Ah, yes. My love-hate relationship with Arrow seems
to inevitably drift more toward the “hate” end of the spectrum with every
passing episode.
The promo department at The CW has been whipping up a lot of
folderal about the three-part Arrow season finale, of which this is the
first installment. Problem is, nothing much happens here. Basically, it’s an
episode in which Oliver shirks his duties for an hour, then finally decides to
get his head back in the game; it’s a grotesquely inessential hour of
television. I suspect the Arrow creative minds realized they had a dud
on their hands and thus shoehorned this episode in under the season-finale
awning so they could have a handy excuse for the lack of forward momentum:
“It’s okay that nothing happens! It’s the build-up to the season finale,
guys!”
We open at Moira’s funeral. Oliver is MIA, as he has been
for the past several days. The graveside ceremony is intercut with scenes of
Sebastian Blood being sworn in as Starling City’s new mayor. Sebastian, who is
a whiz at multi-tasking, then pops up at the Queen mansion for the post-funeral
reception. “Your mother was a good woman,” he lies to Thea about the woman who conspired
to murder five hundred people. “The
loss of a parent changes you,” he then solemnly tells Laurel, speaking with the
authority of a man who murdered both of his parents. This is a pretty dismal
episode, but Sebastian is on fire.
And then the reanimated corpse of Isabel Rochev also pops up
at the reception. She slinks up behind Digg and Felicity and overhears them
fretting about Oliver’s prolonged absence. “Maybe he’ll attend your
funerals,” she reassures them. Isabel, too, is on fire.
Island flashbacks. Even duller than usual! Sara and Oliver,
along with Anatoli and Peter, another escapee from the freighter, board the
ancient Japanese submarine. It won’t move, so Peter, who is dying of radiation
poisoning from one of Dr. Ivo’s medical experiments, climbs into a manually-operated torpedo and detonates it to dislodge the sub
from the ocean bottom, thus teaching Oliver a lesson about the value of noble self-sacrifice.
Laurel finally convinces Quentin that Sebastian Blood is a
bad penny. As Moira’s death benefited Sebastian the most—after all, he’s now
the mayor—Laurel suggests there might be a link between Sebastian and Slade.
With Quentin’s aid, Laurel snoops around Sebastian’s computer and finds a press
release expressing condolences for Moira’s death. Only Sebastian, the dumb
bunny, wrote it the day before Moira died. And then he time-stamped it under
his signature line.
Oh, Sebastian. Not your brightest moment, honey.
Felicity and Diggle hang out at the lair, moping and
fretting about Oliver. Roy is there as well, sprawled across a table, still kept
unconscious via an intravenous administration of pit-viper venom. They still
haven’t removed his sneakers, or thrown a blanket over him, or done any of the
million little things you probably should do when you’re keeping someone in an
induced coma for days upon days. At least someone stuffed a rolled-up towel
under his head as a makeshift pillow, so… I guess that was a nice gesture?
Isabel drops by Verdant to serve Thea with an eviction
notice. Sure, this is sort of Thea’s own fault, thanks to her refusal to
execute the paperwork protecting the family’s assets. In Thea’s defense,
though, it’s tough to imagine any set of circumstances in which the entire
Queen fortune would hinge upon obtaining the signature of the
head-of-household’s teen daughter.
Unable to find Oliver on their own, Felicity and Digg throw
themselves on the mercy of Amanda Waller and her formidable resources at
A.R.G.U.S. Amanda yawns and shrugs and finds Oliver in a heartbeat: He’s holed
up in his top-secret backup lair.
So Digg and Felicity pay him a visit. Oliver, naturally, is
in super-dick mode, having abandoned the following parties: a) his younger
sister in her time of deep grief, b) his loyal associates at a time when
they’re in grave danger (Isabel did obliquely threaten to kill them at
the reception, after all), and c) the city he swore to protect. Felicity tries
to give him an inspirational pep talk, full of platitudes about how Oliver
“…showed me I could be more than just some IT girl.” Yep. He showed you how you
could also be his secretary.
In general, I try not to make negative comments about actors
and their performances, because acting is far too subjective of a field to draw
definitive conclusions. There’s a concrete set of criteria that can be used to
determine good or bad writing, for example, but there’s not an equivalent set
of criteria to determine good or bad acting. Thus, in the case of a weak
episode like this, my default is to be hard on the writers, not the actors. For
his performance as Oliver, Stephen Amell has his detractors, and he has his
defenders; I don’t fall into either camp. I will say, though, that I think he
makes some exceptionally poor choices in this episode. He’s naturally a very
low-energy performer, and he dials his energy back still more to portray Oliver
in his time of grief. In other hands, that strategy could be effective, but
it’s disastrous here. Instead of seeming like someone who’s exhausted to the
core of his being by trauma and grief, he seems… disinterested. Over it. Almost
annoyed. It makes Oliver seem curiously repellant; I had a difficult time
watching his scenes in this episode.
Then again, as I said, acting is wholly subjective. The AV Club has a thoughtful, intelligent write-up of this episode in which the reviewer goes out of his way to praise Amell’s performance. He’s not wrong, and neither
am I.
Oliver calls Isabel and announces his intention to surrender
passively. He shows up at the docks, expecting to find Slade. Instead, Felicity
and Diggle knock him out and drag him back to the lair, where Laurel tells him
she knows he’s the Arrow. This revelation should be a significant moment—Oliver
has spent the past two years hiding his secret identity from her—and yet, like
everything else in this episode, it’s lifeless and weirdly anticlimactic.
Laurel presents him with proof that Slade is conspiring with
Sebastian. Thus, Slade’s murder of Moira was less about seeking vengeance on
Oliver and more about ensuring that Sebastian would become mayor. It’s odd how
Slade keeps using vengeance as a misdirect: When he kidnapped Thea (the first
time he kidnapped Thea), it turned out to be all part of his plan to distract
Oliver while he waylaid the busload of dangerous convicted criminals. In all
this, ruining Oliver’s life appears to be merely a fringe benefit, not his
primary goal.
Oliver crashes Sebastian’s dinner party to drop a pair of
bombshells: a) He knows Sebastian is in cahoots with Slade, and b) he’s the
Arrow. Sebastian is appropriately nonplussed by both revelations. Meanwhile,
Felicity and Diggle kidnap and harass Sebastian’s security chief. Felicity
gleefully starts electronically draining his bank account, until, in a panic,
he spills the beans about Sebastian’s evil plans for the city. It’s a fun scene. Oliver’s a dud this episode, but Felicity and Digg do their
best to pick up his slack.
Armed with the information extorted from the security chief,
Oliver raids Slade’s lair, where Sebastian is rallying his army of mirakuru-enhanced
escaped convicts, all of whom wear adorable matching Deathstroke masks. They’re
set to sow chaos and destruction throughout Starling City, which is all part of
Sebastian’s plan to… well, that’s not entirely clear. Make himself look like a really
good mayor by firmly leading the city post-destruction, I guess. While
Diggle wires the lair with explosives, Oliver is attacked by one of the
Deathstrokes (could be Slade! But probably isn’t!). The Deathstroke gets the
upper hand… until Laurel pops up out of nowhere and bashes him over the head.
Hooray for Laurel being proactive and awesome! Knew you had
it in you, girl.
Before Diggle can blow up the lair, Isabel
jumps him. She’s wearing her very own Deathstroke costume. It looks pretty
ridiculous on her. Sorry, Isabel.
The army of Deathstrokes invades the city. One Deathstroke attacks
Quentin at the police station, while another causes violent chaos at the train
station where Thea is waiting, having decided to skip town and start a new life
in parts unknown.
Now that things are finally starting to pick up, now
that stuff is actually happening, the episode abruptly ends. Two more to go
before the end of the season.
Comments
He showed you how you could also be his secretary.
Definitely felt like a set up/filler episode to get to the action. (I watched this back-to-back with the Streets of Fire ep, which was probably a good way to go, as it probably played better with an immediate follow up.)
And between this ep and Streets of Fire, I'm officially sick of Oliver refusing to do his job until someone steps up and gives him a pep talk. Sure, every superhero should be entitled to a crisis of faith, of the "am I doing more harm than good?" variety, but this is getting repetitious. Either be a superhero, Oliver, or don't. Same goes for Sara.