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Arrow S04E12 “Unchained” REVIEW

Arrow S04E12  “Unchained” REVIEW

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stars 4.5

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

 

Essential plot points:

  • In Nanda Parbat, Nyssa Al Gaul stages a daring and brutal escape from the cell Malcolm’s had her locked up in, with the help of her supporters in the League of Assassins.
  • Back in Star City, Team Arrow is chasing a burglar across the rooftops after a raid on Amertek. Thea has him cornered on a ledge, but suddenly faints, giving the hooded burglar a chance to escape.
  • At Palmer Tech, Felicity struggles with her presentation of Curtis’ new power cell, leading one of her board members to suggest that someone else does it to ensure a perfect launch and protect the struggling company’s stock price.
  • Oliver checks up on Thea, where Malcolm is looking after his daughter. He reveals that the bloodlust relies on her taking someone else’s life, otherwise it will feed off her own life force instead. Oliver wants to find Darhk and get him to repeat what he did to Thea.

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  • The thief strikes again, and Oliver gives chase across the rooftops of a junkyard, eventually catching the thief… and unmasking him as Roy Harper, who promptly escapes again.
  • Oliver’s campaign manager Alex calls Oliver into the election HQ to tell him a new candidate has emerged for the Mayoral race: Ruvé Adams, whom Oliver immediately recognises as Mrs Damien Darhk.
  • Felicity pieces the items Roy’s stolen together and works out it could be combined to create a web bomb that could wipe out the internet. It would need a massive power source though, such as the one Curtis has just invented.
  • Roy breaks into Curtis’s lab and ties to steal the battery, attacking Curtis. Oliver, Laurel and Diggle confront him, but he throws the battery out the window where a drone is waiting to catch it. Felicity spots something wrong with Roy on the CCTV, and Oliver shoots him with a tranquilliser arrow.
  • Back at the lair, they find a small camera-like contact lens in Roy’s eye then resuscitate him. Roy reveals he had been hiding in Hub City before being blackmailed by someone calling himself The Calculator.

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  • In Japan, Nyssa visits a temple to take something called the Lotus. Standing in her way, however, is a familiar face: Tatsu. The two face off.
  • Roy visits an ailing Thea, but she collapses and the wounds from where Ra’s Al Ghul stabbed her briefly reappear on her body.
  • Felicity tries to exploit a back door in the software on the contact lens camera, but the Calculator is waiting for her. He reveals he’s not planning to destroy the internet, but to take down Star City.
  • Fired up, Felicity returns to Palmer Technology to find a cyber security battering ram invented by Ray last year. Curtis asks her why she’s not doing the presentation, and points out the fired up version of her is the one which can deliver a shareholder-pleasing presentation.
  • Felicity discovers the Calculator is installing his web nuke at a data farm outside the city. She and the Calculator get into a back and forth hacking war, while Diggle, Laurel and Roy take out the mercenaries he’s hired to install it. As the mercenaries surround the team, Oliver drops in and takes them out.
  • Roy volunteers to detonate the explosives which will take out the web nuke, and blows it up just before the Calculator triggers the device.

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  • Felicity wipes all the data the Calculator has on Roy to make sure he can go back to living his life again – but not before his declaration of love and tearful goodbye to Thea – then goes on to give a bravura performance at the Palmer Tech presentation of the new battery, watched by Oliver… and the Calculator. Who it turns out, is Felicity’s long-absent father.
  • Thea’s condition deteriorates and she’s taken to hospital, where she slips into a coma. As Oliver keeps vigil by her bedside, Nyssa appears and tells him she has a solution that could cure Thea… if Oliver kills Malcolm Merlyn!
  • In flashbacks to Lian Yu, Reiter tortures Oliver to the point where he hallucinates Shado rescuing him. In his dream she tells him to forgive himself for the lives he’s taken and the choices he’s made, then gives him a totem: a pebble with strange hieroglyphs on it. When he recovers he discovers he has it in his hands for real. He confesses to Taiana that he killed her brother.

 

Review:

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…

 

The Good:

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  • It’s a big hello and welcome back to Colton Haynes, who used to play Arsenal on those days he wasn’t taking ultra-cute Instagram selfies with Emily Bett Rickards. He left last year, to go be in The Rock’s disaster film San Andreas, and a Hollywood career would now appear to beckon.
  • Anyone who follows Stephen Amell on Facebook will know he does a bit of parkour to work out. Which might explain the extended, and elaborate, rooftop chase between Roy and Oliver early in “Unchained”.
  • Given Felicity’s ability to constantly say the most inappropriate thing, the running jokes about her putting her best foot forward, or people telling her to break a leg for good luck and so on are in bad taste or not, but it also fits the larger narrative of how people struggle to deal with others’ disabilities. They’ve done a good job so far of making Felicity a victim of Damien Darhk, not a victim of her condition, and the end of the episode caps that perfectly.
  • For once, though, the best funny line ends up with Laurel, pointing out that her suggestion the thief they are chasing is just someone who can make themselves LOOK like Roy is not the oddest thing they’ve heard recently.

 

The Bad:

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  • It’s never really made clear quite how the camera ended up in Roy’s eye in the first place. The implication seems to be that he didn’t put it in, but that doesn’t make sense – did Noah knock tough street fighting vigilante Roy out and slip him a super contact lens?
  • If you’re watching Legends Of Tomorrow alongside Arrow, there’s a weird disconnect between Malcolm saying that Constantine had cured Sara’s blood lust, and what’s actually happening on screen over on the sister show.
  • Is it even worth mentioning the exceptionally dodgy science behind the “web bomb”? In a franchise with meta-humans, shrinking suits and magic it might seem churlish, but the whole web bomb stuff just seems really clunky. Cyber-villainy, eh? It’s like the last two decades never happened…
  • With all the surprise returns in “Unchained”, it’s also a less required hello and welcome back to the one hospital room set the producers apparently have. I know they make the shows on a tight budget, but they’ve used the one hospital room set so often now it might as well get its own spin-off show.

 

And the Random:

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  • The Calculator, also known as Noah Kuttler, was originally an old Batman villain in the comics, as so many Arrow foes tend to be. Originally just a guy dressed like a calculator, he was retconned to become an evil version of Oracle, providing information for the bad guys in the way Barbara used to help the Bat family.
  • Tom Amandes, who plays Noah, is a regular face on US telly, most famously playing Elliot Ness in the TV version of The Untouchables in the 1990s, and more recently popping up in Scandal and the TV version of Parenthood.
  • Director Kevin Fair makes his Arrowverse debut with “Unchained”, although it’s not his first go-round with DC characters, having shot a bunch of Smallville episodes, including the finale. He’s done a lot of second unit work in Hollywood, including the godawful Get Carter remake, the horrendous Gwyneth Paltrow karaoke flick Duets and the big screen version of Josie And The Pussycats. Don’t hold any of them against him though.
  • Roy’s been hiding out in Hub City which, in the comics, was the home of former Charlton Comics character The Question, created by the legendary Steve Ditko and later picked up by DC. The character still pops up every so often, but he’s perhaps best known these days for being the inspiration behind Rorschach in Watchmen.
  • The scale referred to when describing Thea’s condition is the GSC, or Glasgow Coma Scale. Like your reviewer, it was born in Glasgow’s Southern General Hospital in the 1970s, and is used to assess the condition of patients in intensive care. A three (what Thea is recorded at) is pretty much as low as doctors can score someone without them being dead.
  • When Felicity – apparently as big a Beatles fan as her old da – says the team has between “I Wanna Hold Your Hand” and “Hey Jude” to deactivate the web nuke, that means, for the record between 2m 26s and 7m 11s. Don’t get that in Geeky Monkey, do you?

Review by Iain Hepburn. You can listen to his podcast at www.fromthesublime.com


Read our other Arrow season four reviews

 

Flash Arrow Crossover 20

The CW Renews Virtually Everything: All DC Superhero Shows Are Back

Flash Arrow Crossover 20

Wanna know if your favourite CW show is show is back next year? Don’t worry. It probably is. The CW has given early renewals fora massive 11 series which means the network will be experiencing extreme deja vu next season.

The shows confirmed coming back are:

  • Arrow – for season five
  • DC’s Legends of Tomorrow – for season two
  • The Flash – for season three
  • iZombie – for season three
  • The Originals – for season four
  • The Vampire Diaries – for season eight
  • Reign – for season four
  • Supernatural – for season 12
  • The 100 – for season 4
  • Crazy Ex-Girlfriend – for season two
  • Jane The Virgin – for season three

“The CW has become home to some of the most critically-acclaimed shows on broadcast television,” says CW president, Mark Pedowitz, “with a wide array of fantastic scripted series across the week, ranging from musical comedy, to superhero action, to gritty sci-fi dramas. As we continue to further our strategy of more year-round original programming, picking up these 11 series for the 2016-2017 season puts us in a great position of having proven, high-quality shows to launch in the fall as well as midseason and summer of 2017.”

 


 

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Arrow S04E11 "AWOL” REVIEW

Arrow S04E11:  “AWOL” REVIEW

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stars 4

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

 

Essential plot points:

  • Mr and Mrs Diggle are returning home after date night when Alan Chang, one of Lyla’s former agents, stops them in the street, needing help because he’s been compromised. Before he can say more, he’s shot and snatched by the gunmen in a van.
  • Oliver and Felicity are adjusting to home life now she’s in a wheelchair. He’s trying to be positive and encourage her to stay on Team Arrow, but she has doubts because she may never recover from her spinal injury.
  • At the Arrowcave the gang try to work out who abducted Chang and why, eventually resorting to old-fashioned detective work.

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  • Diggle talks to his incarcerated brother over a cheeseburger. Andy asks why John’s fighting crime with a guy in a green hoodie, but Diggle says he’s not fighting crime: he’s trying to help the city hold itself together, like they did while serving in Afghanistan.
  • Felicity’s medication starts having an effect on her, making her hallucinate: first a voice, then a vision, of her younger, Goth hacker self. It starts to taunt her about her choices in life and her self-pity over her paralysis.

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  • Laurel and the Star City police find the body of Alan Chang dumped in an alley. Diggle inspects the corpse, which shows signs of having been tortured – and an eye gouged out.
  • Lyla and Diggle confront Amanda Waller at ARGUS. Waller slips them a mysterious USB stick as they leave which contains details about a US Army special forces unit called Shadowspire, taken out by ARGUS for war profiteering. Two more agents, who were investigating it, have now gone missing.
  • Diggle confronts Andy, who used to work with Shadowspire, and he reveals how the unit operates and where the missing agents might be. Team Arrow heads there, but discovers upgraded security.
  • Oliver calls Felicity to help hack the systems, but inside the ARGUS agents are dead and the added distraction of her hallucinated self causes Felicity to trip an alarm. Dig is caught by Shadowspire – led by his former army CO Joyner – before Oliver rescues him.
  • Felicity is distraught about her mistake and tells Oliver she can no longer part of the team. He tries to reassure her, but her hallucination continues to abuse her.
  • Diggle takes Andy to ARGUS to be debriefed by Waller. She reveals the two agents that died were safeguarding a shipment of confiscated railguns. But Andy warns that Shadowspire’s not looking for the guns and is using them as a distraction.
  • Oliver, Thea and Laurel stake out the supposed rail gun theft site, but while they’re doing so Shadowspire breaks into ARGUS HQ using the eye stolen from Chang and take Waller and Lyla prisoner.
  • Joyner tells Waller he wants something called Rubicon, and only she can give him the codes. He threatens to execute a hostage every 20 minutes until she cooperates.
  • Oliver can’t reach John, who’s trying to send a signal out to the team showing CCTV of the ARGUS raid. Felicity turns up at the Arrowcave – courtesy of Curtis – to come and help, having shaken off the self-pity and anger of her Goth self.
  • Shadowspire detects Diggle’s signal. Waller refuses to give Joyner the Rubicon code, so he shoots her through the head, then tells Lyla she’s got 20 minutes to cooperate.
  • Team Arrow breaks into ARGUS with Felicity’s help. Down in the cells, the Shadowspire soldiers find Andy, who tells Joyner he wants to help them. He tells Joyner Diggle’s in the ventilation shafts – where he’s found, overpowered and brought in. He tells Lyla to give Joyner access to Rubicon but it’s a ruse constructed by the Diggle brothers to get both of them in the room together to stop Joyner. With Oliver’s help, they take down the Shadowspire team.
  • Felicity torches a picture of her old Goth self, putting her past behind her, as Oliver vows to find a way to help heal her spinal injuries. Meanwhile, Diggle invites John back to live with him and Lyla rather than return to the cell… and introduces him to his baby niece.

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  • In flashbacks, John and Andy reminisce about their time serving with the US Army in Afghanistan. During that time they took on a Taliban RPG team stealing opium while on patrol. Their CO tries to recruit them for black market dealing, but while Diggle resisted, Andy took their coin, which, it turns out, was proffered by Baron Reiter, who traded the stolen opium for an ancient map…

 

Review:

“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.

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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.

 

The Good:

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  • The split-screen stuff with Felicity and Dark Felicity is exceptionally well done. For all the usual split screen tropes, they’ve chucked in a couple of shots of the two moving around each other which are particularly worthy of note.

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  • For the first time, one of these “threaten someone so they give the codes” sequences works. Waller being shot and killed comes completely out of nowhere, and makes Joyner and his team feel like a legitimate threat.
  • The resolution of the Diggle Brothers arc is well-executed. Andy’s motivation and reasoning for going rogue make more sense – as a petty criminal, he wasn’t suited to army life, and only joined up to be with his brother – as does his closer bond with John at the end. Eugene Byrd turns in a hell of a performance so here’s to him popping up again in future episodes.
  • This week’s “big fight in a warehouse” turns out to be a smaller affair and inside an office. It’s still a fight, as you’d expect, but by focusing on the Diggle Brothers and Lyla, and minimising Team Arrow’s involvement, it takes on a far punchier, scrappier dynamic which helps it feel different. About time too.
  • We never really find out what Rubicon is. Hopefully this isn’t a set-up for the future, but is instead a cheeky Mission Impossible III-style Mcguffin that’s never explained again.

The Bad:

  • As Oliver says, the Arrowverse contains flying Egyptian gods, time-travelling speedsters, shrinking scientists, and that’s why he believes a cure might be found for Felicity’s spinal damage. Which makes sense in character, but also feels a bit clunky given we’ve spent the last 45 minutes seeing her come to terms with her paralysis. A show that’s so good in terms of inclusivity with people of colour and LGBTQI characters seems to be looking for a cop-out way of dealing with disability, which is a shame.

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  • The ride-along stuff during the Diggle Brothers’ flashback sequences is meant to be Helmand Province. Shame they didn’t go to too much trouble beyond finding a nearby quarry to film in, as it looks nothing like Afghanistan.
  • We hope Lyla and John are paying their babysitter a tonne of overtime, given they bugger off for the night to play at spies again.
  • Let’s be honest, Diggle’s plan is a bit crap and, had Oliver not dropped in to unlock his handcuffs, wasn’t going to work.
  • It’s a nice bit of joining the circle, having Reiter be the head of the unit Diggle and Diggle served in, but unless it pays off later in the series it’s a horrible bit of coincidental plotting.

And the Random:

  • Charlotte Brandstrom makes her Arrowverse debut with “AWOL” although the French-born Swedish helmer has quite the CV, including directing the proper (ie, not Branagh) Wallander and a host of French films and TV shows. This season has really seen the Arrow producers cast the net far and wide for directors, with remarkable success.
  • Brian Ford Sullivan has been writing for Arrow for a couple of years, including the brilliant goth Felicity episode last season, and also co-wrote cartoon spin-off Vixen. Emilio Aldrich has two episodes under his belt, but regularly writes for the Arrow comic book. And if you want to know what they look like, their mugshots provided the illustration of the two missing agents.

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  • Well, after wondering if Felicity was going to become Oracle last week, we get our answer. Ms Smoak’s long-awaited codename is Overwatch (although her suggestion of Hot Wheels works for us…) which happens to be the same as a novel by show runner Marc Guggenheim.
  • Amusingly, they even crack a joke on the show about how Oliver, “thought about Oracle but it was taken”. Presumably, much like Harley Quinn being verboten past that cheeky Suicide Squad cameo, the cinema universe has staked a claim on the name.
  • Another reference to Kord Industries – this week on the storage units for the railguns. Presumably these are just for the comics fans, unless we’re getting a very slow build for Blue Beetle to join the Arrowverse….

Review by Iain Hepburn. You can listen to his podcast at www.fromthesublime.com


Read our other Arrow season four reviews

 

 

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Arrow S04E10 “Blood Debts” REVIEW

Arrow S04E10 “Blood Debts” REVIEW

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stars 3.5

Airing in the UK on Sky One, Weds 8pm
Writer: Oscar Balderrama
Director: Jesse Warn

 

Essential plot points:

  • Felicity is rushed to hospital after the shooting by Darhk’s Ghosts, while Oliver goes on a rampage through Star City hunting for Darhk. He confronts one Ghost who eventually throws himself off a building into an electricity substation rather than give up his boss.

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  • Back at the Arrow lair, Oliver asks Diggle to interrogate his brother for Darhk’s location. Laurel wants him to be with Felicity as she goes back in for surgery, but he wants to keep hunting her attacker, claiming it’s what she’d want.
  • John Diggle hands out a beating to Andy in his cell in a bid to get information on Darhk’s whereabouts but with no luck.
  • Oliver asks Lance to reveal where he meets Darhk, knowing it will expose the Captain’s double agent role. He promises to offer protection to Lance at the lair and Lance gives him an address, but not before expressing concern that Oliver’s going back to his killing ways.
  • Oliver enters Darhk’s HQ but finds only the bodies of his Ghosts and a giant Anarchy symbol painted in blood. Team Arrow connects it to Lonnie Machin, the would-be enforcer that Thea set on fire two months ago.
  • Lyla convinces Diggle to try a more familial approach to get through to his brother, reaching out to him rather than punching him.
  • At the hospital, Thea confides in Laurel that she’s afraid she’s inspired a blood lust in Machin similar to her own, before they walk in on Lance and Donna embracing. Oops.
  • SCPD’s crime lab identifies blood at Darhk’s base as belonging to Machin’s abducted foster parents. Team Arrow heads to their house, where a masked Machin has set a trap for them. Thea gives chase but is overpowered. Machin takes off his mask to reveal his burned face, but the rest of the team takes him out before he can do anything.
  • They interrogate him for Darhk’s location, before Oliver receives news that Felicity’s surgery has gone wrong. He leaves Thea with Machin, and he taunts her until she pulls an arrow and is ready to kill him before the police arrive to arrest him.
  • Andy Diggle reveals to John a clue as to where Darhk’s house is after John tries to appeal to him “brother to brother”.
  • Oliver breaks Machin out of police custody and plants a tracker on him, allowing them to follow him to Stonehaven, where Darhk lives. Then finally he sees Felicity for the first time since the attack, putting her engagement ring back on and telling her they’ll be together for better or worse.

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  • Machin has abducted Darhk’s wife and child, tying them up and threatening them with a flame thrower before Team Arrow arrives to confront him. He escapes and as Oliver and Thea give chase, Darhk arrives. He and Oliver fight, until Oliver reveals he saved Darhk’s family. As a thank you, he tells Oliver he’ll let him live a few more weeks.
  • Thea captures Machin, and despite his taunting does not give in to her blood lust and doesn’t kill him. However, he manages to escape into the forest.
  • Shaken by what happened, Thea initially breaks up with Alex, before inviting him back to hers.
  • Despite her paralysis, Felicity vows she’ll be wherever Oliver is, and wants to get back into the fight against Darhk.

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  • In flashbacks to Lian Yu, a badly injured Oliver is taken back to camp by Conklin and punished for lying to Baron Ritter, until the magic symbols bestowed on him by John Constantine light up. Oliver strikes a deal: as long as Taiana is protected, he’ll cooperate with Ritter.

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  • And in flash forwards, Oliver finishes his graveside chat with Barry and, in a limo, speaks to a detached and frosty Felicity, who tells him he needs to “kill the son of a bitch”.

 

Review:

We left Arrow on a Christmas cliffhanger, with Felicity apparently dying in Oliver’s arms to the strains of “Little Drummer Boy”. Of course, there’s no way they’re going to kill off Ms Smoak quite so casually; she’s a key part of team Arrow. But now at least we know for sure how high the stakes are going to be this year.

There’s some interesting thematic stuff going on across most of the core characters in “Blood Debts”, specifically with them fighting against their own nature. Oliver wants to revert to the darker instincts that saw him significantly add to global mortality statistics by killing Darhk. Thea wants to give in to her blood lust again. Diggle wants to punish his brother some more for betraying him. Even Darhk has a struggle with his better nature, letting Oliver live when he has the chance to kill him. The only person who is actually embracing, rather than resisting, is Machin, literally a symbol of the anarchy the others are trying to oppose.

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If all that sounds a bit on the nose, even for Arrow, then don’t worry. “Blood Debts has a lot going for it beyond some obviously paralleled character conflict. In fact, there’s a heck of a lot of plot being peddled in what still manages to be a remarkably emotive episode.

The slow burn Diggle Brothers stuff continues, played perfectly by David Ramsey and Eugene Byrd, as Lyla convinces her other half to try and win Andy’s trust through family rather than continuing to beat him to a pulp. It doesn’t necessarily work, but the final scene between the pair, playing a silent game of cards, hints at a further thawing of relations to come.

And there’s the return of Lonnie Machin, the alter ego of comics Batman villain Anarky, and here rendered by Alexander Calvert as a sort of cut-price version of Heath Ledger’s Joker, sent genuinely insane by the disfigurement he suffered by being set on fire by Thea in “The Candidate” earlier this season. As with his first appearance, the character doesn’t quite work, although his escape and survival, and weird relationship with Thea, does at least add something different. The fate of Machin’s left intriguingly vague, too, hinting at a further return for him.

We know more about Darhk’s scheme, not least that his missus is in on it. In fact, in her anger at him not killing the Green Arrow – who’d just saved her and her daughter – when he had the chance, Ruvé comes across like Lady Macbeth. Which could make for an interesting contrast; Felicity urging Oliver not to kill people, Ruvé urging Damien to do just that.

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Ah yes, Felicity and Oliver. The stuff between Rickards and Amell is beautifully done this week, with as much conveyed non-verbally as verbally. Rickards does so much with her body language, which is remarkable given she’s confined to a hospital bed and unable to move below the waist. The contrast between happy Felicity we know and love, and the distant, angry Felicity in the flash forward is notable too, which makes the earlier scenes feel even more important.

And as for that flash forward… We know from the first episode that someone close to Team Arrow is dead; close enough to drive Oliver to want to kill someone. And we now know it’s not Felicity. So the bets are open as to who bites the big one instead. Thea? Dig? Laurel? It makes for an intriguing set up for the next run. Less a whodunnit than a whodiedit.

“Blood Debts” comes back from the winter break, not with a bang, but with a swagger. It doesn’t need a big show-off explosive episode to get everyone’s attention, such is the confidence of everyone involved. The chess pieces for the next stage of the story have been neatly placed, so let’s see if they deliver…

 

The Good:

  • The traditional Arrow soundtrack gets a bit of a remix during the fight sequences with Anarky, with Blake Neely cranking up a heavy, crunching bit of techno over the more orchestra score.
  • The reveal to Laurel that Lance is dating Felicity’s mum is a lovely, grown-up moment. No histrionics, no big drama, just a smile and a wee bit of teasing of her old man. Well done.

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  • Even while paralysed and recovering from major surgery Felicity gets the best single entendres. “I have never been more ready to have a bunch of guys poking around inside me… Doctors! Doing doctor things!” Round of applause for Emily Bett Rickards for selling the gag perfectly too.

The Bad:

  • This week’s BIG FIGHT IN A WAREHOUSE is instead a big fight in a lovely town house in Stonehaven (which is apparently a suburb of Star City, and not the picturesque coastal town 16 miles south of Aberdeen where your correspondent once worked…). But it’s STILL just a big fight, and one that the episode really could have done without. In fact, both the Anarky v Olly and Thea, and the Olly v Darhk scraps could easily have been replaced with stand-offs without in any way damaging either scene.
  • Conklin really is the most pointless henchman character they’ve had on Arrow. Grief, he gets shut down more times than Worf.
  • Is there just one hospital room free in the whole of Star City. That room Felicity is recovering in is the same one Thea was once in. And Sara. And Laurel for that matter.
  • Where’s Dr Palmer? Or the media for that matter? I know Ray’s still trying to keep a low profile but you’d think the attempted assassination and eventual paralysis of his former girlfriend and still close pal would bring him back. And that the press – and the Palmer Tech board, for that matter – might get wind of the fact that the chief executive of the biggest company in the city has been severely injured in a drive by shooting…

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And the Random:

  • The now-paralysed computer genius Felicity was complaining a couple of episodes ago about not having a code name. Given how much else Arrow’s purloined from the Batman universe, what’s the odds on her taking on the name Oracle…?
  • Take a close look at Felicity’s hand in the flash forward scene. Doesn’t look like she’s wearing her ring, does it?
  • Episode director Jesse Warn returns for his fourth stint in the Arrow hotseat, having previously helmed season two’s “Man Under The Hood” and season three’s “Uprising” and “Suicidal Tendancies”. He’s a regular in the Arrowverse, having also done episodes of Supergirl and The Flash, along with quirky murder thriller Nemesis Game.
  • Ruvé, Darhk’s wife, is played by Canadian actress Janet Kidder who’s been in everything from Earth: Final Conflict to The Legend Of Dick And Dom (no, really. She’s also done Casualty and Doctors, for that matter. She just needs Holby to complete the set). If she looks familiar, it’s because she’s also the niece of Margot Kidder, the definitive big screen Lois Lane.

Review by Iain Hepburn. You can listen to his podcast at www.fromthesublime.com


Read our other Arrow season four reviews

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Guardians Of The Gallery: Star Wars Winnie The Pooh, Inception Coffee Table & More

••• Forget flying elephant. One thing we never thought we’d see was Christopher Nolan’s Inception recreated in coffee table form. Honestly, we would have this for the BUZZ office if we had $5,000 spare. If you have, you can buy one here

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••• METEORS! FROM BEYOND THE STARS! TAKE COVER! A gloriously silly trailer for Transformers done in the style of a ’50s B-movie.


••• Welcome to Hundred Parsecs Wood where artist James Hance has re-invented Winnie The Pooh as “Wookiee The Chew.” We don’t think we’ve ever seen anything cuter than Eeyore reimagined as an AT-AT. This is the Star Wars spin-off we really want to see. [via ComicBookResources]

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••• Obi-Wan remembers. How powerful is this scene from Star Wars Episode IV:A New Hope, re-imagined with flashbacks and the music from The Leftovers (or “A Blessing” by Max Richter as it’s properly known).


 

••• You can re-enact Batman V Superman with this new Dawn Of Justice Rock ’Em Sock ’Em Robots set from Mattel.

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••• Manny The Frenchie is a bit of a Twitter celebrity and now he’s turned his talents to Arrow tributes.


 

••• The Warcraft movie trailer as it should sound… like the game!


 

••• You have to love a bit of time lapse.


 

••• We’re putting this one last because it goes on a bit. Great fun, though…

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