The war with Cayden James claims a major casualty >>>
17.83°C
New York
Wednesday, June 17
The war with Cayden James claims a major casualty >>>
James makes his demands, Olly makes his choices >>>
Olly is arrested, Green Arrow is in trouble and Cayden James has a plan… >>>
Arrow S04E12 “Unchained” REVIEW

![]()
Airing in the UK on Sky One, Weds 8pm
Writers: Speed Weed, Beth Schwartz
Director: Kevin Fair



There’s a lovely if somewhat unsubtle meta-joke in “Unchained”. When the team are faced with the revelation that Roy is back in town, an amused Felicity asks, “Whose shocking return can we look forward to next?”
The answer, it turns out, is just about everyone who’s ever been in Arrow.
Okay, we’re slightly exaggerating, but in an episode where Roy Harper returns, albeit briefly, to the team, we’ve also got our first sighting of Nyssa for a few weeks, cameo appearances from Katana and Shado, and the shock twist of the villain behind all this being Felicity’s long lost father.
All this going on in an episode that also has major plot points going on in both the Lian Yu flashbacks and in the current day scenes, combined with the requisite action sequences AND a different take on the villain-of-the-week (while Neal McDonough takes a few days off).
Against all this, the return of Colton Haynes as Roy could feel somewhat overshadowed, so it is surely to their credit that his presence, both in terms of filling a storyline role and as what feels like a much-needed emotional capstone on his character, never once feels lessened by everything else going on. Likewise Haynes picks up right where he left off, stepping into the red and black like he’d never been away.
Someone whose appearance does feel tossed off, slightly, is Celina Jade, returning as Shado for the first time since the end of season two. Bringing her back as Oliver’s conscience is a nice touch – mirroring how we last saw her, as a vision haunting Slade Wilson – and makes sense in an episode filled with other cameos, but feels like something that could have made for a whole episode in itself.
Credit to director Kevin Fair, who keeps a tight reign of the dense source material to provide a slick and tautly-paced episode that balances two or three big emotional moments with slick action sequences, most notably the parkour chase. We also, for once, don’t end with a “big fight in a warehouse”, which is merely the semi-main for a big exploding warehouse instead. Variety is the spice of life, after all.
Appropriately enough, this feels like the midpoint in the story that, the Legends Of Tomorrow diversion aside, has been stepping through the gears. As well as tidying up some loose ends from earlier, “Unchained” feels like it’s laying the seeds for the next phase of this season. So much so that, with all this going on, you won’t even notice that Damien Darhk doesn’t actually appear this week. Which makes him probably the only person in the show not to…



Review by Iain Hepburn. You can listen to his podcast at www.fromthesublime.com
• Read our other Arrow season four reviews
Arrow S04E11: “AWOL” REVIEW

![]()
Airing in the UK on Sky One, Weds 8pm
Writers: Brian Ford Sullivan, Emilio Aldrich
Director: Charlotte Brandstorm



“AWOL” is an odd episode to consider. On the one hand, it’s a relatively slight villain-of-the-week piece, and on the other it’s a crucial repositioning of the emotional pieces of this season.
Diggle-centric episodes tend to be few but great, and the quietly bubbling-away storyline of John confronting, and trying to reconnect with, his wayward brother has been building up to this: a proper explanation of how Andy turned out the way he did, cleverly if a little too neatly tied into the main arc of series four.
David Ramsey and Eugene Byrd have shown a great rapport as the estranged brothers over the last few episodes, coming to a head here where we get to see the Diggle Brothers in action, both in flashback to their days serving in Helmand, and now, teaming up to save Lyla and take down a villain from their mutual past. Likewise the quietly understated presence of Audrey Marie Anderson, always reliable as Lyla, adds meat to the core storyline.
Away from that, we get a nice series of almost-monologues, as Emily Bett Rickards performs against herself as two sides of the conflicted Felicity: the wheelchair-bound victim and a vision of her angry, activist past taunting her current self-pity. The camera tricks that keep the two on screen work well, but it’s the performance that sells it; the difference between the “dark” Felicity we saw last season and “our” Felicity is marked, in body language and attitude as much as in her Death: The High Cost Of Living approach to fashion.
It’s no surprise after the Goth flashbacks people wanted to see that Felicity – much like vamp Willow was brought back in Buffy – but rather than being done as a fan pleaser, this is the character being exorcised. Coupled with some lovely, tender scenes between her and Stephen Amell, and Rickards manages to steal the show from out underneath the main plot.

All this means the usual supporting cast get less to do than normal. Poor Thea might as well not even be in it this week, for starters. But it feels like the show also needed this breather from the Darhk storyline and last week’s trauma to deal with the emotional repercussions of the season so far.
It helps we get a nicely turned-in script to go with all this, one which makes good use of the show’s recent and more long-term history to generate motivations without any major concessions to new viewers, particularly with regard to back stories. The idea Oliver is feeling guilty – but rationalising that guilt as the result of Barry’s screwing about with time in the Legends set-up eps – is an interesting idea in itself, but it almost feels like it’s setting something else up for down the road.
This is Arrow back to doing what it does well: a strong action storyline coupled with some good emotional backfilling, directed with energy and tautness. This season especially has been very good at balancing, and finding strong parallel stories between the action and the emotional, which almost makes this Arrow-by-numbers, except for the fact that Arrow-by-numbers this season is a very good thing. And frankly any episode that gives David Ramsey more to do is fine by us.




Review by Iain Hepburn. You can listen to his podcast at www.fromthesublime.com
• Read our other Arrow season four reviews
Arrow S04E09 “Dark Waters” REVIEW
![]()
Airing in the UK on Sky One, Weds 8pm
Writers: Wendie Mericle, Ben Sokolowski
Director: John Behring
Now all that Legends Of Tomorrow stuff is out the way (at least for the moment) Arrow can pick up where it left off earlier this year with the main season storyline: the battle with Damian Darhk for control of Star City. And with just one episode to take us into the mid-season break, it does so in assured style.
We take a big step forward in discovering what HIVE is up to, although the motivations aren’t completely clear yet, the methodology certainly is. Interestingly, it seems to bear a certain resemblance to Ra’s Al Ghul’s plot in Batman Begins too, not least because of an interesting line of dialogue, almost thrown away, about how humanity needed the Nazis as a “reset, a do-over” to make things better.
It helps with all this that McDonough is so damn good. As Arrow supervillains go, he’s the strongest of the four series: a creature of evil that not even the League Of Shadows wants to go up against properly, and McDonough is clearly having a ball playing the role, cranking up the villainy with knowing glee. It’s reminiscent, to some extent, of Michelle Gomez’s Missy in Doctor Who – a panto-esque bad guy who turns round and murders people in cold blood just to remind you that behind the OTT grinning is a genuine psychopath.
Interestingly, too, among all this is a story of parents and daughters, and of protecting those we love. We discover Darhk has a little girl and an almost picture-book domestic life which he returns to after committing atrocities, while the actions of Captain Lance and Malcolm Merlyn are done to protect those they love: namely Laurel and Thea.
There’s a knowing moment between the two fathers as Lance tries to explain his working with Darhk to Laurel which again helps to tie the thematic structure of the episode together.
As Laurel says, these are familial relationships that are “unconventional”, be it her and Lance or Malcolm and Thea, or even Felicity and Lance, which becomes a possibility as it emerges her mother and the captain are still in a relationship. The nature of unconventional ties and love sits alongside Felicity and Oliver’s relationship; with Oliver having not proposed because their lives changed and became dangerous again. Both Felicity and Laurel berate their loved ones – Oliver and Lance respectively – for taking decisions about their respective futures rather than letting the women decide for themselves, something that becomes a recurring message through the story and contrasted with the relationship Diggle has with his captive brother.
The ending of the episode’s as shocking as it is inevitable, as Oliver and Felicity’s limo is gunned down, although quite why the CEO of the city’s biggest company and its only mayoral candidate – who’s already been the victim of a drone attack a day earlier – wouldn’t be under heavy police or security escort’s a bit of a gaffe.
The clear implication is meant to be that it’s Felicity we see in the grave in the flash forward at the start of the season, and this is the moment that takes us there, although we’re not convinced yet, not least as the episode doesn’t dwell on a final visual of Felicity, crashing hastily to the end logo as Oliver takes her pulse. If this were truly the end, we’d presumably be getting the full On Her Majesty’s Secret Service treatment rather than a crash out and a cliffhanger.
We now get more than a month off until Arrow returns. A crossover wobble aside, the first chunk of series four has been superlative stuff. Here’s hoping it doesn’t indulge too much over the holidays and come back out of shape.
Review by Iain Hepburn. You can listen to his podcast at www.fromthesublime.com
• Read our other Arrow season four reviews
Arrow S04E08 “Legends Of Yesterday” REVIEW
![]()
Airing in the UK on Sky One, Weds 8pm
Writers: Brian Ford Sullivan, Marc Guggenheim, Greg Berlanti
Director: Thor Freudenthal

Last year’s first big crossover between Arrow and Flash felt like a really big deal. The idea of them going head-to-head, then joining forces and cementing a friendship felt important. But since then they’ve been popping up in each other’s shows so often, it’s almost a regular occurance.
All of which makes “Legends Of Yesterday” feel, if not bad, then at least nothing special.
The problem with “Legends Of Yesterday” is that there’s so much going on in here that has to be resolved, it’s almost unwieldy. There’s finishing off the story started in The Flash, continuing the build for Legends Of Tomorrow, plus developing both the Oliver and Felicity relationship and – two years after it first was hinted at in the show – starting the “Oliver’s secret son” storyline.
The latter’s inclusion is almost too much for the plot to take. While it makes sense to develop it while most of the action is in Central City, and the time travel element allows them to use it as an extra factor in the defeat, it feels like a story that could have been expanded over another couple of episodes. The pacing of Arrow so far this season has been largely perfectly judged, with the plots unfolding at a good rate compared to last term.
But the whole “Oliver sees his ex, meets his son, gets sworn to secrecy and lies to Felicity for the first time (twice)” could have been spun out another episode or two, even allowing for the mid-season festive break coming up shortly. The interesting development it might bring – Felicity’s anger and upset – is instantly undone, too, undermining Emily Bett Rickard’s heartfelt performance in the scene.
Elsewhere so much time is spent developing the stories of Hawkman and Hawkgirl that the regular Team Arrow suffers; indeed, Laurel gets so little to do this week she could have been replaced with a shop window dummy and it wouldn’t have made that much difference, while Caitlin barely even gets a look in.
Of course, that’s not necessarily a problem if you take this in isolation as an episode of Arrow, but as the voiceover makes clear the shows, and especially these episodes, are supposed to be seen as a unit.
It doesn’t help as well that Vandal Savage is, well, just there. As a villain he’s not hugely compelling, as a threat he’s fairly well dispatched and as a performance he doesn’t feel anywhere near as dangerous or frankly as big as you’d want him to be. Perhaps we’ve been spoiled by Neal McDonough’s presence as Arrow’s big bad this year, but Casper Crump’s Rasputin-with-kitchen-equipment feels distinctly small time.
Likewise our two relative newcomers – Ciara Renee and the appropriately named Falk Hentschel – don’t exactly overwhelm with charisma either. It doesn’t help that Hentschel looks uncannily like Coldplay frontman Chris Martin; reason alone to want Savage to beat him, surely?
This all sounds negative and it shouldn’t be. “Legends Of Yesterday” is a perfectly decent episode of Arrow, especially visually – not only do the trademark fight sequences work well, but the FX team deserve real credit for managing to make Carter and Kendra’s flight look real and solid, although quite why they’ve never worked out how to do the same for Ray Palmer remains a mystery.
The destruction of the city and the gruesome nuclear blast-esque deaths in the pre-altered timeline are spectacular, looking almost like Dr Manhattan’s exploding of people in Tiresome Hack Snyder’s godawful Watchmen film; appropriate enough, as the Hawk costumes look decidedly like Nite Owl’s outfit from that movie.
It says a lot about the strength of both series currently that even an average episode of Arrow feels significantly stronger and more enjoyable than some of season three’s shakiest moments, but “Legends Of Yesterday” feels distinctly average at times, when it should be a big, loud, blow-away moment in the show’s progression. If last year’s big cross-over event was The Avengers, this is decidedly more Age Of Ultron.
Review by Iain Hepburn. You can listen to his podcast at www.fromthesublime.com
• Read our other Arrow season four reviews
Arrow S04E06 “Lost Souls” REVIEW
Airing in the UK on Sky One, Weds 8pm
Writers: Beth Schwartz, Emilio Ortega Aldrich
Director: Antonio Negret
There’s a weird tone to “Lost Souls”, which on paper absolutely shouldn’t work. It’s a thrilling race against time to rescue a friend being held hostage by Team Arrow’s moral enemy. At the same time it’s an emotional drama looking at guilt and making the wrong choices in relationships. And there’s more murder.
But it’s also laugh-out-loud funny most of the time. There’s an incredible lightness about the script from regular series writer Schwartz and relative newcomer Aldrich, and in theory that should work against the subject matter. Somehow, though, it really doesn’t, and what we get is a charming, amusing, gentle episode of Arrow which feels oddly short on peril yet somehow feels all the better for it.
The steady unfolding of the storylines at a regular rate this series continues to be perfectly judged. Bringing Ray back – looking remarkably healthy for a man who’s spent the last few weeks locked in a fish tank – and advancing Sara’s resurrection storyline (she seem to be affected far worse than Thea ever was) are both obviously primers for the Legends Of Tomorrow launch. Yet those storylines also advance other aspects of the plot; notably Felicity’s guilt providing the first shaky ground for her relationship with Oliver and Lance getting dragged in deeper with Darhk.
There’s a sense of cause and effect to the plot; serial storytelling which is underpinning the coherence of this series compared to last year. Darhk’s wider scheme and the flashback plot on the island are on the back burner for now. We get glimpses of what’s going on, but not enough to judge yet, which feels right while the focus is on the Legends launch.
There’s also an interesting sense of them building up Team Arrow for a fall. They’re all supremely confident in what they do – launching a raid on Kord’s warehouse, rescuing Ray in audacious fashion – that it feels like something’s got to go wrong for them soon. And given what we know from the season opener’s flash forward, that fall will presumably have catastrophic consequences.
But all that’s to come, one would imagine. For now, we’ve got a show building somewhere, full of confident performances and with so far a season that’s not really put a foot wrong. The pacing for the last couple of episodes has notably slowed down from the frenetic opener, but again this feels deliberate; the producers are putting all their pieces on the board for the forthcoming crossover (two weeks and counting) when we can expect it to all kick off.
It’s also great to see Echo Kellum’s engaging Curtis Holt getting more involved. He’s already been a great addition to the cast but three little moments in the episode highlight why having Mister Terrific join Team Arrow full time would be no bad thing: his seeing Oliver for the first time (“Remember: I’m married and he’s straight”), trying to work out of Oliver’s the Arrow (“It’s not you, jaw’s not right”) and him joining in on the rescue. In a show with a whole bunch of great comic performers, he’s already stolen the show.
Review by Iain Hepburn. You can listen to his podcast at www.fromthesublime.com
• Read our other Arrow season four reviews