24: Live Another Day 9.12: Day 9: 10PM-11AM
Manny Coto and Evan Katz
Jon Cassar
Despite all of my misgivings and suspicions about Live Another Day, especially when they seemed to stumble with Chloe’s characterization, I’ve been incredibly pleased with the arc of this revival of 24. It had its moments of cliché, but those moments were fleeting. Not only that, but creative minds that allowed the latter seasons of 24 to descend into mediocrity, only to allow an even bigger mess to bring down Homeland, managed to deliver a tight and meaningful season.
The
biggest problem for me was the possibility that Jack’s actions in the eighth
season would be glossed over, justified, or simply ignored. Not only is that not the case, but the
questions about Jack’s sense of responsibility and redemption were front and
center, right up to the finale itself.
Jack is placed in a position where he has to put his own desires against
those of the nation and the world, and then against the fate of his dearest
friend. He passes both tests in classic
Jack Bauer fashion, and in the process, restores the honor and dignity of a
character that had been forced off his true path.
Audrey’s
fate was surprising; I was under the distinct impression that the writers were
pushing for Jack and Audrey to be together at the end. It seems fitting, however, that she should be
killed, just as Jack has his final confrontation with Cheng. If Jack were ready to allow his rage to rule
the day again, he could kill Cheng without hesitation; the cost would be a war
that could bring the world to its knees.
Instead, Jack waits long enough to get the evidence necessary to allow
President Heller to defuse the situation.
It’s
not ended there. The Russians have
another gambit up their sleeve to get Jack in their clutches, regardless of all
the efforts that might be made by Heller and Jack’s other allies in the
administration. The cost would be Chloe,
who was herself behind a great deal of the damage done over the course of the
season. Her decisions led to the
creation of the override device, after all.
If Jack were falling back into his downward spiral, he could have let Chloe pay for her role in Audrey’s death. Instead, Jack recognized that this was not how Chloe should make her amends, and that he also had to accept the consequences of his actions. Regardless of the rest of the characters and how their journeys ended (mostly as they should have), it was Jack’s decisions in the face of loss and crisis that meant the most. The sins of the eighth season have been redeemed.
The big questions is whether or not this will be the end of 24, once and for all. Live Another Day didn’t come close to the ratings of the original series, but that’s not the best measure of success; it’s more a question of how it fared against programming in the same time period in May-July. Thankfully, the writers handled the end well. If this is the end, Jack has chosen to pay for the crimes he committed in defense of the nation; it’s not a bad way to go. However, it also doesn’t have to be the end at all, as Jack has come back from far worse situations. Only time will tell.
- A fitting finale to the season
- Jack’s choices are pitch perfect
- The fate of the franchise is still uncertain
Flaco_Jones
CONCURRING OPINION