With the notable exception of the cool reveal at the very
end, the island scenes were more interesting than either of the main plotlines
this week, so let’s start there: Oliver, still in the clutches of Dr. Ivo,
leads his captors (Ivo, Sara, the freighter captain, and various unnamed
henchmen) to the downed plane where Shado and Slade have been staying. At Ivo’s
command, the henchmen riddle it with bullets and toss a bomb inside, then
wander off. While hiding inside the plane, Shado deactivates the bomb. Because Arrow
is a disgracefully sloppy show, neither Ivo nor any of his henchmen will bother
to wonder why the plane never explodes.
Ivo forces Oliver to take him to the cave with the skeletons
of the Japanese soldiers, then grows furious when he finds the arrowhead is
missing. As Ivo prepares to torture Oliver into giving him the arrowhead, Shado
and Slade show up, armed to the teeth, and rescue Oliver. Oliver drags an
unwilling Sara along on their escape, while Shado manages to take out some of
the henchmen by tossing their own reactivated bomb at them. This is a good
episode for Shado, by the way. She’s tough and competent, and she doesn’t get
captured and used as bait by the bad guys, so… progress! Keep it up, Arrow.
Slade’s face isn’t looking quite as handsome these days,
though he is looking more and more like his eventual alter ego, so I
suppose his injuries were unavoidable.
Present-day: Count Vertigo (Seth Gabel) escaped from the
prison during the earthquake in the Glades and is once again terrorizing
Starling City with his dangerous namesake drug and his hyper-gimmicky brand of
villainy. I’m not thrilled at revisiting this particular over-tapped well;
Gabel was great on Fringe, but after multiple appearances on Arrow,
he still hasn’t worked out that “based on a comic book” shouldn’t equal
“cartoonish”. His Count is an insufferable twit, and the ghastly quasi-English
accent he dons for the role makes matters worse. The Count sets about poisoning
random people with a souped-up, antidote-resistant version of his drug. Digg
becomes mysteriously infected with Vertigo and falls deeply ill, though his
sickness is largely ignored by Oliver, whose attention is mostly focused on
Moira’s trial for mass murder.
At the trial, Thea is called to the witness stand, where the
assistant district attorney points out that she didn’t visit her mother in
prison during Moira’s first five months of incarceration: “You blamed your
mother for what she’d done. So why shouldn’t the jury?” Everyone acts like a
fatal hole has just been poked in Moira’s case, though it’s hard to follow the
logic here. Does Moira’s lawyer really think the jury would’ve been totally
okay with Moira aiding and abetting Malcolm in the murders of 503 people
just as long as they figured her teen daughter was also totally okay with it?
I love Thea for many reasons, not the least of which is
that, while she’s super-pretty, her hair always looks wrecked. Her
inability to use a hairbrush, even for as formal an occasion as her mom’s
capital murder trial, is somehow very endearing and very plausibly
teenager-ish.
The courtroom scenes are pretty terrible—half-assed,
far-fetched, and incomprehensible—but they perk up when the assistant district
attorney collapses from the affects of Vertigo and is whisked away from the
courthouse in an ambulance driven by the Count. The Count commandeers all
television broadcasts throughout Starling City (très Joker), in which he terrorizes the ADA while revealing his dastardly plan to get
everyone in Starling City addicted to his drug.
With the ADA out of the picture (he’ll be out of the picture
for the rest of the episode, by the way. I guess we’re supposed to assume he
eventually gets rescued? Or that the Count releases him after shooting him up with more Vertigo on live television? Or that he dies?), Laurel reluctantly takes over as the lead
prosecutor. Dude, she’s a longtime friend of the Queen family, she dated the
defendant’s son, she dated the son of the man with whom the defendant stands
accused of conspiring to commit mass murder, her father—on two separate
occasions, mind you—arrested both the defendant’s son and the
defendant’s daughter, her sister apparently died during a secret romantic tryst
with the defendant’s son… there’s no way she should be allowed anywhere
near this case. Laurel goes through the case files and discovers a bombshell:
Moira and Malcolm used to be lovers. She visits Moira in prison to warn her
against taking the stand—if she does, Laurel will be forced to use this
information against her. Laurel: “I know I could be disbarred for speaking to
you.” Well, sure, absolutely, as well you should, but Laurel, my friend,
everyone in your office—you, the district attorney, the assistant district
attorney—should also be disbarred for not recusing you from this case
due to the multiple conflicts of interest, so at this stage it’s all pretty
relative.
Moira disregards Laurel’s advice and takes the stand, the information
about her affair comes out, and everyone is suitably scandalized. And Laurel, the glamorous sad sack, feels terrible about it.
There’s not much Roy in this episode—he hovers around in the
background at the trial, and there’s a weird scene at Verdant where he gives
Thea a pair of boxing gloves and orders her to punch him repeatedly in the
chest while he makes no attempt to defend himself. Then again, it’s been strongly suggested that Roy enjoys getting hit by women, so maybe the scene
wasn’t so weird after all. Roy also crops up in the third Bose-sponsored
minisode of “Blood Rush” that aired during a commercial break, in which he
breaks into the police laboratory (which bears a bizarre resemblance to a Pret A Manger) at Felicity’s behest to destroy Oliver’s blood sample. So help me,
these minisodes have been the liveliest and freshest part of the show in recent
weeks. I feel like rushing out and buying a set of Bose headphones in
gratitude.
They store the blood samples next to the turkey-pesto baguettes. |
Since Oliver is wrapped up with the trial, and since Digg is
still dying politely in a corner somewhere, Felicity decides to track down the
Count herself. Figuring that he’s infecting people through flu shots, she
prowls around a mobile shot dispensary at night, where she’s discovered and
nabbed by the Count.
While Thea and Oliver wait for the verdict, Oliver gets a
call from the Count, who is holding Felicity captive at Queen Enterprises.
Oliver charges over to confront him. The Count gropes and fondles an obviously
terrified Felicity while she sobs and trembles. Yeah, I’m getting a little sick
of seeing frightened women—Felicity here, Laurel and the unnamed female murder
victim at the hands of Barton Mathis a few episodes back, Sara at the hands of
Dr. Ivo’s goons—sobbing while getting terrorized and threatened in a sexualized
manner by men. Knock it off, Arrow.
Oliver makes an understandable exception to his new
no-murdering policy and riddles the Count with a bunch of arrows, then rushes
back to the courthouse to hear the verdict. Despite the trial not going in her
favor (and, perhaps more to the point, despite actually being guilty as all
hell of the charges against her), Moira is found not guilty of both conspiracy
and first-degree murder.
Somewhere in the city, Alderman Blood conducts diabolical
medical experiments. It’s not entirely clear what he’s doing, but it seems like
he’s trying to create a new breed of superhumans.
(This seems as good a time as any to point this out: Over
the past several episodes, Arrow has featured snippets of news
broadcasts about a brand-new particle accelerator which is about to become
operational at S.T.A.R. Labs in Central City. This is all part of the buildup
to next episode’s introduction to Barry Allen, aka the Flash. According to the
news reports, people are hotly protesting the building of the accelerator, for
some damn fool reason. Ah… Arrow, you know particle accelerators are
pretty uncontroversial, right? I mean, sure, there was some hoopla a few years
back when people became baselessly hysterical that the Large Hadron Collider
might form world-destroying black holes, but apart from spawning some awesome memes, nothing came of that. There’s always been a malodorous whiff of “isn’t
science dangerous and scary?” wafting around Arrow—just look at Alderman
Blood and Dr. Ivo, to say nothing of this episode’s unfortunate
flu-shots-are-dangerous message—so I feel justified in assuming this plotline
will not be handled with intelligence and sober reason, and that the
particle accelerator will, in addition to giving Barry his way-cool powers, end
up stone-cold killing people left and right.)
After the verdict is read, Moira is bustled into a car and
whisked away to a remote location, where she’s confronted by… Malcolm Merlyn!
Less dead than advertised! Welcome back. Malcolm
informs Moira that he bought off the jury to get her acquitted. He also reveals
that—drum roll please—Thea is his daughter. This is definitely a cool
development, as long as everyone tries very hard not to think about Thea
putting the moves on her half-brother Tommy last season.
Sort of a dull, lazy episode, except for the great reveal at
the end, which went a long way toward redeeming it. It all balances out, sort
of.
Comments
This ep was filled with a lot of stupidity, from the lack of exploding plane, to Oliver not just shooting the Count, to him nattering on about the hoison (sp?) in front of Sara, who fricking set him up last episode just to get this exact thing... dude, Oliver, you have a short memory. And let's read the coordinates off outloud, while we're at it.
But! The ending reveal was indeed quite cool, and did nearly make up for the rest of the mushpot. If the show can have moments of brilliance, why can't it be more consistent about it?
Also, Felicity's still moping. Stop that already. And yeah, what's up with the ignoring Digg while he nearly dies thing? Not very pleased with that.
Crap episode, great ending. Let's find some middle ground, shall we, Arrow?