"Hostage" Review! 
                            
                          Written 
                              by C.M. 
                                Houghton ("Triplet")
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                            NOTE: I'm going to spoil you on the ID of the Red  Queen in the first paragraph, so literally: read no further if you wish to  remain unspoiled. 
                            You have been warned. 
                            One thing I really hated going into this episode was because  of the trailer shown at the end of 'Sacrifice' I knew exactly who the Red Queen  was.  I supposed they never came out and  said 'Hey, heads up: Martha Kent is the Red Queen,' but the trailer had a  voiceover spoken by Annette that played over different images of the Red Queen.   If that wasn't bad enough, then they  showed Martha dressed in red telling someone (it turned out it was Tess) that she  didn't comprehend how to truly protect someone that she loves. In that promo it  was clear that Martha was the Red Queen.
                              
                            Yet, all during the episode until the reveal in the Luthor  mansion wine cellar, her identity was apparently a mystery to everyone else.   Then they had Maxwell Lord trying to get Tess  to admit she was the Red Queen, even though he would have known she  wasn't.  Was that a red herring for Tess'  benefit or ours? In either case, I'm not sure it makes sense.  For the former, I'm not sure Tess had heard  of the Red Queen before this.  Why tease  her like that?  As for the latter, if it  was for our benefit, it doesn't really work.   Maxwell Lord knows who The Red Queen is, we saw him meet her (or get  kidnapped by her) at the end of 'Charade.'   So, that was weird…
                          
                            And, as I guessed it would be given the way they'd been  teasing how mysterious the Red Queen was, her real identity seemed to have been  intended as a surprise until Martha was actually revealed in that scene with  Tess.  Every scene the Red Queen had been  in up until that point had her face obscured in some way and she never  spoke.  
                            Any time we saw the Red Queen's  hands, they were gloved, and we never got a good look at her body.  If she was walking away, she was either  obscured either by distance or shadow or we only saw her feet or hands  (obscured by gloves).  Everything  everyone did during the episode had obscured her ID up until that reveal in the  wine cellar.  Everyone was on the same  page: acting, writing, directing, the Director of Photography, even the costume  designer had worked to help hide her ID with those red leather gloves and those  awesome red shoes.
                          
                            Yet The CW marketing department apparently hadn't gotten  the memo about the Red Queen's identity being a surprise.  They'd done this kind of thing before which  is the entire reason I don't read the Official Episode Descriptions  anymore.  They always spoil things that  are meant to be surprise reveals in the episode.  I stopped reading them after the 'Traveler'  description had revealed that Lionel kidnaps Clark. However, the way that episode had played out,  it was clear that Lionel having been responsible for Clark's capture was  supposed to have been a surprise.  
                          
                            Now, they spoil important plot surprises in the  trailers?  I admit, Martha wearing all  red maybe wasn't completely like what they did with 'Traveler,' that Official  Description actually had 'Lionel kidnaps Clark' as the title, but still...  Martha wearing red at the end of a montage of  images of the Red Queen was still a huge giveaway for me.
                          I guess I won't be watching the trailers anymore, but I'll  never know for sure how I would have felt differently had I not known the Red  Queen's identity ahead of time.
                            Yet, the  foreknowledge oddly didn't really seem to hurt the episode that much for  me.  I'm not sure what's to thank for  that.  Maybe it's a testament to the way  the show was written or, more likely, it's because I just adored having Annette  O'Toole back on the show.  Martha made me  forgive many of this episode's sins, even though it really didn't have any  serious ones to begin with.
                            
                            I adored that the  episode's writers, Jordan Hawley & Anne Cofell Saunders, brought Martha  back for such an important episode.   The  fact that Annette O'Toole brought her real-life husband Michael McKean along as  Perry White was just icing.  They have a  great chemistry together and the way it was written worked well for both characters.  It also made for good drama.  
                          
                            Probably part  of the reason it took me so long to finish this review was that I watched this  episode about five times more than normal and then I went and dug out my Season  3 DVD set.  Man, the show has changed a  LOT since 'Perry', but it was good to see that episode again to remind me what  Perry White had been like six years ago.  
                              I'd like to  think the writers also dug out that episode to see what had made it so charming  and popular. There was a lot less menace and tons more humor in the earlier  episode, Clark accidentally tossing that tractor and it landing right in front  of Perry always makes me laugh.  That was  funny.  I'm not sure the humor here was  quite as funny, but Perry was brought forward in a very nice way.  I could see the changes that time and six  years of sobriety had wrought in him as a character.   The writers did a good job with that aspect  of the episode.
                          
                            Martha had  also been brought forward in a very believable way.  I loved that Martha wasn't really quite ready  to move on, which also explained why we haven't seen her much since she left at  the end of season 6.  That was a great  way to cover that up in terms of the show's continuity.  It was terrific that it made Martha having  been so scarce for the past three years actually be in character for her and it  gave Annette some great moments to play.
                          
                            It was touching  to see how affected Martha was by seeing Jonathan's gloves on the tool  box.  There were some very nice scenes  between Martha and Clark surrounding that too.   She clearly misses Jonathan still, as would be expected, so I'm glad  they didn't throw her at Perry completely.   As she said, it is probably too soon.   Her profound reaction to seeing Perry wearing Jonathan's old jacket was  proof of that.  That was another  heartbreaking scene. 
                          
                            I also liked  what they'd done that echoed the previous episode with Perry White.  The save that Lois performed off the roof of  that building was similar in a lot of ways to the save in 'Perry' that Lana and  Pete had performed back six seasons ago.   No, there was no superheroing from Clark, just an all-human-powered save  by Lana and Pete. And the 'rope' this time was an orange power cable, though  last time it had been an orange climbing rope. What Pete was doing with a rope  like that when he and Clark had been going camping, I have no idea, but I loved  how this episode seemed to have echoed that one.
                          
                            Although, as  much as I really enjoyed this episode I guess one problem I had with it was  Martha being the Red Queen.  It's an  interesting twist and I suppose it works on one level: she is far younger than  the traditional elderly Martha in the comics, so maybe it isn't that far of a  stretch.  She's also a very strong-willed  character, so of course she's going to do what she can to protect Clark.   Yet, I'm not sure I buy Martha going covert.  Her resolve to protect Clark would likely  make her a formidable person to deal with, but would she have the  wherewithal?  
                          
                            I mean, doing  what she did would take a lot of money and the last time I checked US Senators  don't make all that much.  Not that I  keep track of this sort of thing, but I believe they make less than a couple of  hundred thousand a year.  That's not  much, in the grand scheme of things.  I  don't know, maybe what she'd done hadn't cost that much, but still… How many  people did she really have looking for the Book of Rao and maybe doing stuff for  her in Nairobi?  It strains credulity,  but probably not enough for me to count down too much for it. 
                          
                            I absolutely  adored that Clark figured it out though.   He's a smart guy and doesn't need things to be spelled out to him like a  child, and neither do the viewers, even though the writers sometimes seem to  forget that.  I'm glad that sort of plot point  has become far less common.  
                          
                            Another  problem I had with the episode was that Clark's and Lois' breakup initially  seemed contrived and out of character. However, with subsequent viewings that  didn't bother me as much.  I suppose tension  was needed to lead up to the season finale episode, and this break up (or  'break-up') seriously complicated the situation with Martha being there, but  really?  Do they really have to go there?
                          
                            Unfortunately, this just seems more like the Clark &  Lana will-they-or-won't-they-get-together (and will-Clark-or-won't-Clark-disclose-his-secret-to-her)  merry-go-round.  I hope they don't drag  this on too long into the start of next season, but I suppose there is no drama  without conflict so relationship friction for Clark is probably  unavoidable.  I just hope they can make  it believable and well-motivated. 
                          
                            Yet, all that  drama had terrific consequences for both Clark and Lois.  She learned more about herself this episode  and had a wonderful character arc.  I  liked what Clark took away from it too; he saw that unless he changes his  normal MO the secrets he's been keeping are going to jeopardize his  relationship with Lois.  We'll have to  see how that works out later, but it should build into interesting things next  season if they stick with that.  We  really don't need more of Clark lying to his girlfriend.  He's done that way too much.
                          
                            I liked how  they used Oliver Queen and Maxwell Lord in this episode.  Maxwell Lord has some serious mind control  powers in the comics, I'm glad we saw more of that for his return.  Although, I hope he wasn't killed by that  weird tone over the phone.  I hope he can  come back in some way, I like him as a character and I'd like to see him more.
                          
                            As character  cameos go, Oliver Queen only showing up in some weird dreamscape of Tess'  thanks to Maxwell Lord's manipulations was a doozy.  I had a feeling something was off about how  he was acting right from the start, but it was an interesting twist that I  didn't really see coming.  That was very  well done.
                          
                          
                      
                        The  second-to-last episode of the season usually is in the unenviable position of  setting up stuff for the major complications of the season finale.  What normally ends up happening is they  deliver what fans scornfully refer to as 'filler episodes' at this point in the  season, where nothing of note really happens and the overall story doesn't show  any real progression because they're throwing too much stuff into the episode. This  hour of course didn't side-step that completely, so much of this helped to  transition into the season ender, but I think what they did do with that had  set up things well for that while still giving us compelling drama in this  episode.  
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                            As for the  lack of consequence: I'm not sure "Smallville" ever really has episodes  that are completely without consequence, but the problem with events not having  serious repercussions used to be worse in earlier seasons.  Important things used to happen all the time  that left no serious lasting affects.   Think back to Season 5 and Alicia's return for two episodes: Clark was  seriously involved with her, they had even gotten married (although that didn't  stick since they were both underage) and yet after she had died in the next  episode it was like nothing had ever happened.  I don't think her name was ever even mentioned  again and her loss never affected Clark in any real way in the long term. In  later seasons, the show has better dealt with things like that.  
                            This episode  actually is proof of that: yeah, Martha is almost inexplicably absent from the  show because Annette has moved on in her career, yet this episode proved that  her moving away has had serious consequences for her character.  Those are not seen on the show since she's not  on it anymore, but Martha suffering for her choice to stay away makes sense for  the character.  In fact, it's awesome.  
                            
                            Of course she  would suffer.  She's moved away from the  only family she has left.  She loves  Clark, but the given reason of why she left not only makes sense (it's too painful  to try and deal with the memories associated with the farm), it's also the best  possible explanation for her being gone.   This was a great way to handle that: they made off-camera real-life  stuff work for the show.
                            
                            I can tell  that is working far better than how they've tried to keep Lex involved in the  show after Michael Rosenbaum left, or even how they've barely mentioned Lana  aside from some off-the-cuff comments from Clark.  It might surprise some people for me to say  that about Lana, but that's a shame.  
                            
                            You'd think  she would have come in handy against several dozen Kryptonians: she'd be a  living kryptonite weapon. She's only been only obliquely referred to since she  left, but an actual mention every now and then might be nice.  As much as I hated her storyline last season,  she was very important to Clark and should still be.  
                            
                            She should  keep in touch with Chloe even if she's not calling Clark. I would think Chloe,  with her superhero-sidekick gig becoming a full-time job, would appreciate  updates from her former best-friend on any crime-fighting she's doing.  She might even be able to help Lana with  information. Lana doesn't even have to show up since I know Kristin is off  doing other things, but a mention of her would be nice now and then.
                            
                            I'm glad they  clarified that the castle that had figured so prominently in previous episodes  was actually in Colorado.  I think that  hard to believe, why would anything that the government is involved with be  that elaborate?  However, I guess it's  better that than Clark saving Chloe from a complex in Europe.  (Which is where Checkmate was located in the  comics.)
                            
                            I am a bit  confused how this 'Kryptonian bible' that the Book of Rao is supposed to be is  actually something that will exile all Kryptonians from earth, including Clark,  or even how on earth Martha had figured all that out.   Is it the Kryptonian bible or a device or  somehow both?  I guess I'm not going to  sweat the details too much.  The reveal  of that fact made for one hell of a cliff-hanger ending that tied in perfectly  to the season finale. 
                            
                            Despite the  few problems I had with it, overall this was an excellent episode.  It had terrific act breaks, had an exciting  storyline and the ending was quite a cliff-hanger. 
                            The story had also brought back  Perry White and Martha in a terrific way, and even though the Tess/Maxwell/Oliver  tangle seemed a bit out of place at first, I thought it had worked out well in  the end.  The writers did a good job  bringing all that together.. I also like the continuity used in the episode,  Perry coming back just in time to save Clark's and Lois' jobs was great.  He was able to keep his promise to Clark made  back in Season 3's 'Perry' to get Clark work.   Maybe it was bad that it took six seasons for us to get that pay off,  but it was still nice to see.  Jordan and  Anne did a terrific job with this episode.
                            
                            Tom Welling  was fantastic as Clark.  He played Clark  as so earnest and strong willed, yet my favorite parts were the scenes Clark  had with Martha.  Tom has such good chemistry  with all the women in the show, albeit in different ways, but he had really  shone in Clark's scenes with his mother.   It seems that there is true affection between the two actors, they  seemed so comfortable with each other and seemed to have easily slipped back  into their old roles.  It was different,  Martha and Clark are different now than they were the last time Tom had played  a scene with Annette, but still the ease they seemed to have had with each  other really added to the scenes they shared.   I especially liked the final scene with Martha, when Clark confronted  her about being the Red Queen.  
                            
                            Allison Mack  was awesome.  Probably my favorite scene  with her was when Chloe was talking to Clark about how she'd been having so  many problems and decided to pull back.   It was touching to see Chloe so affected by what had been going on and  Allison had played that scene perfectly.
                            
                            Erica Durance  was wonderful.  She was adorable in Lois'  scenes with Perry and I liked her a lot with Martha and Clark as well.  
                            
                            Cassidy  Freeman was fantastic as Tess Mercer.   The first scenes with Maxwell Lord were disjointed and Cassidy did an  extremely effective job portraying Tess' confusion and fear.  
                            
                            Justin Hartley  had the nearly thankless task of having Oliver Queen only being in Tess'  dreamscape, but he did a terrific job.   He played Oliver as basically the same, but there was an edge there that  seemed different.  So in looking at the  episode several times, it almost like he was letting Gil Bellows' portrayal of  Maxwell Lord color the way he played Oliver in Tess' dream.  I thought it was very well done.
                 
                    
                      
                        
                          Annette  O'Toole was outstanding as Martha Kent.   It's been so long since she'd last been on the show.  The last time we'd seen her in the show  (aside from a few still photos in the Kent farmhouse) had been in the season 6  finale, 'Phantom.'  (Although I hope her  line about coming back soon wasn't just a line and that it means she will try  to come back next season.)  I had  especially liked the scenes Martha had with Clark, especially the last one when  she told Clark about what the Book of Rao does.   It was heart wrenching. 
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                      Michael McKean  was terrific as Perry White.  It's been  so long since he'd last been on, 'Perry' had been on back in the fall of 2003,  I wasn't sure how well this would work out.   Yet, he did a wonderful job.  I  think he was handled the changes that had happened to Perry very well.
                      Gil Bellows  didn't have much screen time, but I really like him as Maxwell Lord.  I hope that Maxwell collapsing on the floor after  that phone call to Martha doesn't mean the end for him. I'd like to see him  again.
                      
                      Glen Winter  did an excellent job as director.  I was  initially a bit weirded-out about how the Tess' scenes with Maxwell Lord were  handled, they were just so different than how the show usually looks, but given  the fact that it was an induced dream (and not Tess really getting locked up in  the Luthor mansion) it made sense.  The unreality  of those scenes was reinforced with jerky hand-held camera work which must have  given the camera operator a real work-out. The scenes in Tess' nightmares were  disjointed and had a skewed POV: there were a lot of extreme close-ups, low  angle shots, a lot of little jump cuts that only had minor changes from shot to  shot and rough hand-held shots.  They all  contributed to the feeling that something was off.  Even before Oliver stood up on a leg that  couldn't have held his weight because it had just been shot, I knew something  was up. I didn't know what, but when it was revealed to have been a dream, it  made perfect sense.  I really liked how  all of those scenes were staged.
                      
                      Glen also got solid  performances from everyone.  It was a  terrifically acted outing and I have to think that Glen had something to do  with that.  It was another solid  directorial effort from him.
                      
                      Greg Middleton  (previously credited as 'Gregory Middleton') has worked in other TV shows and feature  films (most notably as the Second-Unit Cinematographer on "The Butterfly  Affect"), but has also shot for Smallville before.  It was quite some time ago, but he was the  Director of Photography for Glen Winter's directorial debut on the show,  'Cyborg.'  That was a beautiful piece of  photography, as was this.  
                      
                      Although I  felt the dreamscape sequences in Tess' head were initially jarring, upon  subsequent views I thought those scenes were wonderful. The harsh, high  contrast lighting with the de-saturated colors and abrupt changes in setups,  along with the jump cuts from Editor Vikash Patel, were perfect for those  scenes.  It contrasted nicely at times  with the far more colorful and sentimental scenes that had long, leisurely tracking  shots, that took place with Martha back at the farm.  It was a beautifully shot episode.
                      
                      While it might  not seem to be a perfect episode, for me it was pretty close.  Yeah, this episode had some flaws, but  ultimately for me they were minor and it didn't affect the episode in any major  way.  I enjoyed this episode each and  every time I viewed it.  5 golden Books  of Rao out of a possible 5.
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