The Huntress
returned for a straightforward adventure involving hostages, threatened loved
ones, and a healthy sense of, ‘you do what you need to do to survive or to save
someone you love.’ The latter is Sara’s motivation throughout “Birds of Prey.”
She thinks back on what she did to save Oliver when Slade had him, and she opts
to follow what saved Oliver when confronted by threats on her sister’s life.
Threats transformed Sara from wide-eyed to myopic. She will kill to save her
sister’s life. And she’s not portrayed differently from Helena Bertinelli, that
transfixing yet deadly Huntress. Helena Bertinelli’s been motivated by the
desire to kill her father for killing her fiancé. Whatever she needed to do to
come close to shooting an arrow through her father’s heart she did, which
corroded her soul and eventually tore it away from her. Helena’s biggest line
of the episode is about one not coming back from complete darkness. Sara
touched that darkness when dealing with Slade, but five years later, with the
help of Oliver and also the love of her family, she can be pulled back from the
abyss. Helena cannot.
“Birds of Prey”
isn’t overly involved or highlighted by a thrilling fight sequence. The central
tension, and the central action, of the episode took place in one location
where the hostages are along with Laurel Lance. The writers introduced a
combative SWAT leader, portrayed by the legendary Lochlyn Munro, to make one
aware that not all uniformed police like the vigilantes roaming about the city.
The Huntress travels to Starling City after her father is arrested. Soon she
walks into a trap, but not really, because she anticipated the trap and thus
set her own trap that powerful legal folk and police were caught in. It created
the hostage situation and a tense standoff that would end only when Helena had
her father in her sights to kill. Stories for Helena may be a little thin
because of sole motivation to kill her father, so the writers turned that
motivation into a trap that sets off different events for the rest of “Birds of
Prey.”
Choice and
free-will are not readily embraced by any character except for Oliver. Oliver
works to resolve the hostage situation without anyone’s death, which ultimately
fails because of the combative SWAT leader portrayed by the legendary Lochlyn
Munro. Oliver’s role in Helena’s life, beyond gentleman lover, was to help her
let go of anger—similar to his role in Roy’s life as the mirakura works on him.
Helena killed McKenna and then he let her go for she was beyond him. Oliver
hadn’t found himself as a hooded figure wandering the night in season 1. He
didn’t become something different until late in the season. Something different
means hero, though he’s not a hero yet. This is his journey. Helena’s journey
was different, though not foreign to consumers of comics or genre television
over the years. Her obsession cannot be sated through physical violence. What
ailed her was not her father’s existence, which when exhausted does not change
her inside. Clouds do not part. The sun doesn’t rise earlier than it did the
day before. The saddest truth for The Huntress was that the darkness settled in
her soul the second Michael passed from her world.
Sara represents
Helena’s opposite. There’s a little bit of the trope of the current girlfriend
showing she’s better than the ex. Sara expresses a faint jealousy of Oliver’s
ex-girlfriend during exposition about The Huntress. Circumstances changed both
girls’ lives. Sara survived on an island, battled Slade, and somewhere aligned
with the League of Assassins. The idea of choice falls through one’s mind like
water through a strainer in a survival situation. Oliver learned the value of
choice last season and tries to impart that to the women in his life. There
were different ways, he said, to deal with an issue. Violence and death needn’t
happen when there are many possibilities. Oliver spares lives through
practicality and reason. Bertinelli’s killed by the combative SWAT leader
portrayed by the legendary Lychon Munro. Sara doesn’t kill Helena. The actual
plan involves ‘trapping’ Helena, but that plan is shot to hell. The bird theme,
intimated in the title, reaches its neat completion. It’s followed through
using Helena, the bird caged by her anger, resentment, and ‘darkness,’ and then
the bird still caged after the cage opened.
She is the bird of prey, preying on herself, doomed to do so because of
that damned darkness that inspires Laurel.
The parallel
plot in the flashback does not end neatly, without hurt feelings and bloodshed,
because Sara ties up the man Slade wants. Sara’s confronted by a gun to her
body and a refusal to return to the boat, but one man’s life is important than
another, and so Oliver’s life will be spared at another’s. Sara needs Laurel’s
support to stop her from repeating what she on the freighter. There are other
parallels throughout the episode: Roy/Slade; Roy/Helena; Helena/Sara;
Slade/Helena. Sara lashes out at Oliver when he tells her to back off during
Laurel’s prosecution of Helena’s father by reminding him about Slade. There’s a
lot of repetition in the episode, too. The shape of the episode is a circle,
but variation of theme and expansion of theme
Other Thoughts:
-Truth’s another
matter in the episode. Thea rants about untruth around her, praising her
brother for his honesty, right before Slade takes her to destroy that trust she
thought existed between her and her brother.
-John Behring
directed. I didn’t catch the names of the two writers of tonight’s episode.
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