Of all the actors working on Arrow, Katie Cassidy is the
most polarizing. I’ve seen fans argue about whether she’s a capable actress,
how she’s underwhelmed in the other shows she’s been in, how frustrating it is
that The CW didn’t give up on her. Laurel’s one of those beautiful, tough types
writers love to talk about writing for television. She’s a lawyer who stares
bad guys in the face and didn’t once fear for her life in front of the scary
Hood. In season 1, Katie Cassidy played Laurel effectively. She wasn’t the best
or worst part of any Arrow scene. Her chemistry with Stephen Amell is
non-existent when compared to Celina Jade’s scenes with him, but she didn’t
negatively affect what Laurel meant to Oliver, their history, and what they
mean to each other.
“Broken Dolls” focuses on Laurel and moves her past her
feelings about The Hood and looks inward at what motivated her. Through the
first two episodes of the seasons, Laurel’s been angry and shut down. The last
act of tonight’s episode reveals what’s been going on inside of Laurel, what’s
been eating away at her, and what made her turn on The Hood: she blames herself
for Tommy’s death. Blaming onself for a character’s death is as old as the
invention of the television. Laurel didn’t realize what she felt, so it makes
sense Katie Cassidy acted without depth and nuance until her breakdown in
“Broken Dolls.” I couldn’t figure out the character. Cassidy literally glows in
each scene. I think the combination of the lighting, the lens, her make-up, and
her highlighted air creates the glow. Cassidy’s look jumped off the screen way
more than any acting she did. Perhaps, in a strange way, the dollmaker
storyline was designed to reflect Laurel. She’s this beautiful girl who’s
become as hard and impersonal as a doll.
The dollmaker storyline’s very weak. Barton Mathis, the
serial dollmaker, who kidnaps girls and then turns the girls into actual dolls
through a disturbing process, is the typical fictional serial killer. He wears
his blond hair slicked back, glasses on his face, never changes his timbre when
speaking, and works in a dank basement with lighting that’d make the Saw DPs
nod in approval. Mathis wants to preserve a woman’s beauty. The former
detective Lance, now on beat cop duty, put Mathis away the first time. Mathis
remembers and engages him in his psychotic nonsense. Lance enlists Oliver to
help him take down Mathis.
Oliver’s attentions are split between helping Lance and
figuring out who the silver-haired woman in the leather is. She is The Black Canary, and she saved Oliver
from his situation in Laurel’s office. Why? Oliver doesn’t know. The Black
Canary’s running from people she refers to as ‘them’ and will kill anyone who
tries to let ‘them’ know where is, or, to bring her back to ‘them.’ Roy finds
her and receives no answers, and he never appears in the episode after the
Black Canary loses interest in him. Roy’s freed after she sees a message from
Thea Queen, which may or may not be a sign. It probably is; in fact, I’m sure
of it. I don’t know. The Black Canary’s thrall is her mystery. She’s different
from The Huntress, but she kicks ass like her.
Lance already worked through his Arrow issues, so his second
dance with Barton Mathis allows him to work through his role as father to his
daughter. Sarah’s the daughter he couldn’t save and who inspired him to try to
save the girls being killed by Mathis. He thought he’d try to save girls like
Sarah, but he failed. It’s a really effective and moving use of Lance. Last
season showed glimpses of what tragedy’s done to him, but his demotion has
helped him. He trusts the vigilante now and he’s trying to help Laurel through
what she’s experiencing without her falling into a rut like he did. Laurel
won’t let her father in initially, because she doesn’t know what she’s
feeling—she’s lost touch with herself. Nearly dying puts her back in touch with
what’s going on, and she blames herself for Tommy’s death as Oliver watches
from above, after defeating Barton. (The Black Canary killed Barton).
Quentin Lance’s arc from demoted detective to beat cop to
eventual savior of the city is going to be satisfying and fulfilling. Lance’s
arc is common in police dramas. The battered cop finds his way and redeems
himself. The police chief is against him, arresting him for obstructing justice
when Lance involves himself in the Mathis case. Lance’s Detective Gordon to
Oliver’s Bruce Wayne has worked really well so far. For Lance, his pursuit of
The Hood ruined his career—it was an extension of his destructive life. Inevitably,
Oliver will help regain what Lance lost. Sarah can’t be saved, but the many
Sarahs of the world can be, if they continue working together.
The island scenes are brief but explosive. Slade and Oliver
head for high ground while Shado studies a skeleton. Slade repeats his advice
about not forming attachments. Oliver continues to dismiss the advice. The boat
off shore starts firing on the island. Oliver and Slade get hurt. Shado’s fate
is unclear. Slade’s face seems burned by the flames. Oliver wakes in a cage on
the boat, without Slade or Shado in sight. The island scenes only connect to
Lance’s lines about what losing Sarah did to him, which he delivers after
telling Oliver he must’ve lost people he cared about to do what he does.
Arrow’s in a terrific place right now. The characters, the
writing, the plotting, the fight choreography, and the flashbacks, are
excellent. The Barton Maths story is pretty bad but the way it’s told to deepen
the Lances is what makes Arrow.
Other Thoughts:
-I got really into the scene when Felicity baits Mathis and
her boys rush in to save her. I was lying on the couch, but that sequence
jolted me up. So, yeah, I feel invested in the action.
-The District Attorney will pursue the death penalty against
Moira. Moira’s willing to accept death because she doesn’t want the truth to
come out about her involvement in Robert’s death. Thea and Oliver love her and
will fight for her. A fight will bring out those dark secrets and tear the
family apart.
-Marc Guggenheim co-wrote the episode with Keto Shimizu.
Glen Winter directed it.
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