Slade Wilson,
the toughest, gruffest, meanest, and at times most badass character, is
actually the most histrionic of the many characters that populate the fictional
Starling City in this fictional comic book series. The writers never tried to
avoid mention of the series’ soap opera elements. Greg Berlanti’s an executive
producer, co-creator, and frequent story contributor, and he’s made his money
indulging in the histrionics of melodramatic soapiness. Slade Wilson’s reaction
to the truth about Shado’s death is a complete overreaction but without it he’s
not a villain—and this overreaction of his, spurred by the mira-kura
circulating in his bloodstream transforms him into a tragic villain, one who
was sick at that unfortunate time when Oliver’s choice came up. The passage of
time did not heal Slade’s wounds. The promise he made to Oliver five years
ago—to make Oliver feel complete despair—has grown in his mind and in scope.
“The Promise” is
split between the present day reunion between Oliver and Slade and the
flashback to the sacking of the freighter. Neither unfolds well. Oliver’s
caught off-guard by Slade’s aggressive maneuver into his family’s life. By the
end, Slade has introduced himself to Moira and Thea, taken a tour of the house,
and set up cameras throughout—in paintings, in a model miniature boat, in the
walls. All the feeds broadcast to his expensive lair, where he watches like a
god. Slade, in his mind, is god-like. He’s the most powerful man on earth.
Bullets shoot through him. He heals without a wince, a flinch, or a grimace.
Slade knows what’s coming, what came, and who everyone who may oppose him is.
Oliver organizes his team to take Slade out as he exits the building, unaware
of what lengths Slade took to ensure that wouldn’t happen. There are men
gathered around the perimeter of the house, protecting him. Diggle’s bonked in
the head before he can pull the trigger. Oliver learns about Slade’s
involvement with blood. By the end of their unhappy reunion, Slade smirks the
same as when he showed himself to Oliver at the end of the last episode. It’s
not ‘Not yet, kid’ for Slade; it’s ‘Not ever.’
Slade’s
intentionally uses ‘kid’ to Oliver. Oliver was a green kid when he washed up on
shore and still green when he met Slade. Oliver learned most of his skills,
honed those skills, from Slade. Slade is the master and Oliver the pupil.
Oliver can’t match up with Slade. Slade pulled Oliver back from the edge of the
boat when Oliver jumped to meet his friends on the beach, far away from the gun
fire and chaos on the freighter. Slade grabs him like Oliver grabs the rat that
crawled on his belly while he lay in the cell. Oliver returns to the same cell
in which the rat crawled over him. Slade views Oliver as either the same as the
rat or worse than a rat. A rat represents waste and scum. Oliver’s lower than
waste and scum for he chose one girl over another girl.
Slade decides to
take over as captain of the freighter. Taking a bullet and then killing the
ship’s new captain puts him in the leadership role. Any kind of boat needs
constant work to avoid corrosion and rust from the ocean water. Salt wastes
good paint. The inside of the freighter looks like Slade’s soul. It’s dark,
drippy, rusted, and empty. He becomes part of a physical corrosion and physical
rust as his own soul corrodes and rusts. He throws Oliver into a cell after he
asserts his dominance among Ivo’s remaining man. Ivo experiences losing his
hand in Slade’s first act of total disregard for other human lives. Oliver
watches. The lesson taught to Ivo is one of mercilessness. Ivo showed no mercy
to Shado on the night she died; however, Slade doesn’t like the quick kill, the
merciful kill, as it were. Mercy is why he spares Oliver from death. Death
would be a kindness to Oliver when what he deserves is a despairing experience,
one in which he’ll watch everyone he loves horribly die. I told you Slade
overreacted to a complicated system. That’s what monstrous supervillains do: they
become villains because they lose touch with humanity. The mira-kuru
contributes Slade’s extreme visceral reaction to Shadow, his murderous rage and
commitment to death and destruction to those response and those related to
those responsible. Beneath the monster is the grieving man so sad about what
happened to the woman he loved most in the world.
Slade’s
connection with Shado was tenuous. I was never drawn into Slade’s feelings for
Shadow. His connection to her seemed more of an aside than a serious plot
point. The point of Shado was not much more than a plot device. Oliver
experiences haunting dreams of grief, guilt-ridden dreams in which she asks him
why he let her die, why he didn’t choose her, and dream Shadow stabs him
repeatedly in the stomach and in the neck. Oliver and Shadow shared a physical
and emotional connection. They shared bodies, minds, and also fighting
technique. The scene where he chose Sara over Shado seemed different than what
the characters remember. I remember the scene unfolding confusingly with Oliver
dashing in front of Ivo, seemingly to sacrifice himself because he wanted to
save both girls’ lives. The angle of the camera didn’t show Oliver’s angle of
covering Sara, though Stephen Amell looked like he was in between the girls,
thus furthering one’s perception that he offered his own life to Ivo. Sara and
Oliver treated the situation as if he specifically chose her without pointing
out what his intent was—but there’s zero conflict without the choice that
spawned Slade’s insanely powerful wrath that day.
Slade’s the most
personal villain for Oliver; he called Oliver his brother before the freighter
mission. Oliver is kept prisoner for an unknown period of time on the island by
Slade—I assume whatever happened made Oliver ready and willing to take Slade
out immediately in Starling City, as if he was a tyrant only killable with a great
big gun and not the Word.
Other Thoughts:
-I liked Roy’s
intense, rage-filled eyes, and also Slade’s amusement at Roy’s strength. Yeah,
Slade will turn Roy against the family for an episode or two.
-The self-containment
of “The Promise” was different from the usual case-of-the-week format. One
could throw in serialization for self-containment, of course.
-Jake Coburn
& Ben Sokolowski wrote the episode. Glen Winter directed it. I think an
imposter Glen Winter e-mailed me a compliment once. Surely a well-to-do TV
director wouldn’t put a space between the last word in a sentence and the
exclamation point to end that sentence.
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