Thanks to Isabelle’s devious machinations last episodes, the Queens are in imminent danger of losing their vast family fortune. Couldn’t happen to a better bunch of amoral jerkfaces. (Not you, Thea. You’re golden. Oliver and Moira and the late Robert Queen, though? Amoral jerkfaces, all of you). Their lawyer convinces Oliver and Moira to sign over their assets into a new trust that Isabelle can’t touch. They’ll need Thea’s signature to make it legal, which is tricky, seeing as Thea wants nothing more to do with them.
This episode seems to think viewers will feel keenly
emotionally invested in Oliver’s looming financial troubles. This episode is
dead wrong about that.
Per Moira, Robert Queen and Isabelle had an ill-fated affair
back when Isabelle was a plucky young B-school intern at Queen Consolidated,
and thus now she’s devoted her life to seeking vengeance against the remaining
Queens. Oh, yuck. Seriously, Arrow? Can’t your writers conceive of a
backstory for a powerful female character that doesn’t involve romantic
heartbreak? (See also: Helena Bertinelli.) Why couldn’t Isabelle turn out to be
evil simply because she really likes power? Why does it have to be all
about some guy?
Island flashbacks: Following Slade’s spontaneous
unanesthetized amputation of his arm, Dr. Ivo is dying from an infection. In
exchange for a quick death, he tells Sara about a mirakuru antidote he
developed, which is kept in a safe in his office on the freighter. Sara can’t
bring herself to shoot Ivo, but luckily Oliver is more than happy to do it for
her.
Adios, Ivo. Smell you later.
Team Arrow (minus Roy, who is still MIA after skipping town
last episode) arrives in their lair beneath Verdant only to find Slade, in his
full Deathstroke armor, lying in wait for them. Slade cheerfully beats the crap
out of Oliver, Sara and Diggle (Felicity prudently hides in the shadows and
thus avoids receiving a Slade-issued smackdown), then steals the all-powerful
skeleton key Felicity took from William Tockman a few episodes back and
saunters off without breaking a sweat.
Ah, Slade. Once more, you are the very best thing about this
show.
Laurel, who now knows about Oliver’s secret identity
(thanks, Slade!), takes another big step on the Redemptive Path Towards
Awesomeness by calmly gathering evidence to support Slade’s claims in a
practical and thoughtful manner. She visits Sara in the hospital, where she’s
being treated for a broken arm sustained while battling Slade. As soon as
Laurel catches a glimpse of the horrific scars on Sara’s back, which are very
similar to Oliver’s horrific scars, she pieces it all together: Sara is Black
Canary, and Oliver is indeed the Arrow. Laurel prudently keeps this information
to herself.
It happened almost too gradually to notice, but somewhere
along the way this season, Laurel became complex and interesting and likeable.
Huh. Weird.
Oliver asks Thea to sign the papers protecting their assets.
Thea, who is still furious with him for hiding the secret of her true parentage
from her, is having none of it. She’s in the middle of a full-scale meltdown,
since having Malcolm as her dad means she’s the child of not one but two
mass murderers. Also? It means she and Tommy were blood relatives: “I tried to
kiss my half-brother!”
Guessing that Slade plans to use Queen Consolidated’s
industrial centrifuge to mass-produce the mirakuru in his blood, Oliver,
Digg, Felicity and Sara blow up the Applied Sciences building. Ever
resourceful, Slade moves on to Plan B: He uses Tockman’s skeleton key to break
into a S.T.A.R. Labs warehouse and steal what he needs. In the process, he
manages to scare the pants off of a couple of cute nitwits, Caitlin (Danielle
Panabaker) and Cisco (Carlos Valdes), who will be appearing on Arrow’s
spin-off The Flash in the fall. Cisco and Caitlin both have great hair,
and they mumble their way through big chunks of clumsy exposition, and they’re
not even remotely plausible as brainy scientists. They’ll fit in well at The
CW.
Slade swiped a bio-transfuser from S.T.A.R. Labs, which can
distribute blood from a single donor into multiple recipients at once. I have
no idea why such as device would exist, particularly since, as Felicity points
out, the resulting blood loss would leave the donor close to death. Fun fact:
Google the word “bio-transfuser”, and every search result will lead you to
recaps of this episode. Oliver figures Slade’s going to use the device to give
his mirakuru-spiked blood to all the dangerous convicts he freed last
episode, thus creating his own super-powered army.
Oliver confronts Isabelle, who has happily settled into his
old office at Queen Consolidated. According to Isabelle, she and Robert Queen
were truly, madly, deeply in love and made plans to run off together, but then
Robert jilted her and returned to Moira and the kids. Oh, wow, I hate this
development so very, very much. Way to make Isabelle—cold, impersonal,
calculating Isabelle—seem overly-emotional and deluded and petty, Arrow!
On a fundamental level, Arrow really doesn’t get the concept of “strong
female characters.”
Have a seat in the Emotionally-Fragile Women of Arrow
club, Isabelle. Sara, Laurel, Moira and Felicity have been saving a chair for
you.
Quentin, who is (crazily) facing an eighteen-month prison
sentence for aiding and abetting the Arrow, gets beaten up in jail by a
vengeful convict. Laurel visits him in the penitentiary hospital and tells him
she knows the civilian identity of the Arrow. He begs her not to let him in on
the secret, as he prefers to think of the Arrow as a symbol instead of as a
man. I approve of the decision to make Quentin all wise and kindly instead of
blustery and jerkwaddish this season. He’s been pretty consistently great.
Next, Laurel lobs a few ineffectual-sounding threats at the district attorney
to get her to drop all charges against Quentin. It works. Whatever.
Oliver persuades Thea to meet with him one more time to sign
the damn legal papers. He’s interrupted by an emergency call from Felicity: A
huge surge in the power grid indicates that Slade is using the bio-transfuser,
and thus they might be able to catch him while he’s weak from blood loss. In a
moment of damn fool insanity, Felicity urges Oliver not to go after Slade: “If
you don’t get Thea to sign those documents, your family will lose all of its
assets!” Priorities, Felicity. Oliver might lose his money, sure, but Slade is
going to create a murderous super-powered army that will almost
certainly, like, kill lots of people, including Oliver and his entire family,
unless they seize the perfect opportunity to stop him right now.
Oliver traces the power surge to Slade’s new lair, where
sure enough, he’s using the bio-transfuser to simultaneously inject mirakuru
into all the escaped prisoners. Only it’s not Slade who’s donating the mirakuru.
It’s Roy. Poor beautiful, shirtless, shackled, unconscious Roy.
Slade and Isabelle gleefully confront a horrified Oliver:
After Roy skipped town, they tracked him to a homeless shelter. Isabelle smugly
gloats that he didn’t even put up a fight when they caught him. Slade twists
the knife a bit: “You were the only person he looked up to, and for that, you
crushed his soul.”
I have two thoughts:
1) Hey, cool twist having the mirakuru donor turn out
to be Roy! I genuinely did not see that coming.
2) Curse you all to blazes, Arrow, for depriving
viewers (i.e. me) of a lively sequence in which Slade and Isabelle hunt down
and capture Roy! I feel cheated. Seriously, we get four scenes involving
various members of the Queen family squabbling about transferring financial
assets in this episode, and we can’t even get one little scene of Slade and
Isabelle menacing and/or manhandling Roy? I call shenanigans.
Arrow and I are not on the same wavelength. As usual.
Anyway, the standard messy fight scene ensues. Oliver
temporarily incapacitates Slade with an exploding arrow, Digg shoots and kills
Isabelle, and Oliver rescues Roy.
Back at the lair, Roy lies unconscious and dying from the
massive blood loss. Oliver, for reasons having to do with his own inherent
dickishness, refuses to take him to the hospital. He fills the rest of the team
in on his new plan: Recreate Ivo’s mirakuru antidote and use it to take
down Slade.
And then Slade fusses around with Isabelle’s corpse.
Isabelle is bleeding from the eyeballs, so it seems entirely probable she’s
going to come back to life as a mirakuru-enhanced super-soldier.
Comments
But what in the blue blazes is up with making Isabelle some lost jilted love. Really? REALLY? Lame lame lame! And Isabelle was really cool too. Until then. Now she just makes me roll my eyes. They seriously do not appear to know how to write any other motivation for female characters, do they.
And I was not expecting the mirakiru source to be Roy. Awww, poor Roy. That was a nice moment.
I didn't have a clue who those two STAR employees were until I read your review, and, while watching, I was completely fascinated that two random unknowns could think fast enough to take Slade down when Oliver has been failing miserably. I was quite impressed. Interesting that they will be coming back in the spinoff. They're so young though.
And your comments about the financial welfare of the Queens cracked me up. So true. Hee.
(Also disturbing: This is from a recent interview with EP Andrew Kreisberg: "Part of the reason Isabel disappeared for a while was because we still weren’t quite sure which way to go – whether she should be an ally or a villain. We had written it so that it could turn out either way." Okay, dude? That's something you should work out before the last few episodes of the season.)
Roy! I was genuinely shocked to find it was Roy, though in retrospect it does make perfect sense that Slade would go after him.
I do not care one whit whether the Queens lose their vast fortune. In fact, being poor (or at least not being billionaires) would probably be an excellent learning experience for them. I found it so bizarre that Felicity would counsel Oliver to take care of his financial matters first before seizing the opportunity to take down Slade. What the hell, Felicity?
If that's the case, I hope he's been paying her salary out-of-pocket for all the time she spends helping him out.