Oliver’s journey
from series beginning was to save Starling City after saving his father’s
reputation, restoring his memory, and forgiving his father for his sins. The
journey ended badly. Oliver was more killer than hero. He hurt the people he
love, put them in danger whether he meant to or not. A certain detachment
existed in Oliver once he returned from his five year ‘exile’ after the sinking
of the Queen’s Gambit. Laurel tethered him to the present; his friendship with
Tommy also acted as a tether. They kept him level, sane, behaved, inhibited.
Things went bad with Tommy in the season finale. Malcolm Merlyn’s insanity
resulted in over 500 deaths and the death of his son. Oliver resolved to become
someone else—no longer a vindictive vigilante hell-bent on a blood for blood
philosophy. Oliver wanted to be the hero the first season teased he was. Oliver
vowed not to kill, to do what’s right, to protect those he cared about from
what Tommy faced.
Tommy, however,
unbeknownst to anyone in the series, besides Slade, and to the audience, was
the final life Oliver watched die that he had a direct role in, and he couldn’t
be that guy anymore. The past made him who he is and defined him throughout the
first season. The island scenes were, initially, a way to show how playboy
billionaire Oliver Queen transformed into The Hood. Impossible and dangerous
situations changed him, choices he made informed his character, and he looked
more a victim refusing to succumb to victimhood. The past hovered over the
first part of the two part mid-season finale. Oliver’s looks whenever he
discussed the serum suggested a disturbance he felt, as if a memory hit him as
unexpectedly as a sudden wind.
Oliver’s past
confronts him during his hallucinations. Shado and Slade haunt him after Barry
saves his life using rat poison. The rat poison does not affect Oliver. His
mind does. Barry explains his hallucinations aren’t pharma-logical but rather
psychological. Oliver feels guilt and remorse. Shado comes to him gently,
softly recommends letting, which doesn’t mean to let go of the fight to live
but to let go of the guilt he feels for what happened on the island. Ivo gave
Oliver a choice between Sara and Shadow, just like the Joker gave Batman a
choice between Harvey and Rachel. Unlike Batman, Oliver wants to save both.
Batman yelled, “I’m going to Rachel,” unaware of the trick played on him. The
critical moment is oddly staged and confusingly shot. Oliver runs forward,
kneels down, shouting, “No!” Ivo shoots Shado in the head afterwards. It looked
like Oliver dropped to his knees between the women, but from the angle of Ivo,
which the episode cuts to when Shado is shot, it looks like Oliver’ kneeling in
front of Sara. Shado’s death is cataclysmic.
The formerly
dead but instead very much alive Slade awakes asking for Shado and then
unleashes incredible power on Ivo’s men, throwing soldiers through trees and
ripping a man’s still beating heart from his chest. The prone dead body of
Shado unleashes a torrent of grief, proclamations about what he’ll do to those
responsible for her death. Sara lies to him about why Ivo shot him, leaving the
part about Oliver’s choice out. Slade eventually learns what happened because
he’s in present-day Starling City to work with, or rather oversee, Blood’s work
with the serum. Slade’s plan of revenge involves destroying Oliver’s life. It’s
not an original vengeance plan but it is a plan. I assume Slade spent time
watching ABC’s Revenge and liked Emily’s approach to vengeance (though that
character is more hands-on than Slade). The reveal of Slade as the man
overseeing Sebastian Blood is framed for the effect of the surprise, though his
profile is visible in the monitor on his desk. The camera pans up from his hand
to reveal Business Suit Slade who wants to hurt Oliver as much as he hurt him
the day he chose Sara over Shado.
Previous to the
reveal, Cyrus Gold unleashes carnage on the city. Quentin follows Oliver’s
advice to bring men in an attempt to take down Cyrus, but all of the men except
him die at his hand. Slade anticipated every one of Oliver’s moves, seemingly.
His goal is to crush his life, so Blood goes after Roy, will go after Felicity,
and has nearly killed Quentin through Cyrus Gold. Cyrus is killed after an
explosion. Sebastian Blood leaves, which leads to the aforementioned reveal.
The end cuts between the past and present—Slade cradling Shado followed by
present-day Oliver trying on his mask. I should mention Oliver’s third ghost
(his second was Slade, who he lost to in an imaginary fight) is Tommy, who
tells him to continue fighting, to not blame himself for his death for any
death. Quentin tells Oliver the same thing. He cannot continue blaming himself.
It’s an important truth for him to embrace for that inevitable fight with
Slade, which he’ll have to engage in without guilt, without remorse, or else
he’ll lose and the bad guys will win. That won’t happen. Oliver won’t triumph
soon. Slade will hurt the people he cares about.
The scope of the
second season is really impressive. The writers haven’t lost track of the
characters (well, the ones that matter—Laurel’s doing nothing) in the midst of
tremendous plotting. There are big bads all over the narrative. Big moments and
little moments are written with equal nuance. Oliver’s internal psychological
struggle with the past is important as Felicity’s feelings for him, as Oliver’s
way of making right what he did to Roy’s leg, as Diggle’s issue with Deadshot,
as Thea’s whatever. The writers haven’t thrown in these bad guys willy-nilly
the way Sam Raimi was forced to in Spiderman 3, which derailed the film. Ivo,
Blood and Slade connect. Merlyn’s shadowy operations above and beyond Oliver
and Diggle tie into the actual Queen family. Arrow’s set up well for an awesome
2014.
Other Thoughts:
-The . episode
concluded with Barry Allen’s Flash transformation event. The CW’s planning a
spinoff for next season. Right before his transformative event, he tried to
transform Felicity’s idea of whom she wanted by asking her out on a date
sometime.
-I’ll miss
watching Celina Jade light up the television with her transfixing beauty. Did
the writers just run out of ideas for Shado? Her death’s important for the
Slade v. Oliver, I know; however, the character had nothing for this season
besides being involved with Oliver while Slade looked on enviously.
-Geoff Johns
& Ben Sokolowski wrote the episode. Greg Berlanti and Andrew Kreisburg got
the story credit. John Behring directed the episode.
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