Arrow 5.23: Lian Yu
Wendy Mericle and Marc Guggenheim
Jesse Warn
Now, the circle is complete. The end has come
for Oliver and Team Arrow. And with that, comes the true end of the flashbacks.
Like the flashback sequences from the past couple of seasons, the ones here at
the season finale are a bit light on plot. That's to be expected since the bulk
of material has been chewed up by the whole season to date. Of course, my
expectation was that there would be no flashbacks since basically everything
had been dealt with up until the opening of the series premiere.
But the writers threw in one last task for
Oliver to do, which is to deal with Konstantin Kovar. Again. The episode makes
up for repeating this subplot by slowly building the battle between Chase and
Oliver on Lian Yu. There's a palpable sense of anticipation as to what Oliver's
ragtag team of misfits will do against Chase, who's been spending years setting
all of this up, yet Oliver, Malcolm, and Slade have the advantage of knowing
the terrain better than Chase does. Like "Missing," there's a real
sense of the show going back to its roots and playing to its history, reminding
us of things that may have been forgotten. To be sure, Arrow is a dense show,
so much so that I had forgotten that Slade was infected with Mirakuru when
Oliver put him in the ARGUS prison cell, for example. Or that Digger Harkness
is Captain Boomerang. And Harkness being one of the minor characters in the
series made him a prime candidate for betraying Oliver's team, which he does in
record time.
Sure, Chase says that everything that's
happening on Lian Yu is designed to punish Oliver, designed as part of a larger
overall plan. That gives rise to some unexpected surprises, which force
Oliver's team into more difficult choices. Like Thea stepping on a landmine.
The landmine was there from a long time ago so it's not possible for anyone to
defuse it. Malcolm then makes a choice to sacrifice himself for his daughter,
which leads to an explosion, although I don't quite believe that Malcolm is
dead. As the Magician and the former Ra's al Ghul of the League of Assassins,
surely, he would have one more trick up his sleeve. If it does turn out that
this is the last appearance of Malcolm Merlyn on the series, then he died doing
something noble, and that redeems his earlier evil undertaking from the first
season.
I must confess that Oliver is smarter than I am
at figuring out the intricacies of Chase's plan. I thought he would have held
William some place off the island, some place where Oliver couldn't get to his
son. That was the first thought that came into my head when Chase refused to
answer Oliver's screams about where William was being kept. Some episodes of
the series have been rather clunky and haphazard with the execution of its
plots, but this finale was working like a fine-tuned machine. Oliver countered
with a plan of his own, which involved a long con that had Slade turn against
Oliver, only to reveal itself naturally as a way to get a sonic scream device
to Dinah (who's locked up with Rene and being held by Black Siren).
With all the shackles off and the bulk of both
teams assembled in the temple on Lian Yu, the finale can get to its action
centerpiece. Dinah faces off against Black Siren; Talia al Ghul gets to fight
her sister, Nyssa; Oliver takes on Chase, while the rest of Oliver's team,
Slade, Dig, and Rene take on Chase's minions. It's a throwback to earlier
seasons, when Arrow would stage masterfully edited and choreographed
hand-to-hand fight scenes. Okay, a couple of the battles involve complicated
swordplay, but even that was well-done. The fight between Nyssa and Talia was
suitably tinged with some familial bitterness, and ends brutally with Nyssa
almost killing Talia. Same with Dinah and Black Siren, who manages to
temporarily get the upper hand on a stunned Dinah before Quentin surprisingly
interferes and knocks out his daughter's doppleganger. That was somewhat
therapeutic for the former police captain, as he works through the grief of
seeing the image of his dead daughter.
All of it is just a prelude to the showstopping
cap to Chase's plan, though, Everyone except Oliver is stuck on the island
because Chase disabled the operation of his plane, then rigged the entire
island with a bunch of bombs as a booby trap fail-safe. On top of that, Chase
rigged a dead man's switch on himself, which explains why he keeps goading
Oliver to kill him. It all comes down to Chase's escape boat, which I think he
intentionally made to look like the fishing boat that rescues Oliver at the
beginning of the series, and Oliver has to fight him with William being held
onboard as a hostage. The most obvious play is for Oliver to severely injure
Chase without killing him... which is, ostensibly what he does by shooting
Chase in the foot with an arrow. Only, I'm thinking Oliver didn't expect Chase
to simply blow his head off, setting off all the bombs on Lian Yu.
That's how the season ends. Did the writers really just kill off a majority of the cast? It's a bravura cliffhanger to end an era of brave storytelling. Sure, there were some hiccups along the way, but that ending basically clears the board for the writers to start something new next season. It should be a sight to see.
- This episode makes a firm case that the writers intend to move into a completely new phase next season
- What will the show look like next season without the flashbacks?