Slade Wilson, everyone. Slade Wilson.
So Slade picks up Thea, who is heartbroken and morose after
her breakup with Roy. Slade seems kindly and sympathetic at first, acting like
everybody’s favorite uncle and telling her, “Heartbreak is something I know all
too well.” Then he stops the car in a dark alley somewhere and orders her out.
Shocked, Thea runs for it… and promptly gets nabbed by Sebastian Blood.
Total dick move, Slade. I approve.
Unaware of Thea’s current predicament, Oliver puts in a rare
appearance at a Queen Consolidated board meeting. Since Oliver has been a
ridiculous disaster as a CEO, Isabelle Rochev has been quietly keeping the
company afloat in his absence. Isabelle! Good to see you! Where’ve you been,
girl? I thought this show completely forgot you existed.
Moira pops up at Queen Consolidated to browbeat Oliver into
attending her upcoming mayoral debate against Sebastian. She offhandedly
mentions that Thea seems to have disappeared, though neither she nor Oliver
think this is any cause for concern. Er… let’s examine this for a second: Thea
was last seen walking home alone at night from Verdant, smack in the middle of
the crime-ridden Glades, distraught over Roy. She’s either been living with
Roy, or she’s still living with Moira at the mansion, and since she obviously
didn’t spend the night at either of those places, and since Oliver knows full
well Slade might target her, why aren’t warning bells going off right about
now?
In any case, both Moira and Oliver forget all about Thea,
apart from grousing a bit about her unreliability when she fails to show up for
the debate. The debate is kind of a mess: both Sebastian and Moira keep
interrupting and talking over each other in clear violation of established
political-debate protocol, and then the whole shindig comes to a dramatic halt
when someone airs a creepy video of a panicky, teary Thea at the mercy of an
armor-clad Slade.
Everyone—Oliver, Digg, Felicity, Roy, Moira, Isabelle,
Quentin, assorted SCPD officers—assembles at Queen Consolidated for an
emergency summit about Thea’s kidnapping. Preoccupied with concern about Thea’s
predicament, Oliver, the dumb bunny, temporarily signs away all his rights as
CEO to Isabelle. You know, the woman who tried to steal his company from him in the season premiere?
I wish I could say this was Oliver’s single biggest blunder
in this episode.
After Felicity locates Slade via the GPS on his rental car,
Oliver, Roy and Sara head out to take him down. Oliver, who is chock full of
crappy decisions, urges Roy to give in to his mirakuru-enhanced rage.
Roy ineffectually punches Slade in the kisser, and then Oliver shoots Slade in
the chest with a poison arrow (an arrow filled with the super-deadly venom of a
Tibetan pit viper, to be exact—thank you, Sara). In yet another monstrously
ill-advised decision, he then calls Quentin Lance and asks him to arrest the
temporarily-incapacitated Slade. Who, of course, has super-strength and
invulnerability and thus could break out of his handcuffs, slaughter everyone,
and waltz out of the police station any time he wishes, so hooray for the
super-awesome plan, Oliver! At the station, Oliver slips into the interrogation
room to beg Slade to release Thea.
It will no doubt shock you to hear that this strategy proves
ineffective.
Anyway, it turns out Slade has a concrete alibi—apparently
he’d been in Costa Rica for the past three days and thus couldn’t have
kidnapped Thea—so grouchy Lieutenant Pike releases him from custody and rips
Quentin a new one for conspiring with the Arrow to arrest Slade without any
evidence. Slade magnanimously urges Pike to go easy on Quentin: “I’m not one to
hold a grudge.”
Heh. Good one, Slade.
As soon as Slade leaves the police station, Felicity, Digg,
Sara and Roy secretly trail him, hoping he’ll lead them to Thea. In rapid
succession, they all manage to get outwitted and outmaneuvered. This is
downright embarrassing, guys.
No doubt realizing that kidnapping and terrorizing a
heartbroken teen girl might not be his finest moment, Slade, the big softy,
lets Thea go. First, though, he spills the beans about the big secret that
Oliver and Moira have been keeping from her, i.e. that she’s Malcolm Merlyn’s
daughter.
Island flashbacks: Sara prepares to hand an unconscious
Hendriks over to Slade in return for Oliver. Some of the released prisoners from
the freighter object to this, insisting that Slade will murder Hendriks as soon
as the freighter’s engine is fixed. While I’m not sold on this logic—Slade has
no specific vendetta against Hendriks, and all things being equal, wouldn’t you
want to have a competent engineer on board, alive and unharmed, just in case
the engine fails again?—but the point is well taken that Sara is prioritizing
Oliver’s life above Hendriks’s. Sara then shows exactly how little she values
Hendriks’s life when she proposes strapping dynamite to him and blowing him up
after handing him off to Slade. The trade goes as planned—Slade exchanges
Oliver (he throws in Dr. Ivo as an unwanted bonus) for Hendriks—but Sara’s
scheme backfires when Slade uses his mirakuru-enhanced senses to sniff
out the dynamite (I’m relatively certain the writers pulled this “mirakuru
heightens all the senses” concept out of their collective asses just for this
moment, but whatever). Slade is all stoked at the idea of slaughtering
everyone, but a weirdly smug and malevolent ghostly vision of Shado appears to
him and advises him to leave Sara and Oliver to die on the island.
Back in the lair beneath Verdant, Roy, who is still hopped
up on the effects of the mirakuru, gets tantrummy and vicious,
trash-talking Oliver for all the disastrous decisions he’s made lately. While I
adore Roy, and while he’s absolutely right about Oliver making some terrible
blunders this episode, I’m downright sick of his rage-induced hissyfits in
recent episodes. Roy is a delightful character when he’s not being a surly
twerp. Anyway, Roy hurls venom and abuse at everyone for a while, then he
roughs up Diggle and flounces off in a huff.
Meanwhile, Oliver discovers Isabelle secretly assembled his
Board of Directors for an emergency meeting, at which the board elected her as
the new permanent CEO, thus cutting Oliver out of the picture. Isabelle: “I’d
say they lost faith in your leadership, but unfortunately, there wasn’t any.”
The thing I like best about this episode is the way Oliver gets called on the
carpet, comprehensively and repeatedly, for all his bullshit. Lying to Thea,
neglecting his corporation, doing a half-assed job of training Roy, all of that
comes back to bite him in the ass.
Oliver figures out that Isabelle has been in cahoots with
Slade from the start—her attempted takeover of Oliver’s company at the
beginning of the season was orchestrated by Slade specifically to lure Oliver
back to Starling City. Oliver and Isabelle beat each other up a bit, then
Oliver pins her down on the table and threatens to kill her with his bare hands
unless she tells him where Slade is keeping Thea.
So, just to recap, in his relentless quest to find his kid
sister, Oliver lets the Starling City cops handle big, meaty, super-powered,
invulnerable Slade, but beats up and threatens a very small woman himself.
Heroic.
Isabelle tells Oliver that Slade’s keeping Thea at an empty
warehouse. When Oliver shows up, he’s attacked by various low-level flunkies.
Slade, meanwhile, dons his full Deathstroke armor and releases a busload of
prisoners being transferred to the newly-rebuilt maximum-security prison, whom
he then recruits for his own dastardly purposes.
Upon being released by Slade, Thea makes her way to the
police station. She’s furious with Oliver and Moira for hiding secrets
from her. Oliver insists he was trying to keep her safe; Thea’s having none of
it. And then everyone lets the traumatized kidnapping victim, who was snatched
off of the dark and dangerous streets of Starling City while walking by herself
just the previous night and whose kidnapper is still at large, walk home alone
at night again.
Good job, everyone! If Slade were in a really
self-amusing mood, he’d kidnap Thea again.
Roy watches Thea from the shadows, then takes off by
himself, driving out of Starling City in what is almost certainly a stolen car.
Not sure where his plotline is going, exactly, but I’m hoping it involves
finding some way to get rid of the mirakuru in his system.
And even though it turned out that Quentin and the Arrow
were 100% right about Slade being the kidnapper, grouchy Lieutenant Pike
decides to turn a potential PR kerfluffle into an outright disaster by throwing
Quentin in jail for… arresting the right suspect?
Slade, Isabelle and Sebastian meet to discuss their
nefarious schemes: Now that Isabelle is in charge of Queen Consolidated, she’s
devoted all company resources to creating a whole mirakuru-enhanced
army. We see that Slade is still hallucinating visions of Shado even in the
present-day plotline.
Back in the lair, a glum Oliver confesses to Felicity and
Digg that he knows he botched everything across the board: He mismanaged his
company, he drove away Roy, and he alienated Thea. It’s actually a good moment
for him. I like it when Oliver becomes cognizant of the fact that he’s kind of
a douche.
And then, as the delightful cherry on the top of a pretty
solid episode, Slade forces his way into Laurel’s apartment, cheerfully informs
her that Oliver is the Arrow, and saunters off.
Well played, Mr. Wilson.
Comments
I think my favorite part of this episode (and other recent eps) is simply that with Slade around, Oliver runs around like a chicken with its head cut off. And Slade is utterly calm and in control. I love the contrast. I just love how easily Slade makes Oliver panic. In this episode in particular, Oliver's really flying this way and that. I love him signing away his company, cuz 1) he's never been good at business anywa, 2) he seems to trust any chick he's slept with, and 3) he has never been good about thinking things through. Consequences? What consequences?
And Slade... oh Slade, how I love you. Just so calm and enjoying messing with people (secret-dropping) while working on his own agenda. Now here's a guy who can properly multitask while being chased.
But yeah... just let Thea wander around at night not once but twice? I chalk it up to Oliver still failing to think things through. I did like how Thea ignored Moira completely in that last scene. Would not look at her or address her. That was nice. And Roy... yeah, needs to either go completely bonkers or recover from this, cuz this in-between vacilation is getting boring.
No one should ever put Oliver in charge of a corporation, ever. When it comes to business, he's flat-out incompetent.
Is it wrong that my very first thought upon Isabelle stealing the company was, "Hooray! Now Felicity is no longer stuck being his secretary!"?
No!!! It is a wonderful thought. Hopefully, the show won't go there again.