6.15 Smallville Freak
Feb. 17th, 2007 07:18 pmUgh. What a day. We're on the third day of above-35 degree weather and it's stiflingly dry. I don't cope well
in the heat and apparently neither does my ISP, since it was down for most of today. The good news though is the Bob Bob is eating the stew I made him and had his first walk in the park today (he likes other small dogs but takes great offence at skateboarders).
Anyway, it's taken me a while to untangle my feelings about this latest Smallville episode.
Michael plays director
First things first, I think Michael did a great job of directing. I enjoyed seeing his innovations with the camera work, though he definitely strayed from the fixed-camera Smallville standard. Where I really think he excelled was in coaxing great performances from his co-stars, particularly Allison Mack, who has been seriously underwhelming me this season. The scene in which Clark removed the chip from her was incredibly tense and she completely sold me on it--it's some of the best acting I've seen from her ever. And Michael is evidently very good at directing himself. ;-) In the few scenes he was in, his A-game was definitely on, and his delivery was gorgeous. Bet he was loving being unencumbered by external direction since he's clearly got a very clear idea about how he wants to deliver Lex's lines!
I particularly loved Lex's outburst at Dr Bethany when he came to tell him that his laptop had been 'misplaced'. It's always fun seeing Lex take refuge in humour and deadpan delivery: 'sounds like a real blunder, doctor'. But when the real threat to Luthorcorp was made apparent, Lex shifted just as easily into true indignation with the chilly 'I don't tolerate loose ends, doctor'. The threat to Tobias felt really chilling, though I have no idea what Lex intended. I was really hoping we'd get to see those two interact as I wanted to know if Lex appeared as a meteorfreak to Tobias. Alas that was too much to hope for! In fact, his threat prompted Dr Bethany to kill Tobias--and I'm foggy on whether that's what he intended or not. (Luckily Dr Bethany doesn't know the first rule of fighting blind people--stay quiet, dickhead!)
Despite the lack of clarity on that point, I was pleased overall at learning more about what stage Lex is at vis a vis his meteor rock research. It would make sense if he is indeed building an army that he would be searching for meteor freaks, but this episode also dealt with the question of what he does with the ones who are not deemed 'useful'. It is convincing that he would 'dispose' of them: both because he despises them and because he wants complete and absolute control (he certainly wouldn't want to leave the possibility of them aiding Clark). We also Lex using a man whose wife was murdered by meteor freaks--the doctor is clear-sighted about Lex's true motives but he's still manipulated by him. This is what Lex is starting to excel at: manipulating people despite themselves by preying on their own deepest and darkest fears/urges.
Tobias and truth-seeing
I thought Tobias was a very interesting creation. As someone that can identify meteor freaks, he is an incredibly powerful force within Smallville. In this episode he revealed the truth to three characters with very significant consequences:
- he tells Clark that Chloe is meteor-infected
- he tells Lana that Clark is NOT meteor-infected, and
- he tells Clark that Lana thought he was meteor-infected.
Should we suspect Tobias? It is possible that he could lie, because it's hard to prove the 'truth' of what he sees. However, his statements were played as genuine and sincere. It seems unlikely that he was lying. Tobias also pronounces Clark 'the most normal guy I ever met'. If we take Tobias's word, he appears 'ultra-normal'. At some level that makes sense, because Kryptonite only ever has a temporary hold on him--would he look different at those times? I assume so.
Lana's progression
Lana's growing obsession with the 'mystery of Clark Kent' continues. It's worth reflecting that for for so long Lana remained at surface level infatuation with Clark, a level which Lex blasted through very swiftly. She's finally following in Lex's footsteps in transferring the focus of her obsession (and love) onto the mystery beneath the surface. She's now in the stage where she firmly believes that Clark is 'special'--she's convinced herself that he's a meteor freak, but one who uses his powers benevolently. And, like Lex before her, she's willing to protect him by using the resources at her disposal both generously and manipulatively. She offers Tobias a cornea transplant with no strings attached if he'll cover for Clark.
As with Lex before her, just when Lana thinks she's stumbled on definitive proof of Clark's secret, a counterargument is produced: Tobias tells her that Clark's normal. This has echoes of Lex seeing Clark get injured just when he was sure he'd proven his invulnerability. The bullet was another echo of revelations past--very similar to the bullets that Lionel may or may not have seen Clark shoot into his own hand.
Lana was very Lexian in her approach to Clark, confronting him with the evidence of the mystery (the bullet, in this case) and waiting to see how he would lie to her. And of course he does--far more confidently than he used to lie to Lex. The practice has paid off!
Lana's 'you'd still be the same Clark Kent' line was confronting to Clark because he'd always feared that she would hate him as a freak. But he's forgetting the real reason he broke up with her--that his secret endangers her. From Lana's perspective this line is still naive--mainly beccause she's still missing the mark. She doesn't know that he's not a meteor freak, but an alien. Though it's just as likely that she'll change her view on aliens to fit Clark into the picture. However, it remains to be seen whether she can keep either secret successfully--the 'fake' truth she thinks she's uncovered or the real truth--Reckoning showed that she couldn't hide the truth from Lex, and she's even closer to him than ever.
Lana notices that Lex's interest in what happened to Chloe is peculiar. And I think it's that that first triggers Lana's suspicion about the abduction. When Chloe then appears a little cagey about discussing the abduction, she suggests that Chloe thinks Lex had something to do with it. There's a little bit of transference there, I think, since Lana herself is suspicious. Lana knows that Lex is lying to her.
There was some clumsy writing in this episode--the worst instance being having Lana espouse a benevolent view of meteor freaks before it was made clear to the audience that she'd changed her tune only because she suspects Clark of being one now. While that was certainly something I'd been wondering if we'd see happen, there wasn't a clear enough causal link made on the show. And that scene was clumsy for another reason--it thrust Chloe into the role of being wholly critical of them, which worked well for the dramatic revelation later but temporarily made both characters seem a little ooc: a case of the writers forcing words into the characters mouths for the sake of the plot.
Lana uses just the same upfront approach with Lex as she does with Clark--she tells him straight out that she saw him meet with the doctor, and then she watches as he lies with confidence. She's ricocheting between one liar and another. She cuts through his rambling and requests the truth. In response he swears on the soul of his unborn child. *chokes laughing* Um, hasn't she clued that it doesn't HAVE a soul yet?! Or that it's not Lex's?! Either way, that oath is worth nix. In any case, Lana's expression in the embrace that follows is one of resignation and sorrow. It's almost as if she's accepted that the world she lives in is entirely made up of lies. And if neither Clark NOR Lex will give her an honest relationship, what is she to do but make the best of what she's got?
Lana has chosen to protect Clark from her fiance. She does not attempt to persuade Lex of Clark's 'goodness', for she knows that's not a path to success. Duplicity is a necessity in protecting Clark. But will it be enough to keep safe not just the secret but Lana herself?
The problem of Chloe
And now I've come to the part of the episode I had most conflicted feelings about. Within the course of this episode I enjoyed the plotting that led to revealing Chloe as a meteor freak. But I worry about the consequences from here and I find myself deeply troubled by how this affects overall Smallville canon. I was unspoiled for this twist and remain unspoiled as to how it will pan out. I hope my fears prove unfounded, but currently I'm struggling to envisage a resolution that I would find personally find satisfying, though I'm sure mny fans will enjoy it.
The term 'meteor-infected' was used a lot this episode--the term 'freak' was avoided. But implicit in its use as the title of the episode was the knowledge that identifying someone as being affected by meteor rocks is a condemnation, a heavy stigma, one even heavier than the 'mental illness' stigma that Chloe has feared as her destiny before now. Now she's facing a darker destiny than ever.
Clark responds to Tobias's revelations with his standard denial. Eariler in this episode, we'd seen that he's using denial to avoid the complicated emotions surrounding Lana's marriage to Lex--and he successfully changes the subject when Chloe brings it up. Clark wants to use denial and distraction in response to finding out that Chloe's a meteor freak as well, saying 'I'm just glad you're back' and telling her about the computer he swiped. His anxiety manifests in non-verbal behaviour, with him staring at her while she attempts to hack the computer. Chloe reads Clark too well though and recognises this behaviour pattern. She tries to address the truth head-on, asking 'I'm some sort of meteor freak, aren't I?' It's often Clark that jumps to conclusions and Chloe that puts the breaks on, but this time it's Clark saying 'we don't know that' because it's a possibility too chilling for him to face.
Chloe points out: 'Every single meteor freak I've ever run into has ended up dead or in Belle Reve'. Or on Level 33.1, we might add.
supacat reminded me there's at least one meteor freak on the run--the mindwiping guy from Season 4--but we struggled to think of any others. Clark is not able to offer much comfort to Chloe. If he's her personal bomb squad, then the possibility is thrown out that he may have to 'defuse' her by killing her one day.
The scene where Clark uses his heat vision to remove the tracking device in Chloe was very powerful. But it was also uncomfortably masochistic on Chloe's part. I couldn't help feeling that this might be foreshadowing her story arc. It's also a masochism that is kept hidden from Jimmy--she denied that it hurt just as she denied she had feelings for Clark--because it doesn't matter, and also to stop him worrying. And if this is the case, if Chloe's story is going to be one of self-sacrificing martyrdom and voluntary 'death' (symbolic or real) at Clark's hands, then this casts an uncomfortably dark shadow over Chloe's entire life. I sincerely hope this is not the way the show is going, because I genuinely enjoyed the early Clark-Chloe relationship in the days of her high school crush. While I don't ship them now, I don't want the innocence of that early relationship to be overshadowed by a romanticised eternal masochism. In terms of gender politics, this is as repugnant to me as the ultra-objectification of Lana.
So what are the other possibilities? The one I really really thought they were going for was to reveal that Chloe's power is computer hacking. COME ON! It's so FRIKKING OBVIOUS!! It is NOT normal for high school girls to hack defence networks, dammit! Even in this episode Jimmy says 'Chloe's the one with the mad techno skills' and Clark refers to 'pulling off a miracle'. I so thought they were going there. So I found the final scene between Clark and Chloe baffling in its blindness to the obvious. Is the show really going to ignore the opportunity to retrospectively make sense of Chloe's 'superpowers'? Arrgh! If they HAD gone down that path, I could have got behind it--especially if we'd seen it cause some introspection on Chloe's part. For example, Clark could have argued that it was a benevolent power, but Chloe may have been forced to think about the ways in which her behaviour may actually be a violation of others--and how she justifies what she does--a moral journey which would also be useful for Clark, who felt it was fine to swipe a suspect's computer in this ep. (Though I enjoyed seeing his creative use of powers and quick-thinking, I do think that's pretty muddy water for Clark--far more in character for, say, Oliver...)
So I don't want to see Chloe martyred, I don't want her to kill herself, go mad or be killed by Clark. But I also really don't want her to become a superhero. This would seriously mess with Smallville canon. It's way too late for the show to prompt a rethink on the status of meteor freaks--if they can be redeamed or 'saved' then this makes their past deaths/mistreatment appalling in the extreme. And if some magical 'remedy' is discovered, I will be seriously PISSED that the only prompt to find one was when Clark's best friend became one.
There's another reason I really don't like the Chloe-as-superpowered idea. Her appeal as a character has always lain in how ordinary she is. And that is not an insult! She is one of the first characters that many viewers of the show identify with, especially the female viewers. She's 'cool' but she's realistic enough for people to relate to. She has love troubles, she doesn't have a perfect life, she has ambitions but struggles to realise them--she's always been a great viewer avatar. Give her superpowers and she's something else. It also changes her dynamic with Clark. It equalises them in a way that I think is unneccessary and unproductive for the show. Chloe as trusted secret-keeper is less 'special' if she's also got a secret to keep. The relationship becomes more like the one that Clark has with Oliver. It doesn't add anything new to the show--and it also means that the only 'normal' humans on the show are the love interests: Lana, Lois, Jimmy. I dislike that because I've always liked the 'best friend' Chlark relationship.
Can you tell I'm struggling with this?! ;-) I'll be really keen to read other people's thoughts because I'm sure they'll have different views. I wish I could find a silver lining on this one.
Stray thoughts
- The scene of Chloe's abduction was genuinely creepy--and very like a cliched alien abduction. If that was intentional, it's interesting that it's not the REAL alien who's abducting those on Earth and experimenting on them, but a fellow human (and potential meteor-freak).
- It's handy that Clark has a back-up billionaire pal now--everyone needs one of those to help your friends out of trouble. But nice to know that he and Ollie are still in touch! ;-)
- It was fun to see Clark employing a creative use of powers to swipe Dr Bethany's computer, but this is somewhat murky territory for Clark--it was quite Oliver-like, I thought, to justify stealing someone's computer simply because you suspect them of a nefarious purpose.
- I wish I could believe that Lana had an alternative to hanging with Chloe for her Bachelorette Party. It was cute seeing the girls having fun together, but it also felt a bit sad--Lana's life is a very lonely one. This makes me doubly glad that she's nurturing her friendship with Chloe.
in the heat and apparently neither does my ISP, since it was down for most of today. The good news though is the Bob Bob is eating the stew I made him and had his first walk in the park today (he likes other small dogs but takes great offence at skateboarders).
Anyway, it's taken me a while to untangle my feelings about this latest Smallville episode.
Michael plays director
First things first, I think Michael did a great job of directing. I enjoyed seeing his innovations with the camera work, though he definitely strayed from the fixed-camera Smallville standard. Where I really think he excelled was in coaxing great performances from his co-stars, particularly Allison Mack, who has been seriously underwhelming me this season. The scene in which Clark removed the chip from her was incredibly tense and she completely sold me on it--it's some of the best acting I've seen from her ever. And Michael is evidently very good at directing himself. ;-) In the few scenes he was in, his A-game was definitely on, and his delivery was gorgeous. Bet he was loving being unencumbered by external direction since he's clearly got a very clear idea about how he wants to deliver Lex's lines!
I particularly loved Lex's outburst at Dr Bethany when he came to tell him that his laptop had been 'misplaced'. It's always fun seeing Lex take refuge in humour and deadpan delivery: 'sounds like a real blunder, doctor'. But when the real threat to Luthorcorp was made apparent, Lex shifted just as easily into true indignation with the chilly 'I don't tolerate loose ends, doctor'. The threat to Tobias felt really chilling, though I have no idea what Lex intended. I was really hoping we'd get to see those two interact as I wanted to know if Lex appeared as a meteorfreak to Tobias. Alas that was too much to hope for! In fact, his threat prompted Dr Bethany to kill Tobias--and I'm foggy on whether that's what he intended or not. (Luckily Dr Bethany doesn't know the first rule of fighting blind people--stay quiet, dickhead!)
Despite the lack of clarity on that point, I was pleased overall at learning more about what stage Lex is at vis a vis his meteor rock research. It would make sense if he is indeed building an army that he would be searching for meteor freaks, but this episode also dealt with the question of what he does with the ones who are not deemed 'useful'. It is convincing that he would 'dispose' of them: both because he despises them and because he wants complete and absolute control (he certainly wouldn't want to leave the possibility of them aiding Clark). We also Lex using a man whose wife was murdered by meteor freaks--the doctor is clear-sighted about Lex's true motives but he's still manipulated by him. This is what Lex is starting to excel at: manipulating people despite themselves by preying on their own deepest and darkest fears/urges.
Tobias and truth-seeing
I thought Tobias was a very interesting creation. As someone that can identify meteor freaks, he is an incredibly powerful force within Smallville. In this episode he revealed the truth to three characters with very significant consequences:
- he tells Clark that Chloe is meteor-infected
- he tells Lana that Clark is NOT meteor-infected, and
- he tells Clark that Lana thought he was meteor-infected.
Should we suspect Tobias? It is possible that he could lie, because it's hard to prove the 'truth' of what he sees. However, his statements were played as genuine and sincere. It seems unlikely that he was lying. Tobias also pronounces Clark 'the most normal guy I ever met'. If we take Tobias's word, he appears 'ultra-normal'. At some level that makes sense, because Kryptonite only ever has a temporary hold on him--would he look different at those times? I assume so.
Lana's progression
Lana's growing obsession with the 'mystery of Clark Kent' continues. It's worth reflecting that for for so long Lana remained at surface level infatuation with Clark, a level which Lex blasted through very swiftly. She's finally following in Lex's footsteps in transferring the focus of her obsession (and love) onto the mystery beneath the surface. She's now in the stage where she firmly believes that Clark is 'special'--she's convinced herself that he's a meteor freak, but one who uses his powers benevolently. And, like Lex before her, she's willing to protect him by using the resources at her disposal both generously and manipulatively. She offers Tobias a cornea transplant with no strings attached if he'll cover for Clark.
As with Lex before her, just when Lana thinks she's stumbled on definitive proof of Clark's secret, a counterargument is produced: Tobias tells her that Clark's normal. This has echoes of Lex seeing Clark get injured just when he was sure he'd proven his invulnerability. The bullet was another echo of revelations past--very similar to the bullets that Lionel may or may not have seen Clark shoot into his own hand.
Lana was very Lexian in her approach to Clark, confronting him with the evidence of the mystery (the bullet, in this case) and waiting to see how he would lie to her. And of course he does--far more confidently than he used to lie to Lex. The practice has paid off!
Lana's 'you'd still be the same Clark Kent' line was confronting to Clark because he'd always feared that she would hate him as a freak. But he's forgetting the real reason he broke up with her--that his secret endangers her. From Lana's perspective this line is still naive--mainly beccause she's still missing the mark. She doesn't know that he's not a meteor freak, but an alien. Though it's just as likely that she'll change her view on aliens to fit Clark into the picture. However, it remains to be seen whether she can keep either secret successfully--the 'fake' truth she thinks she's uncovered or the real truth--Reckoning showed that she couldn't hide the truth from Lex, and she's even closer to him than ever.
Lana notices that Lex's interest in what happened to Chloe is peculiar. And I think it's that that first triggers Lana's suspicion about the abduction. When Chloe then appears a little cagey about discussing the abduction, she suggests that Chloe thinks Lex had something to do with it. There's a little bit of transference there, I think, since Lana herself is suspicious. Lana knows that Lex is lying to her.
There was some clumsy writing in this episode--the worst instance being having Lana espouse a benevolent view of meteor freaks before it was made clear to the audience that she'd changed her tune only because she suspects Clark of being one now. While that was certainly something I'd been wondering if we'd see happen, there wasn't a clear enough causal link made on the show. And that scene was clumsy for another reason--it thrust Chloe into the role of being wholly critical of them, which worked well for the dramatic revelation later but temporarily made both characters seem a little ooc: a case of the writers forcing words into the characters mouths for the sake of the plot.
Lana uses just the same upfront approach with Lex as she does with Clark--she tells him straight out that she saw him meet with the doctor, and then she watches as he lies with confidence. She's ricocheting between one liar and another. She cuts through his rambling and requests the truth. In response he swears on the soul of his unborn child. *chokes laughing* Um, hasn't she clued that it doesn't HAVE a soul yet?! Or that it's not Lex's?! Either way, that oath is worth nix. In any case, Lana's expression in the embrace that follows is one of resignation and sorrow. It's almost as if she's accepted that the world she lives in is entirely made up of lies. And if neither Clark NOR Lex will give her an honest relationship, what is she to do but make the best of what she's got?
Lana has chosen to protect Clark from her fiance. She does not attempt to persuade Lex of Clark's 'goodness', for she knows that's not a path to success. Duplicity is a necessity in protecting Clark. But will it be enough to keep safe not just the secret but Lana herself?
The problem of Chloe
And now I've come to the part of the episode I had most conflicted feelings about. Within the course of this episode I enjoyed the plotting that led to revealing Chloe as a meteor freak. But I worry about the consequences from here and I find myself deeply troubled by how this affects overall Smallville canon. I was unspoiled for this twist and remain unspoiled as to how it will pan out. I hope my fears prove unfounded, but currently I'm struggling to envisage a resolution that I would find personally find satisfying, though I'm sure mny fans will enjoy it.
The term 'meteor-infected' was used a lot this episode--the term 'freak' was avoided. But implicit in its use as the title of the episode was the knowledge that identifying someone as being affected by meteor rocks is a condemnation, a heavy stigma, one even heavier than the 'mental illness' stigma that Chloe has feared as her destiny before now. Now she's facing a darker destiny than ever.
Clark responds to Tobias's revelations with his standard denial. Eariler in this episode, we'd seen that he's using denial to avoid the complicated emotions surrounding Lana's marriage to Lex--and he successfully changes the subject when Chloe brings it up. Clark wants to use denial and distraction in response to finding out that Chloe's a meteor freak as well, saying 'I'm just glad you're back' and telling her about the computer he swiped. His anxiety manifests in non-verbal behaviour, with him staring at her while she attempts to hack the computer. Chloe reads Clark too well though and recognises this behaviour pattern. She tries to address the truth head-on, asking 'I'm some sort of meteor freak, aren't I?' It's often Clark that jumps to conclusions and Chloe that puts the breaks on, but this time it's Clark saying 'we don't know that' because it's a possibility too chilling for him to face.
Chloe points out: 'Every single meteor freak I've ever run into has ended up dead or in Belle Reve'. Or on Level 33.1, we might add.
The scene where Clark uses his heat vision to remove the tracking device in Chloe was very powerful. But it was also uncomfortably masochistic on Chloe's part. I couldn't help feeling that this might be foreshadowing her story arc. It's also a masochism that is kept hidden from Jimmy--she denied that it hurt just as she denied she had feelings for Clark--because it doesn't matter, and also to stop him worrying. And if this is the case, if Chloe's story is going to be one of self-sacrificing martyrdom and voluntary 'death' (symbolic or real) at Clark's hands, then this casts an uncomfortably dark shadow over Chloe's entire life. I sincerely hope this is not the way the show is going, because I genuinely enjoyed the early Clark-Chloe relationship in the days of her high school crush. While I don't ship them now, I don't want the innocence of that early relationship to be overshadowed by a romanticised eternal masochism. In terms of gender politics, this is as repugnant to me as the ultra-objectification of Lana.
So what are the other possibilities? The one I really really thought they were going for was to reveal that Chloe's power is computer hacking. COME ON! It's so FRIKKING OBVIOUS!! It is NOT normal for high school girls to hack defence networks, dammit! Even in this episode Jimmy says 'Chloe's the one with the mad techno skills' and Clark refers to 'pulling off a miracle'. I so thought they were going there. So I found the final scene between Clark and Chloe baffling in its blindness to the obvious. Is the show really going to ignore the opportunity to retrospectively make sense of Chloe's 'superpowers'? Arrgh! If they HAD gone down that path, I could have got behind it--especially if we'd seen it cause some introspection on Chloe's part. For example, Clark could have argued that it was a benevolent power, but Chloe may have been forced to think about the ways in which her behaviour may actually be a violation of others--and how she justifies what she does--a moral journey which would also be useful for Clark, who felt it was fine to swipe a suspect's computer in this ep. (Though I enjoyed seeing his creative use of powers and quick-thinking, I do think that's pretty muddy water for Clark--far more in character for, say, Oliver...)
So I don't want to see Chloe martyred, I don't want her to kill herself, go mad or be killed by Clark. But I also really don't want her to become a superhero. This would seriously mess with Smallville canon. It's way too late for the show to prompt a rethink on the status of meteor freaks--if they can be redeamed or 'saved' then this makes their past deaths/mistreatment appalling in the extreme. And if some magical 'remedy' is discovered, I will be seriously PISSED that the only prompt to find one was when Clark's best friend became one.
There's another reason I really don't like the Chloe-as-superpowered idea. Her appeal as a character has always lain in how ordinary she is. And that is not an insult! She is one of the first characters that many viewers of the show identify with, especially the female viewers. She's 'cool' but she's realistic enough for people to relate to. She has love troubles, she doesn't have a perfect life, she has ambitions but struggles to realise them--she's always been a great viewer avatar. Give her superpowers and she's something else. It also changes her dynamic with Clark. It equalises them in a way that I think is unneccessary and unproductive for the show. Chloe as trusted secret-keeper is less 'special' if she's also got a secret to keep. The relationship becomes more like the one that Clark has with Oliver. It doesn't add anything new to the show--and it also means that the only 'normal' humans on the show are the love interests: Lana, Lois, Jimmy. I dislike that because I've always liked the 'best friend' Chlark relationship.
Can you tell I'm struggling with this?! ;-) I'll be really keen to read other people's thoughts because I'm sure they'll have different views. I wish I could find a silver lining on this one.
Stray thoughts
- The scene of Chloe's abduction was genuinely creepy--and very like a cliched alien abduction. If that was intentional, it's interesting that it's not the REAL alien who's abducting those on Earth and experimenting on them, but a fellow human (and potential meteor-freak).
- It's handy that Clark has a back-up billionaire pal now--everyone needs one of those to help your friends out of trouble. But nice to know that he and Ollie are still in touch! ;-)
- It was fun to see Clark employing a creative use of powers to swipe Dr Bethany's computer, but this is somewhat murky territory for Clark--it was quite Oliver-like, I thought, to justify stealing someone's computer simply because you suspect them of a nefarious purpose.
- I wish I could believe that Lana had an alternative to hanging with Chloe for her Bachelorette Party. It was cute seeing the girls having fun together, but it also felt a bit sad--Lana's life is a very lonely one. This makes me doubly glad that she's nurturing her friendship with Chloe.
no subject
Date: 2007-02-17 01:47 pm (UTC)THAT'S WHAT I THOUGHT TOO! *highfives*
I agree that Chloe being a meteor freak could turn out really badly. I'm actually hoping that her powers corrupt her, she turns evil, and that Lex ends up killing her (but not before he tortures her for a bit first. Lex's torture scenes are like porn).
no subject
Date: 2007-02-17 01:48 pm (UTC)It would almost be nice to see that Chloe is meteor 'infected' but powerless (as I'm sure a great lot of the population of Smallville might be - given their proximity to the meteors.) and as much as I don't want to see her die, it might also be interesting (if Chloe has to die, which I don't see the reason for) if she was one of the first to come down with the cancer that Lex eventually gets in the comics.
no subject
Date: 2007-02-17 03:18 pm (UTC)I'm in complete agreement with you regarding how problematic the transformation is... it reminds me (inevitably) of late seasons of Buffy. Whenever the topic came up, I fought tooth and nail against the idea of giving Xander powers of some sort — you just don't do that to a character whose primary appeal is his or her normality. And the impact that having Chloe being a meteor mutant would have on what being a mutant means and how she's not expendable, therefore a cure must be found... it's taking me to an uncomfortable meta-Spike place... what does it mean, for Buffy's quite phenomenal kill-rate, if vampires can actually choose to regain their soul? It's a case of the writers introducing new ideas for favored characters that turn the show's entire foundation on end.
no subject
Date: 2007-02-17 03:56 pm (UTC)It's way too late for the show to prompt a rethink on the status of meteor freaks--if they can be redeamed or 'saved' then this makes their past deaths/mistreatment appalling in the extreme. And if some magical 'remedy' is discovered, I will be seriously PISSED that the only prompt to find one was when Clark's best friend became one.
I'm thinking that the point of making Chloe one of "them" isn't so much to illustrate their needing to be saved, but accepted. Most fans adore Chloe and revealing her to be meteor-infected can only raise sympathy and understanding that not *all* meteor freaks are evil/bad and need to be saved. Thankfully, the show has stopped relying on too many FOTW shows, but if you look back there have been several introduced that were not badguys. The kid from Blank, Kyle Tippett from Hug (one of my all-time favorite SV episodes), Byron from Nocturne, Cyrus from Visitor, and that kid from Hereafter.. and who can forget the poor blown-up Ageless baby.
My other thought about this is that it is somewhat of a convenient plot device to explain away all the "Super Chloe" feats that we've seen her do. I have to wonder if TPTB are tapping more into the general feelings and complaints of fans when I see them doing things like finally addressing the Lana/Clark merry-go-round, Lana finally getting a backbone and people actually TALKING to her *draws hearts*, and Chloe's ridiculously OTT abilities with a keyboard. We're also getting a lot more iconic Superman nods and demonstrations of Clark's abilities - again, addressing the biggest complaints of the DC fanboys.
I know I'm ridiculously positive about the show, but I am sincerely loving this season.
no subject
Date: 2007-02-17 05:42 pm (UTC)True, she's closer to Lex than ever, but she's also becoming a better liar than ever. Lex is still seeing through her--in my review I compared their relationship to season 1 Lex and Lionel, in that Lex *thought* he could conceal things from his dad but wasn't ultimately successful--but I'm still impressed at Lana's powers of deception. Lex apparently didn't know she was investigating the Tobias angle, for example, even though he *ought* to have, considering she was questioning him about his relationship with the doctor.
In any case, Lana's expression in the embrace that follows is one of resignation and sorrow. It's almost as if she's accepted that the world she lives in is entirely made up of lies.
Oh, I really like that reading of the scene. I definitely agree with you that Lana knew Lex was lying to her (I've seen a lot of people's reviews say they think she believed him, but I agree that expression at the end shows she knows), but I hadn't thought of the parallel with Clark. Weird that the only person telling Lana the truth in this episode is Chloe! (Represses urge to do a Chlana reading of that fact....)
The scene where Clark uses his heat vision to remove the tracking device in Chloe was very powerful. But it was also uncomfortably masochistic on Chloe's part.
My favorite reading of this scene is
it made me split my comment in half!
Date: 2007-02-17 05:43 pm (UTC)And I don't think it's a bad thing that the show reexamine the meteor mythology. As
And it actually makes sense to re-evaluate the meteor mutants in terms of the overall progression of the show. Mutants have always sort of symbolized Clark's dark side: since season 1, when he came to the realization that he had special powers that made him different, mutants have represented the risk of what those powers could do to him, and what he could become if he exploited his powers. They were, in a sense, a symbolic representation of his fear of his own alienness. Now that he actual has an external enemy and doesn't need the mutants to give him someone to fight, and now that he's starting to accept his own alienness, it makes symbolic sense to me that the show should re-examine whether or not mutants really *are* evil. Maybe, like Jor-El, they're just misunderstood! (I certainly don't think this particular retcon is *more* disruptive than the Jor-El retcon.)
Re: it made me split my comment in half!
Date: 2007-02-17 06:22 pm (UTC)For what it's worth, I'm deeply uncomfortable with where the plotline might go — and I'm sort of holding back to see whether or not it goes there. Yes, if stops are pulled out to find a cure for Chloe, I'm going to be going to a Spike place, and part of me is pretty much bracing for it. There is the potential that they'll handle it well. So I'm trying to reserve judgement until I see how it plays out, but I definitely saw those deep waters!
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Date: 2007-02-17 06:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-17 07:09 pm (UTC)Yes, that really bothered me too. Lana's never been particularly tolerant of anyone out of the ordinary - unless that person is Clark.
Lana's 'you'd still be the same Clark Kent' line was confronting to Clark because he'd always feared that she would hate him as a freak. But he's forgetting the real reason he broke up with her--that his secret endangers her.
Ironically, I'd just rewatched "Extinction" in Season 3 before I saw this episode, so the connections and contradictions were very clear to me, particularly when Lana tells Clark that it would be okay if he were meteor-infected. She says the exact same thing in "Extinction", but that time, he replies, "If only it were that simple." So even besides the effects of "Reckoning", I think Clark is being a bit obtuse about the idea now, because really, despite Lana's tolerance, I would think there's still too much background about the meteor showers and how they affected Lana's life that would make the truth a bit harder to accept.
The idea of Chloe's powers being computer hacking had occurred to me a little, and I'd love to see that as well! I also love the connection you made between this and Chloe's fear of mental illness - especially since those were alluded to again in her role in "Labyrinth" (I know you didn't like that episode, but I thought it was still an interesting link).
Mmm, I love reading your reactions! :D
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Date: 2007-02-17 07:53 pm (UTC)There was some clumsy writing in this episode--the worst instance being having Lana espouse a benevolent view of meteor freaks before it was made clear to the audience that she'd changed her tune only because she suspects Clark of being one now.
Dialogue has never been Slavkin & Swimmer's strong suit. They're totally the go-to guys in the writing stable when it comes to plot, but making the characters sound like humans? Not so much, bless their hearts. *g*
I really enjoyed the few minutes of Lex we got in this episode. He felt very iconic and more importantly, he won. For the most part, with the exception of a few moments in the first act, everyone pretty much came to the conclusion that Dr. Bethany was behind all of it and it was explicitly made clear that Lex's agreement with Dr. Bethany was supposed to keep LC's involvement under wraps. Lex basically got away with it and from the perspective of him growing into his iconic self, that's excellent.
I liked Lana a lot in this episode. She's always better when she's allowed to be smart and capable and an active agent in her life and she got to be all those things throughout the episode. I wish, though, that she'd just call off the wedding. She cares about Lex, yes, but she doesn't love him and significantly, she doesn't trust him and that's not even dramatically interesting to me. The ways in which Lex/Lana are dysfunctional aren't as compelling as, say, Lee and Kara and at this point, it's not like Lana needs to be tethered to Lex in order to have a storyline; her investigation into the mystery that is Clark gives her a storyline that's not just about her romantic entanglements, especially because she still doesn't know the most crucial piece of the puzzle -- Clark's status as a member of the very race of aliens who've terrorized her and Smallville in the past. I would applaud SV like mad if it took the bold step of letting Lana be on her own again for a while.
Clark was, for the most part, wonderfully Supermanly this week. He used every one of his previously introduced powers in this episode and he used them cleverly and competently. The Superman fangrrl in me squeed like a bitty girl at that. Like you, though, I raise an eyebrow at him stealing that laptop. Clark, Clark, Clark. Just because you suspect someone's doing something nefarious still doesn't mean you get to BREAK THE LAW in order to figure out whether or not you're right. Don't make me turn car around on you.
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Date: 2007-02-17 08:07 pm (UTC)This makes sense to me, but to play devil's advocate, I can't help but point out that to the extent the audience has come to any conclusion that meteor mutants are dangerous or require wariness, the show has nothing but itself to blame for that. 'Cause that's how the mutants have largely been used (you cite the excellent examples of the 'good' mutants and I'd add Cassandra from Hourglass to that list); the bulk of them were murderously dangerous.
This was always my problem with Pariah: if the denizens of Smallville the town had experienced mutants in the same way the audience did, then no, the denizens of the town were not, in fact, being irrational or bigoted to think that mutants were dangerous and it therefore was disingenuous of Alicia or the series itself to suggest otherwise. Alicia was a member of the subset of mutants that tried to kill/harmed people and the series itself always had control over how meteor mutants were portrayed. The series chose to show the majority of them as dangerous, criminal, psychotic or downright evil. So to now, five and three-quarter years after-the-fact, try and argue something different does fundamentally change the overall premise and ethos of the show. And it changes the premise/ethos in a way that makes Clark & Co. look bad: they can only countenance the possibility that Mutants Are People, Too because someone close to them has been revealed to be one. That's a disquieting kind of moral/ethical relativism I'd rather not see in the future Superman (or his entourage).
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Date: 2007-02-17 09:38 pm (UTC)And hmm, yeah. The question of Chloe. I was totally waiting for them to be like, "So that's why you have mad computer skillz!" But then it never happened! For serious, if I suddenly discovered that I was meteor-infected, the first thing I'd think about is what the hell my power was. I was surprised when the end of the ep rolled around and both Chloe and Clark never even really discussed it, and were just like, "Well, I guess we'll see how things go."
I do think it would be interesting if her power was just something subtle, just a little help in the computer/hacking department, so she could be an Oracle type of person. But if I were writing a follow up for this ep, I'd probably give her cancer. I mean, I don't want her to die, but the fact that she has been around so many meteor rocks, and hasn't really shown any significant reation or power leads me to a Lex-losing-his-hand kind of place. I've always sort of figured that one day TPTB would kill her off, because of her original character status, and because they've put themselves in a bad position with bringing Lois into the storyline, so I think that meteor-induced cancer might be a poignant way to kill her off. A little less masochist (because yes, that's worrisome), and to keep her basically normal. Also, SAD.
Speaking of sad, I totally agree that Lana probably didn't have an alternative to just hanging with Chloe. She said that she could have had some big party with lots of girls, and she just wanted to hang with her best girl, but I don't really by it. Lana seems very alone.
Anyhoo, I really hope that TPTB haven't written themselves into a corner with Chloe. I guess we'll just have to see if they take this someplace interesting, or if they just totally fuck with their own canon for meteor freaks.
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Date: 2007-02-17 10:09 pm (UTC)I understand what you are saying, and it's a very good point. I guess I've just never felt that mutants = bad is a fundamental premise or ethos of the show. As you rightly point out: the majority of them certainly have been, but for whatever reasons, all those exceptions have always stood very prominently out in my perception of mutants in general. IOW, as a viewer it's very hard for me to generalize them based on just the majority represented. I don't think the Mutants are People Too is such a bad thing to remind people. Chloe's story of trying to accept her newfound status, particularly with her history of investigating so many mutants, is something I'm actually interested in watching. As far as Clark is concerned, he more than anyone should know and embrace the concept of good aliens/bad aliens and be able to extend that to good mutants/bad mutants already. I don't think his stance on the mutants will be changed at all. His concern for Chloe being one might be better explained as a real concern for her distress over the discovery, and the unknown factor still hanging her about the exact nature of her possible abilities.
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Date: 2007-02-17 10:24 pm (UTC)*highfives*
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Date: 2007-02-17 10:28 pm (UTC)Nice suggestions about where they could go from here--yes, maybe Chloe is powerless--though they didn't play it that way with Tobias--if they were going to take that path I would have thought they'd have him identify some people who at least were latent as yet. But perhaps. The cancer would be interesting... but I'm still struggling to work out if she's marked for death or not!
One more thought about Clark and Chloe
Date: 2007-02-17 10:29 pm (UTC)The scene where Clark uses his heat vision to remove the tracking device in Chloe was very powerful. But it was also uncomfortably masochistic on Chloe's part. I couldn't help feeling that this might be foreshadowing her story arc.... And if this is the case, if Chloe's story is going to be one of self-sacrificing martyrdom and voluntary 'death' (symbolic or real) at Clark's hands, then this casts an uncomfortably dark shadow over Chloe's entire life."
I was thinking about this some more about Chloe, Clark, and penetration, and I think I have a different reading of that scene. I think you have to read it as a reversal of what happened earlier in the episode, in which she was kidnapped by Lex's men, symbolically raped with that machine, and *implanted with something,* and then roofied to forget it all. So I don't think that choosing to have Clark penetrate her with his heat vision was masochistic/ self-sacrificing as much as it was symbolically reasserting her own choices over who penetrated her, and also having Clark perform a symbolic abortion.
And once we look at it that way, the parallels to the Lana plot arc are clear, because she too has had something menacing and Luthorian planted in her, but she hasn't been allowed the agency to have it removed.
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Date: 2007-02-17 10:33 pm (UTC)what does it mean, for Buffy's quite phenomenal kill-rate, if vampires can actually choose to regain their soul? It's a case of the writers introducing new ideas for favored characters that turn the show's entire foundation on end.
Absolutely1 It's a really bad idea so late in a series. Bring it up early and you have the chance to explore moral ambiguity and grey areas and so on. But this late in a show's established canon and it just ends up looking a) incredibly self-indulgent b) like you've pissed on your own world. Much as I loved the idea of Spike getting his soul back, it made me very uncomfortable. And if anything I'm more uncomfortable about this twist in Smallville because at least in Jossverse it wasn't the only introduction of moral ambiguity--in AtS they were busy establishing that some demons are friendly, etc. Smallville is so black and white, and while sometimes I wish it WAS more morally ambiguous and Clark would stop and think before hurling meteorfreaks across rooms, I don't want him to be promted to rethink only because his best friend is one! *headdesk*
*frets*
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Date: 2007-02-17 10:41 pm (UTC)In terms of Chloe being meteor-infected, yes, I see it's a way for the show to raise sympathy for the meteorfreaks, but I agree with LaT that the show's only got itself to blame for making them appear evil/bad. But I feel it's such murky waters now--because who's to judge the good from the bad? Who's to say that Clark hasn't eliminated freaks that could have been redeemed? I'm just... uncomfortable with the implications.
And another reason I don't like this plot (can't believe I forgot this one above!) is that I find it really strange that the show's dragging us back into meteor freak land, when I THOUGHT the rest of this season was going to be about hunting the Zoners! Why introduce them if only to ignore them? And didn't Clark vow to rid the world of them? It seems like a backwards step for both the show and Clark. The Zoners were introducing global concerns and symbolised Clark taking responsibility for his actions, leading him forward to his destiny. This just ... leads him back into angst.
I'm loving this season too--but this just threw me for a loop. I do think you're probably right when you point out the ways that TPTB have addressed some of the biggest concerns of fans this season. And many of those things I'm really happy with. I have anxiety about this because the implications are so enormous, but I'll be hoping for the best, that's for sure! :-) And despite my overall plot concerns, I did enjoy this actual episode. So it's all in the execution--they could yet sell me on it.
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Date: 2007-02-17 10:47 pm (UTC)Still, compassionate Clark is a Clark I guess I'll enjoy seeing develop. Though I still don't know how they'll resolve this. *bites nails*
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Date: 2007-02-17 10:52 pm (UTC)I agree. Her powers of deception have seriously improved. She's almost the equal of Clark and Lex now--which made her final approach to each of them all the more interesting. She tests them to see if she'll get the truth, but she's also capable of withholding the truth herself. And she'll do so as a response to their secrecy--so Clexian.
Weird that the only person telling Lana the truth in this episode is Chloe! (Represses urge to do a Chlana reading of that fact....)
I think that's significant! It really makes that friendship a shining example of honesty right now, and it's down to Lana drawing a line and stopping demanding that Chloe tell her about Clark's secret. Much respect for Lana for that! And I'm surprised/delighted to be able to 'buy' their friendship again.
My favorite reading of this scene is [info]mskatej's, that it's actually sex. Or the closest Chlarkers are ever going to get to sex from their couple.
*nods* I haven't read that yet, but I agree. It read as VERY sexual, and it was interesting that it was kept secret from Jimmy, and that Chloe demanded it and Clark did it as a favour. But the masochism bit squicked me.
Re: it made me split my comment in half!
Date: 2007-02-17 11:08 pm (UTC)Your arguments are excellent and I'm really glad both you and
It's interesting that you say this gives Chloe a plotarc that's not tied to Clark. I had the opposite reaction--to me, this binds her to Clark more than ever. They've got mutual secrets now, not to mention a masochistic pact. Chloe's been in Clark's most intimate circle for ages--now she's still in it, but with bonus superpowers. To me, that's making her more 'special' than Lana or Lois, and I just wish the show didn't feel they had to do this. Though you're right--evidently I'm in the minority who LIKE Chloe as normal.
I don't think it's as big of a retcon as making unsouled Spike a good person in Buffy, because there have been plenty of mutants with good intentions--maybe all they've needed was a benevolent billionaire doing research to help them control the side effects of their powers (Oliver, who apparently took his first step in that direction with Tobias).
Oh, we're going to have to agree to disagree on this one. Because I think it's as big or bigger. Jossverse was more succesfully morally ambiguous for me--there were demons that were friendly. But Spike turning good still threw me out of the later seasons of Buffy. I was always uncomfortable with them, even though I loved Spike and loved the idea. I just never felt it was well enough justified within the show's canon/world-building, and this really really feels the same way. And I think it's feeling bigger because I don't actually think it's a good thing for Chloe, whereas I liked it for Spike.
As for them just needing a benevolent billionaire--well this makes me just soo ragey and uncomfortable--because if that was the case, why didn't we see that possibility held out before? And what does it say about all those freaks Clark casually KILLED? Besides which, if Smallville had always intended to take this direction, I think they would have shown us early on the possiblity that Lex could have helped but didn't. Then it would have greater resonance that now there IS a billionaire willing to help. This connects with nothing for me, it feels like such a loose thread in the Smallville tapestry.
it makes symbolic sense to me that the show should re-examine whether or not mutants really *are* evil. Maybe, like Jor-El, they're just misunderstood!
Now, the symbolism argument I LIKE. I like a lot. Push that one some more and maybe you'll win me over... seems like I'll need to be won over if I'm to continue to enjoy the show this season. *sigh* *clings to this idea*
I certainly don't think this particular retcon is *more* disruptive than the Jor-El retcon.
Now you're just teasing me! Because OMG the two could not me more different! You forget that I don't view Jor-El as a retcon AT ALL! I ALWAYS saw him as benevolent--the prejudice on the part of the Kents and the viewers was obvious to me and I always believed that he would be proved to be a force of good. It was so obvious that that's what the show was setting up for YEARS. Since Season 2! Retcon? Pfft! I don't think so! Whereas I haven't seen anyone claiming through the seasons that Chloe was a meteorfreak. And we've never had a hint of it on the show before--EXCEPT where the computer hacking is concerned, which is why I could have got more behind it had they built on that. GRRR.
Re: it made me split my comment in half!
Date: 2007-02-17 11:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-17 11:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-17 11:13 pm (UTC)Yes, totally! I'll extend him some generosity and say he's in a soft-hearted place right now because the wedding's only a week away. But if it continues it will begin to irk me, because I thought he'd worked through those issues.
especially since those were alluded to again in her role in "Labyrinth"
Yes! I really like the whole Chloe-mental-illness connection and to me that already gave her a fear about her destiny that I would like to see explored. I would be interested to see if they pair the two up: I could enjoy that. Especially since Belle Reve has been the dumping ground for meteor freaks in the past. Connecting and paralleling the two could be a graceful way of connecting this new twist to previous Chloe canon.
Thanks for your comment!
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Date: 2007-02-17 11:18 pm (UTC)Yes, that's true! It was a very strong Lex episode. Well needed!
I wish, though, that she'd just call off the wedding. She cares about Lex, yes, but she doesn't love him and significantly, she doesn't trust him and that's not even dramatically interesting to me.
Well, I did wonder if she MIGHT! I'm sure I'd have picked up on the spoiler vibe if this was the case, but watching this episode in isolation, completely unspoiled, I could see that they might be building towards a calling off the wedding--melodramatically late, of course! ;-) *sigh* Probably too much to hope for.
Clark, Clark, Clark. Just because you suspect someone's doing something nefarious still doesn't mean you get to BREAK THE LAW in order to figure out whether or not you're right.
I know!! Someone's been spending a leetle too much time around Ollie! And I'd loove to have seen Oliver snark about that. 'Oh, it's ok when YOU do it!' Still, his use of powers is far more cluey and competent than it used to be and that's fun to see. I'll put the laptop down as loose writing. It just better not continue!