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bop_radar ([personal profile] bop_radar) wrote2009-05-11 06:28 pm
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Smallville 8.21 Injustice

I don't have a lot to say about this episode. Yeah... once the thought 'NAKED OLIVER, NAKED! wore off, I didn't really have a lot of thinky thoughts about this episode. I feel like large swathes of this season were written by people that have never seen an episode of Smallville before. And ok, I know that's not true, but it feels true. This episode also featured several of my most hated elements of Season 8, a season which, on reflection, is probably second to last in my season hierarchy.

Hated plot 1: Oliver is a ravening killer
I feel like the writer have approached the subject of Oliver's morality differing from Clark's with all the subtlety of a sledgehammer this season. Supposing that I could buy that Oliver would be so enraged at his parents' death at the hands of Oliver that he would kill Lex as revenge (a leap I still find hard to swallow), I think there's a big difference between killing from a place of personal vengeance for a deep wrong, and just getting carried away in casual violence (as we saw with the billiard ball). Smallville has scripted Oliver as having both aspects to his personality, instead of doing what it should have done, which is explore situations where there was really no other alternative but to steal/kill in order to achieve the goal of justice. I don't feel they've done that, and I'm miffed. I want to like Oliver, but I hated him in most of this episode.

Hated plot 2: Everyone tries to talk Clark out of a perfectly good plan
Last week Clark's plan to send Davis/Doomsday to the Phantom Zone seemed just fine to me. This week, he came up with an even better, though more dangerous plan. If he can pull it off, splitting Davis from Doomsday and sending only Doomsday to the Phantom Zone is the more compassionate option. However, I do take issue with it on this level: Clark (I nearly called him Smallville, hee!) only came up with this plan in response to Chloe lecturing him. *headdesk* STFU Chloe! STFU everyone that is not Clark! The problem with Chloe doing so is that she is biased. Clark cannot know, and does not know, that Davis is culpable for some deaths himself, beyond the influence of Doomsday. Now, I can live with Davis not being sent to the Phantom Zone because I do believe he can be 'saved' as a human being, but I also feel strongly that he should be held accountable for what he did have control over. Ultimately, that's up to Davis: Davis has to man up and admit his own guilt. But in theory, Clark could have investigated further himself, not just taken Chloe on her word. Is Chloe making Clark a 'better' hero? That's presumably the gloss the writers intended but it's all too convenient for me. Clark couldn't remember Black K until Chloe lectured? Yeah, right... *eyeroll*

On to elements I did like... Oliver hid his pants! HA! I found that entire sequence completely hilarious and joyful in its randomness and I heart this episode for creating it, but seriously, what were the writers thinking? 'This ep is so boring it needs some... naked Oliver'? SURE! \o/ Bring it on, dudes. I laughed so hard when his ruse was 'I hid my pants'. Honey, that is so not the same thing as hiding your lover's clothes. YOU know where your pants ARE! I can't believe Tess didn't just raise an eyebrow and say 'well go find them again, then!' But I enjoyed the myriad of other brush-offs she came up with. I don't think I could be so strong.

I found it ridiculous that Plastique popped up out of nowhere and we're supposed to believe Tess has been training a team this whole time. Oh, Smallville. Sigh. And I know many people will take issue with this, but I found Allison's acting so bad I found it hard to remember that she wasn't Chloe. I had to keep reminding myself, but the give-away was that she wasn't saying the exact opposite of what Clark was saying, and what she'd said last week all the damn time.

Also, I really really mourn the loss of coherent visual/colour/light metaphors on this show. I think that every week.

When is this season over?

[identity profile] daybreak777.livejournal.com 2009-05-12 11:39 pm (UTC)(link)
I do have much affection for Clarky. It took a long, long while for me to realize his strength was his compassion and ability not to be corrupted. I don't really want Clark to give up compassion. What I think Clark needs to find is some balance between leaving loose ends to come back to haunt him and meting out deadly justice left and right just because he can. I hope someday he finds this balance because every victim of any villain he leaves alive is on Clark's head. That must be hard to live with. I don't think it's godlike to save those potential victims. Hopefully, saving them would not be at the cost of Clark's soul but there must be a way to do both. Climb the slippery slope and not fall. Clark's a strong guy and if he's to be Superman he'll have to do this, yes?

Hmm . . . so SV villains can end up in Gotham? Really? I obviously know nothing about the comics or how the verses are related. But Belle Reve or Arkham Asylum it's still just containment. They can potentially get out, right? And the supernatural or alien villains go to the Phantom Zone? The thing is even if Clark manages to get Doomsday to the Phantom Zone I don't believe he'll stay there. I've only been watching for two seasons but Bizarro came back, Plastique, and another villain played by Tori Spelling came back just the other week. They just keep coming back!

It keeps Superman and the comics in business but it doesn't really solve the villain dilemma. Hmm. I don't usually get this thinky about SV lately! So thanks for responding to my comment. Maybe there is a way for permanent containment in the comicverse? Is that possible?

[identity profile] bop-radar.livejournal.com 2009-05-12 11:48 pm (UTC)(link)
so SV villains can end up in Gotham?
Well, that's not clear from Smallville-verse. It is true of future comics canon though, which I think is what [livejournal.com profile] cbrownjc was talking about. In Clark's young days, yes they often wound up in Belle Reve. However, Clark has seen with his own eyes how terrible that place is and is concerned about it and I think is moving towards a different option (that's my fannish take on that, but I'm sure the show has shown his emotional journey about Belle Reve for a reason). i.e. Clark is maturing into his future self who will try and find compassionate containment for villains.

They just keep coming back!
Hee! Well, you've hit on a central paradox in any superhero universe. On the one hand, the heroes have a 'victory' method that represents them overcoming the bad guy, and on the other hand the villains just keep coming back. I don't think death is a solution, as come ON! how many times have villains come back from the dead in these universes?! The point is that Clark is putting them in the place that is most secure. They're always going to need more plots though so yeah.... they could come back.