Obviously Cape Opera has been away for a while... The regular show updates were getting too long-winded, and the schedule was too much to handle as well as work, so I mothballed it for a bit... Iâm bringing it back soon with a less time-driven approach and a new style. For now, just enjoy another example of the golden age - the best fight scene from the fantastic Daredevil Season 2!
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My friend and fellow Legends fan Pete had some negative points to make about episode 3, and they are not without merit. Kendra, aka Hawkgirl, injured at the climax of episode 2, spends most of this one unconscious, occasionally blurting out convenient plot details. But hey, on the upside, no more you-know-who, except (please no) in flashbacks.
Flashback time! Another cold open. Weâre in Egypt, the Ancient one, that looks like a stage set for a Canadian production of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolour Dream Coat. Vandal Savage is creeping about in the darkness, and guess whoâs here to kill him... itâs Rip Hunter. With no backup. And just a stupid knife. Bad plan.
After two solid episodes of action, all signs point to this being more of a âfillerâ episode. Weâre already down one badass, with Hawkgirl out of action. Itâs still the 70s outside, Savage got away, and Kendra has evil magical blade fragments working their way through her bloodstream, leaving the crew time-stranded. The expositionary dialogue in the obligatory team conference scene is given to Heatwave, officially man-of-the-match for both of these episodes, which is interesting - Iâd actually love to see him doing more speeches that begin with âTo sum up...â
It all leads into a speech from Rip Hunter, who delivers that killer line from the trailer:Â âIâve seen men of steel die, and dark knights fall...â True, its impact is somewhat diminished without explosions and trailer music behind it, but whatevs. Cool line. And apparently, this is what makes Rip such a time travel genius, you see. He has more âperspectiveâ on events, because he has been a Time Master. To be fair, everyone looks a bit skeptical at this point - heâs certainly made a complete arse of taking out Savage so far, and the cold open hints that it isnât his first time fumbling the ball.
This is what you could be watching in another dimension or a parallel timeline.
While theyâre stranded, shipâs computer Gideon advises them that their Jump Ship (awesome!), a "small expeditionary vehicleâ (Rip, obvs) for super-missions, needs some repairs - handy then that Jax, aka Yung Firestorm, is a qualified automechanic. I was quite looking forward to seeing the guts of the ship, but thatâs not really this show - look to The Expanse for your grim futuretech fun. Nope, YFS is going to be the getaway driver for Captain Cold and Heatwave, on a very special 70s heist.
But first, White Canary calls bullshit on Hunterâs âI am a badass Timelordâ speech: âYou donât actually have a plan, do you?â Luckily, Canary was trained by Raâas Al Ghul (the original, scary one, not John Barrowman). She proposes a plan to cut off Vandal Savageâs money - to rob him of his power by going after his stash at The Broomberg Group. Nice. Herein lies this episodeâs problem, though - any idiot could have pointed out that if they were going to do some housebreaking, they should have brought Snart and Rory.
Canary even points out what a dick Hunter is being by proposing to rob Savage by himself. Hunter gives her this speech about how he âcanât risk the whole team,â which is stupid, because they risked the whole team last episode, and still didnât beat Savage. Quite why Hunter wants to go off on his ones and try again, immediately, is unclear, but Canary has his back regardless.Â
Snart and Rory even come in, overhear the plan, and OFFER TO HELP. And Hunter, who has already called Rory âthick,â is rude to them yet again. It comes off as snarky and arrogant, which I guess is a facet of Hunter weâre supposed to be seeing here - his hubris. But it feels like territory we already covered.
What makes it worse is that Rory isnât as dumb as he looks - heâs just bored. âWhen Iâm bored, I make bad decisions,â he says to Hunter, clearly a threat. Hunter just subs him, and by doing so, kinda seals his own fate, as far as his and Canaryâs plot thread is concerned. He deserves what he gets.
Speaking of plot threads, Captain Atom and Olâ Man Firestorm spend the whole episode measuring their scientific dicks, and re-enacting a kind of two-man Inner Space inside Kendraâs body. Itâs weird, and gross, and pretty disappointingly poorly animated, so Iâll spare you the blow-by-blows.
As predicted, Canary and Hunterâs reconnaissance mission becomes a punch-fest, and the show doesnât disappoint here. Itâs a cool fight... yâknow, as cool as a fight against evil ninja bankers can be, anyway.
Youâre right, itâs dumb. It isnât even a good meme. Itâs all setup, really, for the realisation that Sara, who slices and dices her way through this crew like butter, still has the crazy resurrected ninja zombie rage, just like Speedy over on Arrow. Even though that makes no sense, because according to that show, Constantine âpurifiedâ Saraâs soul of the Lazarus Pitâs creepy supernatural badness. Seems he left a few sticky traces... she still, very much, has the stabby stabby thoughts.
Rip and Sara tie up and mock-torture one of the banker dudes (the sword guy, who has an Evil Fringe, and is a bit of a silver fox). We learn that Savage is the head of this dudeâs super-creepy cult, and together, they sneak into Savageâs private party, because Savage and his rich-and-famous, Eyes Wide Shut pals (Heatwave even makes an Eyes Wide Shut joke later, I swear to fuck...) are going to perform an evil ritual with Hawkbroâs chisel-jawed corpse. Sara and Rip finally admit they need Snart and coâs help... but of course, theyâre off stealing shit.
Cold and Heatwave, with Jax as the getaway driver, are off to steal a crazy big emerald (which looked, I think, a whole bunch like Kryptonite... I dunno, maybe thatâs wishful thinking). But we donât get to see that - instead, we learn that Snart has intercepted this jewel in an effort to keep his Dad out of jail.
Snartâs going to fuck with the timeline. Which is kind of stupid, given that we did the âdonât fuck with your own timelineâ thing last week, with Professor Steinâs whole disappearing wife / wedding ring / Back to the Future type deal. Itâs just a bad sign, kinda, if weâre going to have to mess with Grandfather Paradoxes every week, right? You canât just screw with history?
âYeah, well,â says Snart, âhistory screwed with me first.â Itâs a great answer, and encapsulates everything about why Wentworth Miller is the real star of this show. He doesnât want redemption, he doesnât even want revenge - he wants to right the cosmic injustice of his own existence. He wants to un-write or re-write the tragedy of himself. To become a hero? To seek annihilation? Who can tell, probably not even him. His is a truly Nietzschean struggle. The scene between Snart and his father is played with such restrained menace; within the context of Millerâs grandstanding, snarky, sometimes moustache-twirling villainy elsewhere in the show, this quiet scene feels real, and has depth. Even if it is another stupid Grandfather Paradox.
With that, itâs back to the creepy Kubrick ball-slash-secret ceremony. It turns out Savage was expecting them - because he always bloody is. We get the end of that cold open - back in Ye Olde Egypt, Hunter tried to kill Savage, but faltered. This has led to Hunter becoming the creepy cultâs Judas figure - and the ceremony with Carterâs body provided a great excuse to lure him out.
Thankfully thereâs no plan to bring Carter back to life - Savage cuts his throat and drinks his blood, sharing it with his creepy followers to give them a taste of the afterlife too. This is kind of cool, leading back to the idea of Savage as a kind of immortal energy vampire, and in that way slightly akin to The Reverse Flash. Not only does he live forever, he can feed off the reincarnation energy of whatever eraâs Hawkman and Hawkgirl he finds himself in.
This also demonstrates quite clearly why Rip Hunterâs multiple failed assassination attempts could be literally the worst plan ever - all that has to happen is that Savage gets a time machine, and any barriers to his total dominance of history (as foreshadowed in the scenes of destruction in Rip Hunterâs time) are removed. Hunter is playing a dangerous game. And he is rubbish at time travel, as others have quite rightly pointed out.
Whatâs more, in this confrontation, he actually gives up the identity of his wife and son - Savage sees their picture. Hunter has done just what he has warned everyone not to - given away his advantage, removed the element of surprise, and revealed his weakness. Perhaps he has even caused the very events that led to his familyâs death.
Luckily, even though Rip is a patronising, dismissive dick to everyone, they all still love him, because Cold and Heatwave show up and assist with laying waste to the place and everyone in it. Go team! Excellent work show, weâre back where we were at the start of episode 2. The team recover Carterâs body, and Hunter once again comes face to face with Savage.Â
Hunter slashes his throat. Even though he knows this wonât kill him, because only Kendra can kill him, and only with the same magic knife Savage stabbed her with last week. While he kills Savage wounds Savage does that, he says his wifeâs and his sonâs names. Because he is an idiot. Clearly.
Meanwhile, nothing Snart has done has actually affected the timeline at all - his Dad still gets arrested, this time trying to move the stolen goods. âYou tried to save him,â points out Jax, completely missing the existential core of what Snart has tried to do by rubbing out the bad parts of his fatherâs life in an effort to to curtail his own childhood trauma before it even happens. âThatâs gotta count for something.â
âTurns out it doesnât,â replies Snart, joining Rick (of Rick and Morty) on the list of my favourite fictional cosmic pessimists. Blah blah blah, Carter gets a funeral, Hunter apologises for lying to everyone and completely fucking up, again, and makes everyone agree, again, to work as a team. BUT CAN THEY ACTUALLY DO IT?
Looks like weâre about to find out RIGHT NOW - no cold open for episode 4, weâre straight into 1986, and itâs time to rob the fucking Pentagon. Letâs do this. Believe it or not, it works like a charm - everyone gets a job, with Snart on pass-thieving janitor duty, Sara and Kendra as General-Type Ladies, and Rory sneaking into the guardsâ quarters and challenging everyone to an arm wrestle (seriously).Â
Every member of the team does okay except for Jax, who manages to electrocute himself. This trips the alarm, leading to Kendra getting all Hawk-goddess on the security guards (spooky red eyes and everything), and Heatwave has to break out the old flame-on gun. Firestorm rescues the berserker-raging Kendra, and everyone gets back to the ship okay - Canary even has the file on Savage they were after all along. Itâs just that the Pentagon knows about super-beings now, in 1986. Ooops. Luckily, Gideon âerased the tapes.â It never happened! Yeah, I hope that little incident doesnât um... affect the timeline, or anything.Â
Back at the ship, this episodeâs conflicts are set up! Itâs Jax versus Prof Stein for control of Firestormâs inner monologue! Kendra versus Sara for the title of most-mysteriously enraged badass! Snart versus Palmer for, uh.. romance (more of that later). And for the team as a whole, itâs off to Russia for another crack at Savage! But oh no... as Jax puts it, âBoba Fettâs back.â Itâs everyoneâs favourite Temporal Bounty Hunter, IG-88.
Nah, Iâm just kidding, itâs Chronos, and heâs still pissed. With some fancy flying and uncloaking and re-cloaking, Hunter manages to give Chronos the slip, distracting him with the Russian Air Force, and allowing The Atom to drop a Top Gun reference. Iâm trying to decide if itâs cute or disturbing that itâs Snart who picks him up on it.
They cut the engines on the Waverider to avoid a pair of heat-seeking missiles (which hit Chronos, suckaaaaaaa!), and end up crashing in Russia harder than a Tunguska meteor, behind Communist lines. Eep.Â
Luckily, they have magic science pills which allow them to speak fluent Russian. Yass. The plan is that Snart and Palmer cosy up to a Russian scientist-slash-super-spy, and find out what Savage is up to behind the Iron Curtain. Sara, meanwhile, is on training time this week with Sara, whoâll teach her about managing her anger in a constructive way, and restraining her âinner warrior.â
Yeah, thatâll go well. Sara has her own rageaholic problems, and besides, the gang kind of need Kendra to be a bit of a mental radge if sheâs going to go up against Savage and beat him. They fight, and nearly kill each other, again surprising absolutely nobody.
At the opera, it turns out the Russian target is way more super-spy than scientist - she has no interest in talking to doofus Ray Palmer, and so Snart slides in. The pair skip the second half of the ballet, and head for a romantic (but suitably snarky and moustache-twirly) winter walk through a Canadian city somewhere Russian, probably Moscow. Snart hits it off with the target, and steals her security pass. I wonder if he has, like, a nail on his wall where he keeps all of the security passes heâs stolen? Iâd totally do that if I was him. Does the Waverider even have bedrooms? Is it like the ship from Firefly, with quarters for everyone, or do they just kip in those fancy chairs on the bridge?Â
Rip meanwhile gets to go Chronos-hunting with Heatwave, and again, this is the beauty of the show - itâs basically a bag of unlikely team-ups. The casting is so good that even if one arc doesnât pan out for you, another will - and this weekâs best âconceptual horseâ is definitely the Hunter / Heatwave double-act. Instead of Boba Fetty Wap, they find Time Master Druce, who wants to try and head off Hunterâs lunatic plan to deliver time travel into Savageâs hands. Druce asks Hunter to give up the chase. And Hunter, who has STILL LEARNED NOTHING ABOUT TEAMWORK, APPARENTLY, decides to pitch it to the gang.
What a pitch it is. Everyone goes back to 2016, they let Savage conquer history, and the Time Council put right all of the teamâs fuck-ups so far. Thankfully, Hunter is like, âHell naw,â and pulls the old bait-and-switch on Druce, who is of course, rolling with the bounty hunter at his back. Firestorm swoops in, with Heatwave as backup. They exchange laser-fire with Chronos, but Jax is hit, separating him from the Professor. Chronosâ blast was too much for him - he is wounded badly.
Back at the ship, the Prof gives Jax both barrels for being reckless during the fight. Then he volunteers to take point on inflltrating the Russian lab where Savageâs weapons are being manufactured - the episodeâs gambit coming into play fairly late in the game. He gets in fine, and finds a secret basement of dead test subjects... for a Russian Firestorm. As Stein says, âSavage has spent the last decade trying to level the arms race against our team.â
Every episode so far has shown what a tangled web time travel weaves - each move undoes another, or produces a counter-move. The more they encounter Savage, the more he learns about them. Our heroes still seem remarkably oblivious to this, but Stein is catching on - horrified by the idea that his Firestorm research could have contributed to an East-West arms race, not to mention Savageâs rise to power.
The climax sees Palmer and Snart take on Russian military guards, and the scientist/super-spy valentina, while the Prof, who is immune to radiation, tries to contain the energy of the power core the Russians are using to make their own Firestorm. He manages to contain it, but Snart has already been captured by Valentina.
Rory turns up to rescue Snart - interesting Rory fact, his entry line for last episodeâs last-minute rescue was âLetâs get this party started!â This episode, he goes with âThis where the partyâs at?â Rory likes to party. Unfortunately, Rory gets shot, and Snart only just gets away with the power core, leaving his partner and the Prof in Valentinaâs clutches.Â
So weâre set up for a rescue mission - can Kendra and Sara keep their shit together, and only kill, uhhhh, guys who kinda deserve it, I guess? Can Jax continue to not blame Professor Stein for his complete irrationality and dickish behaviour? Will Snart let Hunter live after Hunter let Rory get captured? Can we please have some more cool Atom-action not based in someoneâs intestine, or have we blown that budget?
This weekâs Arrow had the most badass opening of the season so far, featuring the return of one of the showâs best characters, Nyssa Al-Ghul, Daughter of the (original) Demon. This lethal, ass-kicking, globe-trotting assassin has been locked up in her fatherâs dungeon for quite some time, after helping Laurel Lance, aka Black Canary, use the Lazarus Pit to resurrect Sara Lance, aka White Canary... WITH TERRIBLE CONSEQUENCES! Yep, Raâs Al-Barrowman was pretty pissed at Nyssa when we last saw them together...
As Episode 12 opens, Talibah, a League of Assassins adept originally rescued and recruited by Nyssa and Sara, brings the Daughter of the Demon her dinner - a delicious stuffed pepper. Itâs stuffed with... GASP! A ninja shank!
Nyssa and Talibah kick seven shades of crap out of a bunch of League-ers - Nyssa begins the fight by literally launching herself through the closing prison door, both feet and hands connecting with the guyâs masked face as he hits the dirt. The duo pick up swords from the fallen, and take out half a dozen or more ninjas, back to back. The fight choreography on this show, headed up by James Bamford, just keeps getting better.Â
Cut to another room full of ninjas - two more League-ers enter, and report that Nyssa has escaped. As another clutch of guards prepare to join the fight, the two who reported the breakout attack, slaying everyone in the room. Nyssa and Talibah enter, and they bend the knee. Nyssa has loyal followers within the League, and intends to slay âthe usurper,â ie Barrowman.Â
The Demonâs Head. BRRRRRRRRR....
Given that I live in Glasgow, and am more used to seeing Barrowman in panto with The Krankies, I must confess Iâd be more than happy to see him deposed from the League, and Nyssa in charge (although, to be fair to Barrowman, his performance as Malcolm Merlyn has done a lot to endear him to me).
Meanwhile, Team Arrow are chasing a cat burglar - the hooded figure gives Magneto Diggle and Black Canary the slip with some nifty parkour, and outruns Ollie and Speedy on the roof. Speedy has him cornered, pinning him to the edge of the roof, but she gets faint. Ollie only just saves her from falling. The man in black gets away.Â
Back at the Arrow Cave, the gang are all of the opinion that Speedy flipped out because her blood lust is back. While White Canaryâs blood lust was cured by John Constantine, Speedyâs had no such luck - Damian Dahrk drained her of the stabby-stabby thoughts for a bit, but they come back. The team have yet another reason to track down Dahrk, but he and his Ghosts have gone, um... dark for the last wee while (Besides, as weâll see in this weekâs Legends of Tomorrow, maybe Sara isnât as chilled and mellow as everyone thinks, exactly).
Felicityâs subplot is fairly run-of-the-mill this week - she has to do a presentation for PalmerTech about a new piece of battery technology or something. Her new best bud, Curtis, helps her out and in the course of it, she regains some of the confidence knocked out of her by her recent confrontation with Gothlicity. Itâs solid character-building for Felicity, and imminent-death-wise, she seems to be out of the woods for now, but itâs this episodeâs slowest thread. The Den of Geek reviewer seems to like Curtis, though. Myself, Iâm finding him a bit third-wheel ish.
Malclom Merlyn drops by and chats undead curses with Ollie and Speedy, but the Ollie is called away to fight the burglar from earlier on - and guess what folks, itâs Roy Harper! Thatâs right, Star Cityâs best warning against steroid use has returned, and heâs as moody as ever - when Ollie reveals his face, he gets a swift punch in the jaw, and Roy escapes again.
Except itâs not the âroids which have got Roy all fired up - itâs mind control (naturally). Before we can find this out, itâs back to the island again, GROAN, where Ollie is being tortured by Baron Reiter.Â
Baron motherfucking Blitzkrieg, yo. Not fucking about, not even slightly.
Interesting Reiter fact - this character is based on Baron Blitzkrieg, a Nazi DC supervllain. Whether Reiter becomes enhanced, or magic, or metahuman, or indeed a Nazi on the show remains to be seen, but hereâs a cool piece on Comic Vine about the casting of the role, with comments from Marc Guggenheim, Arrow producer and veteran comics writer.
Long story short, in the flashbacks, Shadow is back (in the past). EPIC GROAN. Except sheâs a hallucination. AGAIN. GROAN. Jesus, just ditch the fucking flashbacks, show, please. Enough already.Â
Obvs Ollie has some deep something-or-other to learn about himself in these scenes, but they have long felt like wheel-spinning, especially since Ollie has evolved from overly-worried-newbie, to worryingly-competent-killing-machine, to upstanding-moral-killing-only-when-necessary-mayoral-candidate, and all this happened literally ages ago in this narrative. The island is ancient history. Itâs time. Jettison the device, show.
Back in the present, Diggle, Laurel and Ollie take down Roy, faking his death so that whoever is mind controlling him wonât suspect anything. Back at the Arrow Cave, a reunion takes place. Roy has been coerced into stealing tech for a new, as yet unseen villain - The Calculator. Given that the DC Universe Wiki outright describes Calculator as âthe evil version of Oracle,â this weekâs episode is suddenly interesting again. Felicity, newly codenamed Overwatch, is looking more and more like the Arrowverseâs Oracle... but why couldnât they use the name? Is Oracle going to figure in the upcoming Justice League movie? Interesting...
After more Island pish, weâre back with Nyssa - HOORAY! - and she has come to Japan to confront a very different opponent... Katana, aka Oliverâs former handler and sometime-ally, Tatsu Yamashiro. Her confrontation with Nyssa is this episodeâs (all too brief) highlight - two phenomenal performers, athletes and characters squaring off with deadly intentions. It is fantastic from start to finish.
This is also significant because it means Katana has not been taken off The CWâs board, despite her central presence in the upcoming Suicide Squad film (and unlike poor old Amanda Waller, who bit the bullet last week). Iâm going to be optimistic here, and hope this is more evidence of a wider acceptance of the CWVerse as another branch in a slowly-unfolding DC TV / Cinematic Multiverse.
âWeâre evenly matched,â quips Nyssa after a lightning exchange of katana blows. âOne of us must yield, or this could go on for ages.â
Tatsu removes her mask and glowers imperiously at her opponent. âI have nowhere else to be.â
YES.Â
Eventually, Tatsu agrees to listen to Nyssaâs tale. Back to Star City, where Roy and Ollie bro down wearing vests. Then Roy visits Thea, but as they talk, the stab wound inflicted on her by Raâs Al-Ghul (the first one, no her Da), reappears. Looks like her blood lust problem is getting worse.Â
Over at the Arrow Cave, Felicity is closing in on The Calculator with her best hacker-fu. She heads to PalmerTech to get help from Curtis (whose insight basically amounts to, âWhy not focus on the subplots which DONâT involve punching?â No, punk!), while Ollie tries to reassure Speedy.
By the time Felicity has tracked The Calculator using some PalmerTech gizmos, Ollieâs back in the green leather, and he and Roy take on The Calculatorâs hired mercs in (you guessed it) a warehouse. The fights provide some nice Ollie/Roy banter, but itâs all about Overwatch versus Calculator, with a good old hacker battle! Plus ca change, plus ca meme chose.
Come on, who doesnât love hacking montages?
This particular hack-off ends with Roy shooting an arrow at the mainframe (or something), before rope-sliding away from a gigantic explosion. NICE! Home and safe, Roy says heâs not sticking around. And Ollie, meanwhile, is going to let Thea decide what to do about the whole blood lust thing - the worldâs most controlling big brother is finally unclenching (or trying to). Speedy and Roy share a teary goodbye, and Felicity nails her PalmerTech speech (surprise).
But then! ACTUAL SURPRISE! Who shows up at the office? THE CALCULATOR! And Felicity is all like... âDad?âÂ
So it turns out hacking runs in the family, and maybe Gothlicity was closer to the dark side than even her black lipstick and Gaiman-esque threads suggested...
Ollie visits Thea, and even shares a bro-down handshake of thanks with Merlyn... then Nyssa turns up, and offers Ollie a magic Assassinsâ potion, The Lotus, which will cure Speedyâs blood lust... if Ollie agrees to kill Malcolm Merlyn.Â
BOOM.
Thoughts on this episode: Show, I want MORE NYSSA AND TALIBAH, NOW! Have them join the Legends for an episode or something. Or just another badass Nyssa versus Katana showdown. Maybe even a four-way Nyssah / Talibah / Canaryâs / Katana team-up. Thereâs your next spin-off show, right there... and please, please, please kill the flashbacks.
#CapeOpera: Legends Of Tomorrow, Season 1, Episode 2
Once again, Legends of Tomorrow has delivered a triumphant episode. Weâre only 2 eps in, and already the show is finding its feet with fast-paced, quick-witted dialogue and kick-ass fight scenes. You havenât watched yet? GO WATCH IT!! You just want the recap? OK! Hereâs how it went down in episode 2!
After running from Chronos at the end of episode 1, the team have tracked Vandal Savage to 1970s Norway, where some kind of big black market arms shindig is about to go down. First, Rip Hunter has to deal with some moaning from the Hawkfolk, who obviously are quite keen to go back in time and prevent their âsonâ (the old professor guy from episode 1 - yay, time travel!) from dying. Hunter quickly explains that you canât cross your own timeline without screwing up history - unless you are, like him, a badass Time Master. Itâs good they explained the whole âtemporal vortexâ concept, because thatâs whatâs going to happen in this episode - the timeline is about to get pretty majorly dicked with.Â
Props to White Canary for the showâs first âSPEAK ENGLISH, SCIENCE GUYâ moment, with her classic opening line: âForgetting about physics for a second...â Or, yâknow, 45 minutes. Or even the whole series? TIMEY WIMEY STUFF, right? Good enough, carry on.
Captain Cold and Heatwave are, of course, the natural choices to take point on the whole arms dealing mission: âArms dealers and terrorists arenât exactly our kind of people,â quips Cold, âbut theyâre the next best thing.â The BEST thing, obviously, being every single line of dialogue Wentworth Miller utters.
As they prepare for the mission, Hunter lets us know that the **Waverider **is equipped with a room which generates era-specific costumes, providing yet more grist for my fantheory about how Hunter connects to Doctor Who and the TARDIS. âYouâve got a room that makes clothing?â marvels Firestorm Junior. âDoesnât everyone?â replies Hunter. Nope, just you and the Doctor! But enough about that for now...
Off to the arms auction, which is hosted in a suspiciously Canadian warehouse, and attended by none other than Arrow villain Damian Dahrk, looking not a day younger than his 2010s self, and wearing what can only be described as a fashion-forward, cream-coloured Blofeld-suit. Just in case you were in any doubt that he was a villain in the 70s, too.Â
And lo and behold, who is hosting the motherfucking auction? Itâs Savage! After Firestorm Senior and Cold talk their way through security, the team join the auction (standing in the front row, no less, with no view of the exits....) and even end up making a successful bid on a nuclear warhead.Â
Savage, of course, rumbles the team (specifically, he trips up Firestorm Senior into revealing they are time travellers) and all hell breaks loose. Cue an all-team fight scene, with explosions, much punching, and **The Atom **flying around in both mini and full-size versions, generally whipping everybodyâs ass. Itâs beautiful... truly beautiful. As io9 quite rightly point out:Â âLegends of Tomorrow: Come for the fights, stay for... more fights.â
Letâs talk about this fight in-depth for a bit... the whole thing kicks off (of course) with a huge gout of flame from Heatwaveâs super-flamethrower, providing cover as the HawkPeople fly in and start macing dudes in the face. The camera tracks back to show the jet of flame from Heatwaveâs gun, and the landing Hawks. Meanwhile, Canary has produced her fighty-sticks, and is destroying be-suited badguys with low, circular, sweeping blows, turning the motion into momentum for devastating uppercuts.Â
Professor Firestorm gets grabbed by a bald thug - cue The Atom, who launches his suit from the Profâs pocket. Â We zoom in on him, as he uses his tiny-mode to sequence-punch, like, eight terrorists. As the camera tracks him, we pan back across to the still kung-fu-ing White Canary, and a tour-de-force spinning camera shot of Cold and Heatwave back to back, firing twin jets of ice and flame, followed by Hawkman and Hawkgirl picking dudes up and dropping them, then pinning them to the ground with wing-assisted punches.
It is... itâs just so beautiful. I think I peed myself a little the first time I watched it - just a little wee came out as I squealed with excitement. The second time, I confess, there were even some tears. Shitâs just exploding everywhere, people are on fire, the sound of punching is like early-period jungle rhythms, thereâs just so much of it. This show knows how to reward its viewers.
Vandal Savage is noticeably distressed by all this violence, and stands stock still in the centre of the room while none of the team try and kill him even a little bit. Which is pretty daft, but by the end of the episode, weâll realise it wouldnât have made much of a difference anyway. Savage is harder to kill than Dracula, Wolverine and Keith Richards combined.
Savage sets the nuke to blow, and the Atom manages to do the classic âsetting the timer countdown to like, way soonerâ thing by flying inside it in mini-mode. This leaves a powered up Firestorm(s) (seriously, how am I meant to be pluralising this?) to transport the nuke to âa safe distanceâ before it explodes. It explodes in what looks like a bird sanctuary, destroying some trees, but itâs no big deal - and now we know Firestorm can stop a nuke, which you can imagine might come in handy, somewhere down the line.
Back at the ship, the team realise that they pretty much ballsed that mission up, despite the awesome fighting. Atom lost a rocket-launching gauntlet, which was picked up by Savageâs people and reverse-engineered, meaning that their future is now an apocalyptic wasteland ruled by Savageâs neo-fascist militia. Bummer. Luckily, as Hunter explains, this future has yet to solidify (âTime is like concrete, it takes a while to setâ), and so, if they can retrieve the gauntlet, everything will be fine.
Cue the HawkPeople - again carrying the romance subplot. Kendraâs still not into Carter, although she is remembering a bunch of stuff about her original incarnation in Ancient Egypt - specifically, that the dagger Savage used to stab her and her lover is the only weapon which can kill him. Because, magic.Â
Cue a big team planner session - Cold, Heatwave and Atom will try to steal the dagger from a private collection. As soon as they have it, theyâll call in the Hawks. Meanwhile, the Firestorm(s) and Canary will visit the Professorâs 1970s past self to borrow a gadget which tracks super particles or something dumb like that, which will lead them to Atomâs gauntlet, and, presumably, Savage.
Hereâs where things get groovy - it turns out the Professorâs 1970s self was a pot-smoking, womanising, charmingly arrogant party boy. He gets Canary high (the Firestorms refuse), and they steal his thingummy-detector (after Canary knocks him out with.... a bong!).Â
The set-dressing and costumes here are fantastic, with laughs-a-plenty about Firestorm Juniorâs flares, another sly wink to Canaryâs hedonistic character and open bisexuality, and a 1970s college dorm festooned with bongs and lava lamps and psych-rock band posters. This is the show gently easing into the time travel aspect, and doing it with considerable panache and humour. I mean, we all love Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. but would that show do this?
Yeah... I think not.Â
Back at the break-in, Cold and Heatwave display their proficiency in the technique of Consecutive Normal Punches, and manage to finesse their way inside. They find the ancient dagger, but decide to take a bunch of other shit too, because as Cold says, âYou donât break into a candy store and steal one gumball.âÂ
Goody-two-shoes Atom objects, and gets clocked in the face - he and Cold trade punches, but then, SURPRISE! Savage shows up. The private collection is, of course, his, and he easily imprisons Cold and Atom in a handy cage (it literally drops from the ceiling!!), keeping Heatwave outside as a hostage.Â
Before Savage shows, however, we get a nice little scene with Cold and the Atom. Cold attempts to re-wire the security system (giant cage!), leading Atom to comment that Cold could have had a career as an electrical engineer, instead of a badass thief with snarky banter.Â
Cold pooh-poohs this immediately, cutting Atom down to size by calling him âthe incredible shrinking schmuck.â Listen, I know this show is all about redemption, but I really donât want Cold to EVER stop being reluctant about heroics. Fine, redeem him, but he should then disown it - every time. I think the show is smart enough to play it like that.
We get a ton of Hawkman / Hawkgirl stuff which basically amounts to - Kendra is warming to Carter, and remembering more of her past lives all the time. Just wade through this - thereâs a reward coming at the end of this episode. Back to Firestorm(s) and Canary - theyâve got the tech-tracking whats-it, and are back on the Waverider, but... OHNOES! 1970s Professor has followed them on board.Â
There follows a fairly dumb subplot about him not meeting his future wife because of changes to the timeline, which is cool in a sort of nods-to-Back-To-The-Future way, but is pretty pointless, other than to convince the Professor that he should be less of a dick to his symbiotic partner. Which, given his roofie-based antics last ep, should come as a relief.
Anyway, time travel guff dispensed with, we proceed to the main rammy - itâs everyone versus Vandal Savage, to the death! Firestorm frees Cold, Heatwave and The Atom, and takes Vandal out with a nuclear fireball, but of course, heâs not dead - cue an attack from the Hawks, aided by the newly-acquired mystical dagger.
Meanwhile, Savageâs henchmen attack, in another epic fight scene replete with explosions, lasers, punching and impressive camera work. LOVE THIS SHOW. The best part is at the beginning of the fight, as Hunter hands The Atom a tiny action figure - his miniaturised suit. SO COOL!
For... for me?
Finale time - Hawkman takes on Savage but SURPRISE! Even though Hawkman stabs Savage, he no die! He no die! Apparently, only Kendra can wield the blade and kill him. TOO BAD! Hawkman get stabbed. To death. Properly, for good. Heâs gone! Kendra, who is also stabbed but then rescued by Atom, and patched up by Gideon, now has an amazing revenge motive! YESSSS. Words cannot capture how pleased I am with this result.
And our team? Now, they are not only underdogs, but they have a fully-fledged revenge quest to embark upon together. As episode 2 ends, theyâve saved the world of the future (from their own mistakes, granted, but still...), had a crack at Savage, and once more had their fortunes reversed.
Two episodes in to the second half of Arrowâs fourth season, and the groundwork has already been laid - this season is about magic, itâs about identity, and itâs about the lure of power.Â
Terminally emo ninja rich kid Ollie is campaigning to be mayor, while behind the scenes, Team Arrow works to defeat the villainous Damian Dahrk (expertly played by Neil McDonagh), a man whose creepy occult powers and army of brainwashed, tooled-up followers known as H.I.V.E. (also called the âGhostsâ for some reason, maybe I missed something) immediately make him a bigger threat than Malcolm Merlyn and Deathstroke combined.Â
H.I.V.E., by the way, stands for Hierarchy of International Vengeance and Extermination, which is nearly as cool as V.E.N.O.M. - the Vicious Evil Network of Mayhem, whom we will get to see in the proposed M.A.S.K. / G.I. Joe / Micronauts / My Little Pony shared cinematic universe. But enough about Hollywood... this is the CWVerse!
A quick recap of significant happenings in episodes 1-10:Â
- Ollie is now the Green Arrow. Donât worry, he may have picked a colour scheme, and it may even symbolise his desire to be a better man, and stop killing people. But he still regularly shoots people in the face, through the heart and lungs, and into electrical pylons / through plate glass windows / off the top of tall buildings. Iâm sure theyâre fine.Â
- Diggle now has a codename - he is Spartan, a name he shares with a robotic superhuman computer-bot originally affiliated with Jim Leeâs Wildstorm-based characters, the WildC.A.T.S. Will Diggle become a manborg in a future series? We can only hope, but for now, heâs borrowed Magnetoâs helmet, and oh yeah, his gun fires âstun bulletsâ so he totally did NOT just shoot that guy in the FACE, to DEATH, mkay?
- Diggleâs brother, long thought dead, is alive, and working for Dahrk / H.I.V.E., or at least he was til Team Arrow rescued/kidnapped him. They pretty much keep him in a cage, which looks boring as hell. Occasionally Diggle or Ollie get to punch or strangle him, presumably just to stave off boredom.
- Captain Lance, who this season valiantly gave in to encroaching baldness, has been playing both sides - initially threatened into helping Dahrk, he now informs on Dahrkâs movements to Team Arrow. He and Laurel Lance, aka Black Canary, are finally on speaking terms again, so hopefully weâll be spared too much Lance family trauma this season.
- John Constantine made an appearance, it was glorious, he gave Ollie a magic tattoo (no, really) in an island flashback, and helped retrieve Sara Lanceâs soul from the nether regions of hell after she came back all cray-cray zombie assassin style from Raâs Al Ghulâs Lazarus Pit. Now Sara is the White Canary, and has gone off to join the Legends of Tomorrow. Which is awesome. It looks like we wonât see Constantine again though, and that sucks. But he has definitely lent some weight to the introduction of more mystical elements to the Arrow mythos.
Sound advice from the Hellblazer. Yeâll be missed, son
- The Atom, aka Ray Palmer, is not dead after all, but shrank to the size of an ant (man) and couldnât re-embiggen because, reasons. Now back to full size, heâs understandably a bit miffed that Felicity is with Ollie. This is a bummer, really, because he and Felicity made way more sense as a couple - a double-serving of geek is deliciously sweet. However, he does have a super sweet Iron Man Atomtech suit, and now rolls with a gang of time-travelling badasses. So heâs got that going for him.
- The Flash came to town to try and help his new pal Hawkgirl discover that she is not, in fact, humble barista Kendra Saunders, but an immortal reincarnated Egyptian mace specialist with awesome wings. She regained her memories of previous incarnations, dumped poor Cisco, and took off with fellow reincarnated Egyptian (and notable douchebag) Hawkbro. Theyâre both off being Legends too.
Okay, thatâs you up to speed!Â
Last episode, the team went after Anarky, a murderous and confusingly apolitical anarchist who had decided to target Dahrk for some revenge-type punching action, with a side salad of murder. A few episodes back, we learned that aside from being a super-evil bad guy, Dahrk is also a family man - Anarky goes after the wife and kids, and Ollie and Team Arrow have no choice but to save Dahrk.Â
Ollie, of course, experiences some angst - why not just let Anarky kill Dahrk? All season, Ollieâs principle angst-face scenes (you know the ones - he almost smiles, that weird hairline wiggles a bit, he stamps his feet and puts his hands on his hips) have been dealing with his belief that to defeat Dahrk, he needs to be âwilling to go far enough,â ie, kill him. All of which is brilliantly funny when you consider the *actual* death toll of each episode.
Ollie being angst-face-y
So anyway, Ollie lets Anarky go, and he goes after Dahrkâs family, who must be innocent, because who has an evil wife and kids, right? WRONG! Having second thoughts about freeing a murderer from police custody, mayoral candidate (!) Ollie tracks Anarky to Dahrkâs home. After saving Dahrkâs family, Dahrk tells Ollie heâs still going to kill him, but that in gratitude for saving the wife and kids, he can spend some time with his Team Arrow pals. What a dude. And after Ollie leaves? We see the wife is evil too. Hell, probably the kids as well. EVIL FAMILY UNIT! Lo and behold, Ollie and Felicity are ambushed in their limo, and Felicity is shot by the Ghosts.
This effectively delays the big face-off with Dahrk, who may only be a feint, villain-wise - although he is clearly mega-powerful, I would lay odds on him being defeated 2/3 of the way through the season, in time for the introduction of another Big Bad, and the build-up to Season 4âČs cliffhanger. Weâre also getting lots of foreshadowing about a team member dying - weâve seen multiple scenes of Ollie in front of a grave, being all angst-face-y with Barry in tow. Presumably, defeating Dum Dum Dugan Dahrk will exact a heavy toll.
âSo Iâm in Marvel AND DC continuity, big whoop, wanna fight about it?â
Which brings me to Felicity. Show, donât kill off Felicity. Donât do that. We get that she is a fan favourite, we get that her relationship with Ollie is wish fulfillment for fans (see Rob Brickenâs great io9 piece on the topic), but show, if you kill her off... I dunno, Iâll cry or something. Yes, actually, legit cry - because thatâs how much I care now, show. Iâve watched 4 seasons of this. Iâve seen Ollie get his heart broken over and over. Iâve witnessed the struggle and THE STRUGGLE IS REAL (for Oliverâs retarded emotional growth curve, that is). This man needs no more dead bodies as motivation, show.
So, Felicity, who survived the shooting, for now at least, is in a wheelchair - cue endless fan speculation about Felicity becoming Oracle. In the latest episode, when Felicity gets back in the game, she is given a new codename - the slightly daft Overwatch. Because, apparently, âOracle was taken.â Was this a Birds of Prey nod? A DC cinematic universe thing? A copyright thing? A multiverse thing? Who knows, regardless, it seems Babs Gordonâs codename is safely stashed for future/past/aternate timeline use.
Back to Felicity - this episode saw the return of Goth Felicity, who, cards on the table, I TOTALLY FUCKING ADORE AND WORSHIP.
Where oh where did Goth Felicity get her look? Hmmmmm....
... or as the fans like to call her, Gothlicity. A badass goth hacker from the past, she pops up here as a hallucination (suuuuure....) to tell Hot Wheels (Felicityâs codename suggestion, actually quite cool IMO, shot down by Ollie) that she canât be a hacker any more because, um, her legs donât work.Â
Brickenâs theory about how this shows her character development and makes sense of her love of angst-pot Ollie aside, this made not much sense to me... because hackers mostly work sitting down, right? Itâs a type-y type-y job. Most hackers I know have couch-sores and week-old Dorito residue on them - they donât move. Maybe Felicity was just thinking sheâd miss out on that other favourite hacker pastime, rollerblading.
Anyway, eventually, Felicity swings back into action (sitting down at a keyboard, as predicted), and helps Ollie and Diggle out as they are ambushed at A.R.G.U.S. by a team of mercenaries called Shadowspire.Â
Cue flashback. In Afghanistan - which Diggle inexplicably calls âthe âStanâ - Diggle and his brother encounter the mysterious and corrupt Shadowspire unit, and it is led by - shock horror - the dude currently causing Ollie grief on the island in his flashbacks. ITâS ALL CONNECTED! In the raid on A.R.G.U.S., Amanda Waller is unceremoniously shot in the head - a shame really, as she was a cool character who they had spent a long time building up and developing... you canât help but suspect that her death has something to do with her coming appearance in Suicide Squad. Arrow has fallen foul of this inter-studio meddling before, with David Ayerâs movie calling time on the showâs version of the Squad back in season 2.Â
YAAAAAASSSSS! SUICIDE SQUAD! Sorry, Iâm dead excited for this.
Will Felicity remain in a wheelchair? Quite possibly, although screaming at me from the back of my brain is the fact that FELICITY HELPED BUILD THE ATOM SUIT. Right? Youâre telling me all of Palmer Tech (of which Felicity is still the boss, yeah?) canât come up with a simple robotic spine, but it can build a full working exosuit with miniaturisation controls and wrist-mounted rocket launchers? CâMON, SHOW. As Ollie says, itâs a weird world, and he wonât stop searching it until he realises that it was entirely bloody obvious who should be building Felicityâs new mecha-spine.
Can we talk here for a minute about the flashback structure used in this show? How many fucking times has Ollie been to the island, for real! Iâm over it now. The Flash did away with the flashbacks device, and as a result, it feels faster-paced, more engaging, and the stakes feel higher. The flashbacks worked for a few seasons on Arrow; the terrible, terrible wigs were legit fun, and arguably the flashbacks were necessary for the introduction of Sara Lance, A.R.G.U.S., Deathstroke, and the League of Assassins. Now, they are just distracting. Ollie grew this beard just watching dailies of all the flashbacks.
Honestly, thereâs some kinda magic MacGuffiun on the island? Who cares, man! Get on with shooting people in the face with arrows, please! Especially in comparison to the loony dash of Legends of Tomorrow, these scenes are making Arrow feel a bit slow and tedious of late. Time to let the flashbacks go.
Okay, thatâs yer lot! From next week on, weâll be into regular, one-episode-per-post recaps for all yer Arrow fun, and after a big post getting us up to speed with The Flash, weâll have this baby up and running.Â
EXCELSIOR! Or something more DC-ish. Uh... MULTIVERSE! Yes.Â
And speaking of multiverses, Iâll have a big long chat with you about the sheer brilliance of the multiverse concept as handled by The CW when we talk about The Flash. See you then!
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