, he’s been a (reluctant) part of the team all season, but Jason hasn’t been himself. For this episode, at least, he’s even more than himself.

It’s been a while since we’ve seen genuine camaraderie during an op. This time, nobody was trying to one-up each other for the best bunk or seething inside while melting on the outside.

They did normal things, like stocking the kitchen and razzing one another about silly things.

Even better, Jason stopped treating Drew with kid gloves.

(Pablo Arellano Spataro/Paramount+)

Skinemax, Not Hardcore Jason

Although Drew was impressed seeing the real Jason for the first time, Omar was quick to point out that he saw the Skinemax version, and hardcore Jason had yet to make an appearance.

I think we can say that by the end of the hour, hardcore Jason had returned. He even managed to scare the hell out of Drew, which is a mean feat in itself.

Drew is a tough guy, just like Jason. His antics with their target proved that when he played the role of a drunk tourist to create a diversion for the team.

But Jason took things even further when he walked into a very risky situation at the junkyard and flattened everyone without a second thought.

Since he was asked to keep things on the down low, that was a bold move that caught Drew off-guard. It’s hard to tell how much of this is old Jason returning and how much is fearful father Jason getting his revenge on the drug trade.

They work well hand-in-hand, but those kinds of risks can get people killed. Hot-headed Jason isn’t as welcome as hard-as-nails Jason, who skirts the rules without entirely breaking them.

(Pablo Arellano Spataro/Paramount+)

Jason and Ray Connect on the Real Issues

Until this episode, I didn’t realize how far removed from each other Ray and Jason had become.

This season feels like it’s barely started, and we’re already nearing the end.

Early on, Jason couldn’t figure out why Ray was taking chances on an op when he was so close to retirement, and Ray countered that he wondered why Jason was so trigger-happy when he was just scrapping plans for fear of getting people killed.

(Pablo Arellano Spataro/Paramount+)

Jason’s Parenting Fears

In earlier seasons, Jason and Ray were as Bravo 1 and 2 as you could get. They were partners on the team and in life. They knew all of each other’s secrets. How did that change?

Jason has been so inside of his own head that he’s left Ray dangling on a thread. Ray had no idea Jason blamed himself for Mikey’s overdose. I don’t even think he knew Mikey ODed.

What I found most interesting about their chat was that Ray didn’t try to sway Jason away from how he felt about his parenting skills. Instead, he just commiserated. Maybe that’s what Jason needs.

Mandy is trying to make Jason see reason. Ray just listened. Sometimes, that’s all it takes to get through to someone.

Jason thought he was following Ray’s lead to find balance in life, but he thought it was no longer possible to achieve that goal.

(Pablo Arellano Spataro/Paramount+)

Ray’s Uncertain Future

If Ray was in the dark about Jason, Jason was in the dark about Ray, too.

Omar admitted that the longer Ray hangs around, the worse he feels about his own future. He has no idea where his place is, and that’s something Ray understands all too well.

The irony of Jason’s feelings about work-life balance was that Ray was quiet about Spencer House because he didn’t want his brothers to lose their unicorn. Ray was busy representing the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow when, in reality, he was stuck on that rainbow without a place to land.

Everyone sees Spencer House as the pot of gold except Ray. Ray feels arrogant for believing he could walk away from all of this clean. Admitting that was too hard to do.

While they didn’t have answers for each other, at least they weren’t alone anymore. And, well, as the hour ended, it all started to make sense. But we’re not quite to that part of the conversation yet.

(Pablo Arellano Spataro/Paramount+)

Getting to Know Omar

Better late than never, I guess.

Omar’s personal backstory is tragic. Like many others in this profession, he fell down the neck of bottle and lost his wife and his son.

His wife married a dude from Foxtrot who raises his kid as his own. Omar straightened up and decided not to shake up his kid’s world, choosing instead to send periodic gifts from Uncle Omar.

No wonder he’s so anxious about Ray sticking around. Ray IS Omar’s unicorn. He’s got a great family and a future outside of Bravo, while Omar has nothing but the job.

That could have provided a lot of storytelling opportunities for SEAL Team Season 7.

I guess we’ll never know why his backstory was unworthy of exploration and pushed aside for Drew, but I did appreciate getting to know him a little bit better.

(Pablo Arellano Spataro/Paramount+)

Lisa and Sonny Play Lovers

Get a room, you two!

Omar and Drew weren’t around when Lisa was a more integral part of Bravo, so they were in the dark about Sonny and Lisa’s past. But once Lisa was under the same roof, it was impossible not to see the sparks flying.

Lisa does everything she can to distance herself from Sonny, but it never works. Sonny would give his eyeteeth for a future with that woman, and I’m closer to believing that’s exactly what he’ll do.

(Pablo Arellano Spataro/Paramount+)

Jason asked them to play a couple, and I wondered how much dancing they’d done together. How much of their dance was keeping each other at a distance and how much allowed them to explore the possibilities of a life together?

The writers weren’t being coy about one or the other of them letting go of their Naval futures to begin a life together.

Lisa was on the op because she was in the doghouse over what transpired with the now-general. Someone is going to have to pay for that mistake.

She is adamant that she won’t let Sonny give up his trident to save her, but the look he has on his face says that she is more important than that trident.

Maybe that’s why Sonny is taking his kit to investors. Could he be imagining a future where he stops kicking doors?

(Trae Patton/Paramount+)

Curtis Opened the Door, and Bravo Will Close It

All of this begins to make sense when it’s revealed that Curtis is cavorting with the enemy.

Curtis came into SEAL Team Season 7 with the notion that there isn’t a chance anybody in Bravo will attain the dream of a balanced life.

It was his yammering that set everyone on edge and made them question their futures. Curtis is a bonafide war hero. If he can’t get it right, then who are they to think they can?

It turns out that what he saw of Bravo might have turned him green with jealousy. It wasn’t so much that they couldn’t reach that pot of gold but that he failed to do it himself. You know the old saying — misery loves company.

It’s ironic that Bravo is so misunderstood from the outside that nobody spots that these guys would rather be miserable alone than bring their brothers down with them. That’s evident from everything else we discussed in this review.

Will we discover why Curtis turned to the dark side? I don’t think it matters. What does matter is that everyone who fell for his schtick is shaken enough by this discovery to fall back into line.

(Pablo Arellano Spataro/Paramount+)

An Old-Fashioned SEAL Team Ending

Oh, how I’ve missed ending episodes right in the middle of an intense scene.

It was terrific to be thrown right back into the action again with real stakes. SEALs doing what SEALs do — green face, slinking through the jungle. It was good stuff.

Still, I did have a few quibbles. Do they always walk standing up when a combatant is mere feet away? Lisa said communications were difficult given the terrain, but she had a perfect bird’s-eye view of the action. Why didn’t the bullets pierce that rubber boat?

But that’s small potatoes compared to the characters beginning to act like themselves again. There’s a lot of ground to cover in the next two episodes.

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