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                  Blow Out: ForsakenWritten 
                  by Hope
 I am Brian 
                  Peterson and Kelly Souders' biggest fan. Sincerely, I am- I 
                  am quite possibly the only Smallville fan who will proudly say 
                  that I enjoyed their "Nocturne." See also "Skinwalker." 
                  Everybody else got on the bandwagon with "Prodigal," 
                  and have mostly been on the bandwagon ever since, with an especially 
                  vibrant surge of love as of "Phoenix." Unfortunately, 
                  Peterson & Souders are ending S3 on a low note- for them, 
                  but just an "eh" note for the season as a whole. "Forsaken" 
                  not the worst episode of the year. I can comfortably say without 
                  seeing "Covenant" next week that that prize goes to 
                  Ken Horton for his abysmal piece de merdement, "Whisper," 
                  and no, I'm not going to stop beating him over that anytime 
                  soon. My TV screenwriting boyfriend, Mark Verheiden, had to 
                  wear the chaps for a year over "Dichotic," and as 
                  indicated by the title "my TV screenwriting boyfriend," 
                  my feelings for Verheiden are just a little schmoopily biased. But I digress, 
                  which seems to be the overall theme of "Forsaken," 
                  and thus it's appropriate for this review. This episode was 
                  all over the place and the structure was a mess. Peterson & 
                  Souders stepped out of their "Outsider makes waves in Smallville" 
                  comfort zone, and couldn't quite pull it together as a coherent 
                  whole. Interestingly enough- for me anyway- is that in spite 
                  of the poorly-weighted acts (Pete's storyline started too late, 
                  Chloe's storyline was an incohesive mish-mash of various season 
                  three mythos signposts, Lex's storyline was ploddingly linear, 
                  Clark's storyline was ineffectual, and Lana's storyline was 
                  static, picking up steam only when she fought back against Emily,) 
                  it still wasn't an unenjoyable episode to watch because Peterson 
                  & Souders, better than almost anyone on this show, write 
                  really good characters. Though the 
                  story as a whole didn't gel, each individual scene shone. These 
                  were touchstone moments, the hours and minutes that change everything: 
                  Lana's let herself be somebody else's girl likely for the last 
                  time; Chloe finally does the right thing with the truth and 
                  throws herself right into the fire, Lex and Lionel have dropped 
                  the pretenses and bared their teeth at once, and Clark is still 
                  trudging along, desperately selfish and stupid until he realizes, 
                  just a little too late, how selfish and stupid he's been. I 
                  imagine that's a theme we're going to see played out to its 
                  fullest next week, and I look forward to it. I didn't 
                  mention Pete in that paragraph, but there was no need to. Don't 
                  get me wrong, Pete's scene with Lex, and his final scene with 
                  Clark, were both word-perfect, but Pete served entirely to cough 
                  up exposition and to play Greek Chorus this week. I think it's 
                  a sad testament to how badly this character has been used since 
                  the beginning, that his final storyline didn't start until the 
                  middle of Act III, and conveniently ended in the middle of Act 
                  IV.  It was a 
                  nice bit of work to have Lex and Pete share a scene together; 
                  I know I enjoyed that momentary glimpse of a future where Mr. 
                  Ross may well be Mr. Luthor's running mate (though that stint 
                  in Belle Reve is going to be hard to explain to constituents, 
                  I'd think.) It's a sorry thing that the character was wasted 
                  because he had a lot of potential, and I'm going to miss Sam 
                  Jones III. He had a great, wry delivery, and wonderful chemistry 
                  with Allison Mack and Tom Welling; I'm sorry to see him go. Emily was 
                  suitably creepy, with those dead, gothbaby eyes and girlish 
                  mannerisms to her voice, and it's a nice nod to the ubercanon 
                  of the comics world that her phase ability was explained both 
                  in a way that made sense for Smallville science and for the 
                  general DC universe. After all, Wally West- doing business as 
                  The Flash- can also walk through walls if he gets his molecules 
                  going. (Don't you feel better knowing that Wally could put his 
                  hand through somebody's chest wall, but is too busy kicking 
                  back and throwing flirty looks at Hawkgirl to bother?)  The childish 
                  reasoning and rage written into the character was wonderful; 
                  that simplistic approach to friendship didn't change one bit, 
                  but the nice recall to the way Clark reacted to her when she 
                  was still physically small, compared to the way he reacted when 
                  she was physically large was well put. She was, unquestionably, 
                  dangerous. She needed to be stopped. However, she was still 
                  very much a victim, and Clark responded to her in "Accelerate" 
                  that way. It was so easy for Clark to forget that when faced 
                  with an adult Emily, and there's a compare/contrast in there 
                  for the way he behaves with Lex.  Clark cannot 
                  and should not shoulder the blame for the wicked things Lex 
                  has done and will do all on his own (because let's face it, 
                  Lex is not a saint. He wasn't a saint from the day he walked 
                  into Smallville; I'm pretty sure Clark had nothing to do with 
                  Lex embezzling money from LuthorCorp for a particle accelerator, 
                  nor for Lex opting to drug Dom and dump him in the trunk of 
                  a car as an expedient solution to an annoying problem,) but 
                  Clark is fully responsible for the shoddy way he's treated Lex- 
                  accusing him of wrongdoing at every turn, refusing to apologize 
                  even when apologies were due, keeping a secret *about* Lex *from* 
                  Lex, not to mention the multiple instances of head trauma. For 
                  all the bad things Lex does, Lex was still in many cases the 
                  victim of circumstances, and Clark never gave him any quarter 
                  even when he should have. The enemy Clark makes of Lex, he made 
                  by his own deeds. I'm sure 
                  all of these splayed threads will be woven together for the 
                  finale; this was a necessary episode, and not a bad episode 
                  to watch, but overall, it's not Peterson & Souders' best 
                  work. I was blown away by "Phoenix," but merely entertained 
                  by "Forsaken," and I wish I had a better note to end 
                  the season on with this writing duo, because like I said- I'm 
                  their biggest fan, and I like to say nice things about them. 
                  Hopefully I'll get another chance next year. Screenwriting: 
                  C-To Watch: C+
 Next Week: 
                  Meanwhile, in Jeph Loeb's Superman/Batman, issues 8 and 9... 
                  oh wait, I meant next time on Smallville...
 Note: 
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