DC's Legends of Tomorrow 3.08: Crisis on Earth-X: Part IV
Andrew Kreisberg, Marc Guggenheim, Phil Klemmer, and Keto Shimizu
Gregory Smith
After two middling middle chapters, Crisis on Earth-X goes out with a bang.
There's a bit of everything thrown into this concluding episode, likely because
everyone involved both in front and behind the camera saw the end and wanted to
go for broke. It's not entirely unexpected, but on top of two extended,
sometimes-chaotic, overly-filled-with-CGI action sequences, the writers manage
to squeeze in an admittedly emotional subplot that continues the consequences
of the very end of Part Three.
And yes, the emotion surrounding the death of
Professor Martin Stein is dented by the fact that Victor Garber has wanted out
of Legends of Tomorrow for a while
now, everything around the subplot works on an emotional level. I didn't expect
this kind of pathos to be present in a shared universe where death is treated
like an inconvenient hiccup, but that only makes the scenes shown here all that
more impressive. The connection between Martin and Jax has been a running
thread not only in the background of the past three parts of Crisis on Earth-X, but also a running
subplot through the current season of Legends
of Tomorrow.
So the stakes between the two of them are much
more heightened than say, the marital issues of Oliver and Felicity, or the
sister bonding between Kara and Alex Danvers. I certainly believe that Martin
considers Jax the son he never had, and that Jax has always regarded Martin as
a father figure to replace his absent biological father, and that connection
makes their inevitable separation all that more painful and heartbreaking. Not
only that, but Martin had significant interactions with the characters in The Flash so his death affects them as
well as the Legends. They were Martin's surrogate family, on top of the growing
family that he wanted to get back to.
Speaking of the Legends, they do factor into
the action sequences that fill out the rest of the episode. They enter STAR
Labs at the most inopportune time, right as Thawne is about to cut out Kara's
heart. They thwart that, as well as participate in taking out Metallo-X in a
flashy and spectacular manner. Like the various missions of the Legends, the
battle sequences are filled with CGI, though the production staff has learned
how to harness everything so that the sequences don't look as fake or cheap as
it could have been if they tried something like this crossover just a couple of
years ago.
The STAR Labs battle is an appetizer for the
full-on battle sequence that occurs over Central City. The crossover event
really commits to the comic book aesthetic, putting out various action and
group shots that look like they've leapt straight from the comic book page onto
the small screen. The Right Stuff-esque shot as the heroes walk in a straight
line towards a bunch of Nazis is an even better improvement on the smaller shot
from Part Two. The episode maintains this epic sort of feel to everything
throughout the course of the battle. We get to see all sorts of cool sequences,
from Supergirl and Overgirl duking it out in the skies above Central City, to
Killer Frost transporting Zari and Amaya on an ice slide towards the Nazi
Waverider, and Oliver battling Dark Oliver as Kara carries an exploding
Overgirl towards the atmosphere and away from danger. Because Crisis on Earth-X committed to making
Dark Oliver and Overgirl a romantic couple, the pain Dark Oliver feels over his
wife's death is palpable, even if that lasts just for a moment before Oliver
shoots him dead. He did promise earlier to kill his dark doppleganger, so the
episode pays off what was hinted in chapters before.
It all ends in an all-too-neat manner, though
that's not a criticism of this huge crossover event. It had to end that way so
that the writers could advance the arc that started all of this: Barry and Iris
finally get married by Dig, who's been absent for the entire
"crisis." Not only that, but Felicity decides to change her entire
stance on not getting married to Oliver, something that's also been a running
thread through the previous three parts of the crossover, and make it a
surprise double wedding! I consider myself very tolerant of the Oliver-Felicity
romance so I didn't mind this unexpected development, but I wouldn't be
surprised if those fans who hate the relationship would hate it. The crossover
comes full circle, and gets an altogether entertaining sendoff.
- The effects push the limitations of television CGI but manage to pull it off brilliantly
- If you don’t like Olicity, the ending is gonna be a bad time for you