This season, I’m going to try recapping The CW’s Arrow.
Fair warning: It may not work out. This site is littered with the rotting,
forgotten carcasses of shows I started reviewing, then abandoned out of
frustration or tedium, and Arrow, for all its strengths, is wholly
capable of being both frustrating and tedious. We’ll see how this goes.
After a critically and commercially successful first season,
Arrow kicked off Season Two earlier this month. Developed by Greg
Berlanti, Marc Guggenheim and Andrew Kreisberg, Arrow centers around the
DC Comics superhero Green Arrow, though it’s more of a reimagining of the
source material than a faithful adaptation. While it’s got some problem areas,
the show is pretty enjoyable overall, with some cool visuals and evocative
themes, and it has the potential to evolve into something great.
Arrow has a large and unwieldy cast. Let’s meet our
main players. Spoiler warnings for the complete first season:
Oliver Queen (Stephen Amell)
Billionaire scion of the disreputable Queen family. A big,
handsome, meaty slab of blankness, Oliver spent five years shipwrecked on a
mysterious island, where he developed some super-cool fighting skills, but lost
much of his humanity. After returning to the lawless cesspool of violence and
corruption known as Starling City, Oliver created a formidable crime-fighting
alter-ego known as the Hood. In the first season, the Hood racked up a
dizzyingly high body count, though Oliver has recently vowed to cut back on the
murdering. In many ways, Oliver is a frustratingly vague and inert protagonist,
but Stephen Amell freaking nails the action scenes. He’s fast and
graceful and powerful all at once, and that makes up for a lot.
Laurel Lance (Katie Cassidy)
Oliver’s once-and-future girlfriend, Laurel is an assistant
district attorney in crime-ridden Starling City. I really, really want to like
Laurel (and not just because Katie Cassidy is David’s daughter and Shaun’s
niece, though that does suggest she’s genetically predisposed towards
awesomeness, or at least the ability to sing catchy pop tunes), but it’s an
uphill battle. On paper, we can see the bare bones of a cool character
emerging: she’s smart, she’s beautiful, she supports the legal system, she’s
trained in self-defense, and she knows her way around a shotgun. Problem is,
even after a full season, there’s not enough of a character here to like—apart
from some low-grade smarm, Laurel has yet to show much spark*. Here’s hoping
this gets addressed and fixed in season two.
*To be fair to Laurel, it’s not like Oliver is a simmering
cauldron of verve and vigor, either, but at least he can point to his five
years of dehumanizing trauma on the island as an excuse for his blandness. In
any case, whenever these two star-crossed lovers share a scene, the show creaks
to a halt. The lack of a believable emotional connection between its leads is
one of Arrow’s biggest problems.
John Diggle (David Ramsey)
Oliver’s bodyguard, who becomes his partner in fighting
crime. Competent and sensible, Digg is a cool, laid-back guy who mostly flies
under the radar, but has occasional moments of hardcore awesomeness. Gets
consistently taken for granted by Oliver.
Felicity Smoak (Emily Bett Rickards)
Scene-stealing IT whiz who assists Oliver with his
crime-fighting derring-do. Smart and funny, Felicity is proof that someone
on the creative staff knows how to write decent female characters, though
Laurel and Moira and Shado would seem to suggest otherwise.
Moira Queen (Susanna Thompson)
Oliver’s mom. A spineless and unfathomably corrupt wretch of
a human being who spent five years conspiring to murder hundreds of people, all
with some vague, muddled notion of Protecting Her Family™. Moira is currently
in jail. Good.
Thea Queen (Willa Holland)
Oliver’s wild-child kid sister. Thea has never conspired to
commit mass murder, nor has she ever killed anyone in cold blood, which
automatically makes her the most likeable and relatable member of the Queen
family. She’s irresponsible and reckless and mouthy, and she and beautiful
hoodlum Roy Harper keep enthusiastically sexing each other up all over the
place, and thanks to all this, I am firmly pro-Thea.
Tommy Merlyn (Colin Donnell)
Laurel’s occasional boyfriend. Like his best friend Oliver,
Tommy is a billionaire scion with fierce daddy issues. He has a reputation
around Starling City for being a free-wheeling, high-living, scandalous bon
vivant, though we sadly see little evidence of this. Mostly, he glumly
frets about how he can’t compete with Oliver for Laurel’s heart. And then he
dies.
Quentin Lance (Paul Blackthorne)
Laurel’s overprotective dad and a detective in Starling
City’s police department. Loathes Oliver, loathes Tommy, loathes the Hood. Not
terribly competent, not terribly likeable, perpetually grumpy. However, Paul
Blackthorne was one of the few saving graces of ABC’s short-lived,
train-wreckish supernatural prime-time soap The Gates (he played a
suavely evil vampire, while his beauteous Arrow costar Colton Haynes
played a moody teen werewolf), and thus my feelings toward Quentin are mostly
warm.
Slade Wilson (Manu Bennett)
A gruff and mysterious Australian Intelligence agent who
allies himself with Oliver during his time on the island. Has awfully nice
upper arms.
Shado (Celina Jade)
A martial-arts master who teaches Oliver some mad archery
skillz whilst stranded with him on the island. Shado gets repeatedly captured
and used as a hostage by various island miscreants, which: knock it off, Arrow. It’s been established that she’s a
badass; let’s start seeing some signs of this.
Roy Harper (Colton Haynes)
A feisty young hoodlum with great cheekbones and an
impressive rap sheet. Roy spends his time romancing Thea, stealing cars,
getting beat up, and hero-worshipping the Hood. Roy is fun.
Malcolm Merlyn (John Barrowman)
Tommy’s villainous, mass-murdering dad, who has his own
dangerous secret identity: He’s the Dark Archer, a bigger, stronger, meaner
version of the Hood. John Barrowman, folks. I mean, John Barrowman.
The Story Thus Far:
Five years ago: Billionaire Robert Queen, CEO of Queen
Consolidated, sets sail from Starling City to China. His shiftless twentysomething
son, Oliver, tags along for the ride, accompanied by Sarah Lance, the younger
sister of his steady girlfriend, Laurel. An explosion sinks the boat, killing
Sarah and most of the crew. Robert and Oliver make it to a life raft, along
with another crew member. After floating adrift at sea for days, Robert murders
the crew member and shoots himself in the head, all to improve Oliver’s chances
of reaching land before supplies run out.
(Oliver likes to wax philosophic about how his father
sacrificed himself so he might live. We’re into the second season now, and I’m still
waiting for Oliver to acknowledge that murdering that poor crew member was,
like, morally wrong or whatever. I suspect I’ll be waiting a while. Oliver’s
moral compass is in need of realignment.)
Oliver makes his way to a mysterious island, where he’s
taken under the wing of an exiled Chinese military officer, Yao Fei (Byron
Mann, aka Ryu in Street Fighter, the very best gleefully terrible
mid-nineties film based on an old arcade game, edging out such formidable
competition as Mortal Kombat, Double Dragon, and yes, even Super
Mario Bros). While dodging various hostile factions on the island, Oliver
teams up with Yao Fei’s daughter, Shado, and Slade Wilson, an Australian secret
agent, both of whom teach him the skills he needs to survive in this dangerous
environment… look, let’s just move on, because no one cares about the
island plotline. All episodes, which are primarily set in present-day Starling
City, are peppered with multiple flashbacks to Oliver’s time on the island,
which means we’re deluged with scenes of Oliver training in archery,
hand-to-hand combat, etcetera, all of which: a) are repetitive and dull, and b)
suck valuable momentum away from the action taking place in the present.
(I understand that Oliver’s island training is crucial to
Green Arrow’s origin story. I get that, I do. Still, wouldn’t it have been far
cooler if the island flashbacks were omitted entirely, and the question of how
Oliver picked up his sweet new skills—his prowess with a bow and arrow, his
knowledge of martial arts, his fluency in Chinese and Russian—during his
missing years was left as a big, tantalizing mystery?)
Present day: Following his eventual rescue from the island,
Oliver returns home, hardened yet purposeless. His father kept a secret
notebook filled with the names of Starling City’s most corrupt citizens: drug
dealers, crime bosses, slumlords, embezzlers. Determined to clean up the city,
Oliver creates a secret identity, that of a leather-clad, bow-wielding
vigilante known as the Hood, and systematically murders his way down the list
of names. He recruits a pair of accomplices: Digg, a former soldier set on
avenging his brother’s death at the hands of an assassin named Deadshot, and
Felicity, the sharpest employee in Queen Consolidated’s IT department. They set
up a cool superhero lair in the basement of Verdant, a sleek nightclub that
Oliver runs to help maintain his outward appearance of a shallow, dissolute
trust-fund baby.
As the Hood, Oliver runs afoul of corrupt billionaire
Malcolm Merlyn, who has spent the past five years conspiring with other members
of the wealthy elite, Oliver’s mother Moira chief among them, on a plot to
generate an earthquake destructive enough to obliterate the Glades, Starling
City’s most crime-ridden neighborhood. At the last moment, Moira’s conscience
finally kicks in, and she calls a press conference to expose Malcolm’s plan.
The Hood battles Malcolm’s alter ego, the Dark Archer, and ultimately prevails,
though he’s too late to stop the activation of the seismic device. Hundreds of
people in the Glades are killed, including Malcolm’s son Tommy, who dies while
rescuing Laurel at the climax of the first season.
The creative minds behind Arrow have done a top-notch
job of establishing Starling City as a believable setting for all this. The
downtown skyline is a triumph of CGI, filled with glittering skyscrapers that
radiate wealth and vibrancy, in stark contrast to the rest of the city, which
is a mess of abandoned construction sites and burned-out cars and boarded-up
houses. Arrow’s primary theme (fittingly, considering Green Arrow’s
Robin Hood-inspired roots) is the dichotomy between the rich and the poor, and
the problems this imbalance creates. In Starling City, the wealthy elite are
waging outright war on the impoverished (the 1% battling the 99%, if you will),
seen most clearly in Malcolm Merlyn’s destruction of the Glades, which is done
with the support of Starling City’s most powerful leaders. Malcolm is motivated
by vengeance: His wife was murdered in the Glades, and thus he wants to wipe
the entire neighborhood off the map. Robert and Moira Queen, on the other hand,
are motivated by cowardice and moral weakness: After accidentally killing
someone, Robert allowed himself to be blackmailed into supporting Malcolm’s
attempt at mass murder, whereas Moira cooperated out of fear. (In an attempt to
break free of Malcolm’s grip, Moira and a business associate send an assassin
after him. When the attempt backfires, she feigns innocence and rats out her
associate, whom Malcolm promptly murders. The Queens are awful people.)
Oliver’s vigilante escapades, on the other hand, don’t
appear to be motivated by much of anything, apart from maybe a hazy desire to
mete out justice. Or perhaps he just really likes killing people—it’s sometimes
hard to figure out what’s going on in Oliver’s head. To survive on the island,
he was forced to shed his entitled rich-kid skin, and now that he’s
returned to his old life, he hasn’t yet figured out who he should become when
he’s not the Hood. His odd blankness makes sense for the character, given what
he’s been through, but it also makes him a frustrating protagonist. Oliver is
mostly defined by what he’s not: He’s not smart, he’s not witty, he’s not
compassionate, he’s not goofy, he’s not really… anything. He’s great at
killing, and that’s about it.
Despite having a cast comprised of young, attractive people,
all of whom clearly spend lots and lots of hours in the gym, Arrow is
curiously sexless and dour when it comes to romance. In the Arrow
universe, romantic pairings are a smorgasbord of disappointment and secrets and
squabbles and injured feelings. Here’s a rundown of all the glum, listless
hookups featured on the show thus far: Oliver and Laurel, Laurel and Tommy,
Oliver and Shado, Oliver and Helena Bertinelli, Oliver and Detective McKenna
Hall, Moira and Walter Steele, and Digg and Carly. Arrow has some good
writers, but damn, they take a sour view of relationships. The only not-awful
romance thus far is the fun, lively dynamic between pampered princess Thea
Queen and bad-boy Roy Harper (they have a meet-cute in the Glades when Roy
steals Thea’s purse, then gets stabbed while protecting her from a gang of
thugs). They’re cute and peppy and seem to genuinely enjoy each other’s
company, and as the great poet Rick Springfield once said, ain’t that the way
love’s supposed to be? If Roy and Thea were to spin off into their own series
(the Joanie Loves Chachi to Arrow’s Happy Days, natch), in
which they fight crime with equal parts enthusiasm and incompetence while
engaging in giggly banter and having a lot of really great sex, I would watch
the hell out of it.
(Speaking of Roy… Poaching Colton Haynes from Teen Wolf
may be the shrewdest casting move Arrow has made thus far, because the
kid has added a much-needed jolt of adrenaline to the show. Haynes was
downright mesmerizing on Teen Wolf as the damaged, toxic, hilariously
pissy Jackson, who stole scenes with every eye roll and nostril flare and
hissed line of dialogue. Haynes is a live wire, which is good news, because Arrow’s
cast features a number of actors who keep sleepwalking through their scenes. It
makes me worry about the quality of the coffee on the craft services table on
the show’s Vancouver set.)
Heading into Season Two, with Tommy and Malcolm dead, the
Glades in shambles, Moira in prison, and Oliver making a game attempt at being
the kind of vigilante who doesn’t murder everyone in sight, Arrow’s
in decent, if imperfect, shape. I’m in for the ride.
(I’ll try to crank out the first few recaps of Season Two
next week and get all caught up by the time the fourth episode airs. No
promises, though. I’m very lazy.)
Comments
If nothing else, with all these pretty people running around doing what I'm almost certain is nonsense, Arrow would make wonderful wallpaper while you read The Longbow Hunters or something.
http://paparazzigossipnews.blogspot.com.au/2013/02/tvline-arrow-fave-on-felicitys-smoakin.html
Overall, I quite enjoyed season one. Hooked me right away. I love Felicity and Thea and Roy and Diggle and Slade (yowza, is he good-looking!) and Walter... and to my great surprise, as he isn't the type of character I usually fall for, I rather fell in love with Tommy. Under-utilized and turned into victim by the writers (stupid choice), but still, he ended up being my favorite character. And from the second or third ep, I was like, oh, he's so toast by the end of this season... and damn it, I was right and they did kill him off. Maybe because he had more growth than most of the other characters, and him telling his father off on his birthday night might be my favorite moment. Anyway, he was rather adorable, sweet and sassy, and has the moral center Oliver is lacking. I kind of want to bring him home with me.
Moira... wow, you summed her up precisely. What a piece of work she was.
I think the only thing I disagree on is that I actually liked the flashbacks, and in some eps was more into what was happening there than current day. That could be because that's where Slade is, and there's not enough of him otherwise.
Okay, now ready to move on to Season 2!
Oh, yeah, Slade is far and away the best thing about the island. Love him, and I like what he brings out in Oliver.
I've read recaps on two other sites, both of which despise Thea and love Moira, which is the kind of thing that makes me wonder which show I've been watching. Moira's so spineless. Drives me crazy.
(True confession: I started watching Arrow almost entirely for Colton Haynes--Roy--who was astonishingly good as a villain--hilarious and damaged and tragic and vicious all at once--on Teen Wolf. The kid might be the very best Abercrombie & Fitch model-turned-actor out there.)
Anyway. Season Two is still maintaining that queasy relationship between awesome stuff and mediocre stuff. I'm still optimistic it'll fully commit to awesomeness at some point.
I may have to give Teen Wolf a try, cuz, yeah, Colton Haynes is so much fun here, I'd like to see him in something else.
Oh, Teen Wolf. It can be pretty awful (hint: if you start watching it -- it's streaming on Netflix! -- just skip the pilot episode entirely. You won't miss anything), but there's something about those first two seasons that resonates very deeply with my soul. Part of it is that it's executive produced/directed by the great Russell Mulcahy, which means it has the glossy look of a vintage Duran Duran video, and part of it is Colton. He started out quietly in the first couple of episodes, playing a rich, popular, beautiful, nasty jock (which is always fun in its own way -- in a 1980s movie, his character would be played by James Spader or Billy Zabka), and then by the fourth or fifth episode, he becomes amazing. It's one of those performances that, for whatever combination of reasons, managed to get under my skin and stick with me. And once he left Teen Wolf at the end of the second season, all the life drained out of the show.