Sons Of Anarchy 7.5 Review - 5 Talking Points From Some Strange Eruption

The most explosive moments from the fifth episode of the final season.

€œThis war is coming to Charming now, and it€™s going to get a whole lot bloodier. Episode five is in the books, and things have spiraled even further out of control in the €œidyllic€ hamlet of Charming, California. With Diosa in ruins and a large segment of SAMCRO€™s workforce lying in the morgue, things have escalated to a level we€™ve never seen in the previous six seasons. €œSome Strange Eruption€ followed up on the events at Diosa with an intense confrontation between The Lin Triad and Jax and Chibs, (orchestrated with a little help from Charlie Barosky), the continuing saga of Gemma and Juice, an evolving romance between Chibs and Sheriff Jerry, and a high-pressure moral dilemma for Nero. We€™ve gotten the set-up out of the way and now we€™re digging in to the meat of the plot, tearing away at the story that Kurt Sutter has lain before us, likely until we€™re left with nothing more than bone when all is said and done. What we€™re watching feels like the dissolution of the Sons of Anarchy, a season where everything that possibly could go wrong, does, instead of the usual slick maneuvering and the advantage of being the smartest dogs in the yard. We€™re a little over 1/3rd of the way in now and there€™s still no clear picture of how things will play out, which is one of the reasons we love this show. Sons of Anarchy is rarely predictable and excels at delivering those gut-punch moments that completely change the face of the series, but with this being the final ride, the expectations for closure are even higher. But this isn€™t Once Upon A Time, and there aren€™t going to be any neat and tidy fairy tale endings here Let€™s take a look at 5 talking points from €œSome Strange Eruption€€
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Contributor

Brad Hamilton is a writer, musician and marketer/social media manager from Atlanta, Georgia. He's an undefeated freestyle rap battle champion, spends too little time being productive and defines himself as the literary version of Brock Lesnar.