"Nemesis"
Review!
Written
by Triplet
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NOTE:
I discuss major plot points in this review so
if you try hard to avoid that sort of thing
you should know better than reading one of my
reviews. Be warned, read any further at your
own risk.
Wow.
Just.
Wow.
Just
when I thought this awesome season couldn't
get any better, they deliver this terrific episode.
It's probably one of the stronger episodes of
the season, if not the series. Despite one or
two things, like getting Lex kidnapped again
and a couple of other picayunish contrivances,
this was about as close to perfect that an episode
can get.
One
thing I was worried about when I heard about
this episode was that how were they going to
keep up the suspense with two men trapped in
a collapsed tunnel. I mean, there's only so
much that can happen, right? Well, I shouldn't
have worried. Caroline has done so well in her
previous efforts for Smallville, "Oracle"
and "Cyborg." (I'll conveniently ignore
the fact she wrote "Subterranean"
for the sake of this argument. Although that
wasn't a horrible episode, it just wasn't that
great either.) Anyway, I shouldn't have fretted.
I mean, just the idea sounded great.
Clark
injured, weakened by kryptonite, and trapped
with Lex and no way to get out? All the while,
Clark is still jealous and hurt about Lex's
apparent manipulation of Lana to force her to
the altar and Lex is rightly convinced his wife
still loves his ex-best friend more than him...
There was zero chance the two former friends
wouldn't have a serious confrontation.
It's
such a wonderful gold-mine of potential
for drama even lousy writer probably could
have made the script passable. How could
anyone except a complete hack even screw
that up? Fanboy contentions to the contrary,
I don't believe any writer on the staff
could be described as that despite the
occasional dud. So I shouldn't have worried.
Aside
from a couple of things, which I'll get
to later, the episode didn't disappoint.
It was everything I had expected and more.
The script was tight and had some great
act break cliffhangers and got several
storylines moved along in major ways.
For Caroline, the dialogue was especially
awesome.
At
several times, Caroline had written words
that meant more than one thing depending
on what you knew. I love when writers
in any fiction form (whether it be film,
tv or in novels) do that. She'd put layers
of meaning into many parts of the episode's
dialogue and it made for a much more fulfilling
experience, even with multiple viewings.
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Although
there were many examples of this during the
episode, Caroline had done particularly well
with the layers of meaning when, at the end
of the episode, Lana asked Lex what she'd done
to deserve him loving her. It twisted the knife
into Lex more deeply; I think he finally realized
how profoundly he'd manipulated the love of
his life, and just how agonizing losing the
"baby" had been for her. The whole
exchange with Lex was also painful for Lana.
Her knowing what he did to her, even though
he misunderstood the real meaning behind the
question, it was still a good question to ask.
What had she ever done to deserve his way of
showing her love? It was a painfully poignant
moment.
The
scenes between Lex and Clark in the tunnels
were outstanding. Clark was at times angry and
resentful but finally, when Lex came back, regretful
he'd thought that he'd leave him there to die.
The
dialogue was excellent, but the character development
was better. Lana has moved into a whole new
world. Forget being scorned, hell hath no fury
like a woman who had been tricked by her boyfriend
into thinking she had been pregnant so she'd
marry him and then made to think she'd lost
the baby only once they were safely wedded.
When
Lana found the blueprints to the tunnels, she
took absolutely no action in order to get revenge
on Lex. That was pretty cold. She was going
to let him die and I wouldn't have blamed her
one bit if she had. What he did to her was so
wrong Lex had finally, irrevocably, turned into
evil. She was right to turn a little bit evil
to protect herself and those she loves.
However,
I suspect not all of her rookie attempts at
Luthor style machinations were expert enough
to fool Lex for long. Shooting what looked to
be Lex's prize, silver plated gun without cleaning
it and replacing the spent bullets may not have
been a very good idea. One look at that gun
and Lex will know she was the one that shot
the locks off that case, not the police. Not
exactly a smart move on her part.
However,
her two interactions with Lionel were classic
Luthor and very well played. She pressured her
father-in-law in very smart ways and I was glad
she did. I had mentioned before in my review
for Promise that what Lionel had done in threatening
to kill Clark was inexplicable. He had seemed
at points to be a nicer guy, more on Clark's
side.... Thanks to Lana's nascent evil-doing,
he finally made his real motivations clear.
However, he'd only somewhat explained himself
since what little he had said left open many
more questions than the ones he had answered.
What
exactly is Lionel protecting Clark from? How
does making Lana marry Lex keep Clark safe?
What is it that Lex would do to Clark if Lana
weren't in the picture? Does the danger to Clark
have to do with the little 33.1 project that
Lex is working, "Ares?"
Ares,
by the way, is the name of the ancient Greek
God of War. He was the son of Hera and Zeus
and, in ancient Greek, his name literally means
"injurer" or "destroyer."
(Okay, I looked that up. I'm not that smart.)
Anyway,
with Lex knowing at least one of Clark's abilities
for sure, he had said that hitting Clark with
that chisel was like hitting stone, would Clark
have been destined to be added to that project?
Is marrying Lana enough of a distraction for
Lex so that is what makes Clark safe? Or he
is safe because of Lana's affection for her
ex? If that's the case, why wasn't Chloe (Lana's
dearest friend) safe? Once Lex finds out that
Lana knows what he did to her, and maybe headed
to talk things over with a good divorce attorney,
will Clark suddenly be back in Lex's crosshairs?
Will Lionel still be able to help Clark then?
What does the phantom that Lana saw in that
video have to do with the Ares Project? Has
Lex figured out the phantoms are more aliens,
like Titan from the fight club in "Combat?"
Is Lionel truly good now? Or is the Magnificent
Bastard back and only protecting Clark for his
own very selfish reasons?
The
questions Lionel opened up with his "explanation"
are seemingly endless...
The
plot thickens with only a few more episodes
to go before the season finale. I can't wait
to see where they're going with all of these
intersecting storylines...
I
loved that Caroline managed to put in major
mythic canon that hadn't really been addressed
by Smallville much before. I'm specifically
referring to the connection between Clark's
powers and Earth's yellow sun. I think the only
time in the series Clark's powers being derived
from the sun had ever really been a plot point
was back in Season 3's "Perry," when
unusually intense sunspot activity adversely
affected Clark's powers. Clark should feel rejuvenated
in sunlight, it's fairly common occurrence in
the comics and in previous incarnations on TV,
and in this episode we finally got to see it.
Probably
the main problem I had with the script itself
revolved around that pesky Kryptonite. How exactly
did it find its way down into the walls of a
tunnel complex that had looked like it was from
the Cold War era? And how can Clark remain conscious
with that much Kryptonite around?
That said, I can see the reason why it happened
the way it did. As a writer, you are given the
job to get Lex and Clark in an enclosed space
with Clark weakened, while away from rejuvenating
sunlight, and to up the stakes by putting their
lives into danger. So why not put them into
a partially collapsed underground complex with
no way out as time-bombs are about to go off?
Sounds good, right? Yeah, pretty good until
you decide to have Clark weakened by kryptonite
in the walls of a tunnel system that had been
abandoned decades before the first meteor shower
brought all that radioactive rock to Smallville....
Oops.
Well, logic problems abound in this episode
if you look closely enough but I will freely
admit that I didn't really care. There was so
much else to love about this episode for me
to be bothered too much about that.
Anyway,
the acting was terrific again this episode.
Tom Welling was simply awesome. Clark was put
into a very difficult situation. He went down
to save Lex and he was the one who ended up
needing saving. Tom played Clark as heroic,
risking his life to save Lex's simply because
it was the right thing to do. His dilemma was
believable because he was obviously torn. Once
Clark was down in the tunnels, he was frustrated
by being weakened and unable to finish the job,
not that he ever stopped trying, and Tom played
his anger, frustration, weariness, and surprise
at Lex's rescue of him, perfectly. I'm glad
when Clark is passionate. Clark's usually so
closed off emotionally, it's nice to see Tom
to be able to let loose. Besides, he does "angry"
better than almost anyone. At the end, when
Clark realized that maybe he was at least partly
to blame for who Lex had become because he'd
given up on him, the epiphany was heart breaking.
Although, personally I don't think Clark is
at all to blame but in a literary sense he has
to be. There is no evil without good to fight
against it. The guys who were black hats always
have to fight the ones wearing white ones, or
they don't look as evil.
Michael
was as good as he's ever been. The range of
emotions Lex went through, were amazing to watch.
Again, the scenes between Clark and Lex were
wonderful. Lex blames Clark for a lot of their
problems, but the way Michael played Lex's reactions
to Clark's anger was fantastic. He'd made it
clear that Lex knows he wasn't totally blameless
in their growing animosity toward each other.
It was fine line to tread and he played it so
well. Also, later in the episode during Lana's
speech about how much it would hurt to have
someone lie about something profound, Lex almost
seemed to crumble under the unspoken accusation.
The looks that passed across Michael's face
were so well done I could almost tell what Lex
was thinking from moment to moment. He was truly
at the top of his game in this episode.
I'd
also like to add that it was wonderful to have
the two men play so many scenes together in
this episode. They haven't actually been together
a lot lately and, as both rivals and friends,
they have wonderful chemistry together. It was
an added treat for them to be in the same scenes
for most of the episode, whether they were working
against each other or for each other.
Kristin
Kreuk was awesome in this episode and it was
probably the best acting she's ever done. I
loved to see her holding her own with John Glover's
Lionel and being decisive in shooting off the
locks to see what her dear hubby was up to.
But Kristin especially shone in Lana's final
scene with Lex, where's she's lying to him about
what happened on their wedding day. Lana went
through a wide range of emotions in that scene
and the devastation of knowing what Lex had
done to her was touching and painful to watch.
The
production design was terrific. The tunnels
Production Designer James Philpot created looked
old and distressed and they were gloomily filmed
by Director of Photography, Glen Winter. I loved
the high contrast ratio (the ratio of difference
between the brightest lights and the darkest
shadows) at several spots throughout the episode,
but especially in the tunnel scenes. I adored
the lightest whites being so bright they were
actually overexposed. It looked much better
as it was aired than it had in the "director's
cut" on the CWTV.com video site. The only
problem I think I had with the photography was
when Clark was asking Lex about how he'd forced
Lana to marry him, Clark's face was too dark.
I would have liked to have seen the look on
his face in that moment more clearly.
As
good as the action can get on Smallville, sometimes
they simply fail. The scuffle between Lex and
Jodi over the gun was over too quickly with
a totally expected result. It's the worst kind
of trite move, attempting to inject a bit of
suspense, to have the gun go off in between
two people and force the audience to guess who
got shot. I suppose I should let them slide
on that, had it been anyone else other than
Lex, it would have been less suspenseful. He's
been shot so many times, maybe he might have
gotten shot one more time, but it was Jodi who'd
gotten shot. She was doomed to die so she couldn't
disarm the bombs and remove the threat to Lex
and Clark.
That
moment was about as contrived, and as anti-climactic,
as it comes. I think I would have preferred
Lex shooting her in cold blood as she turned
the switch to kill him in return.
Despite
the contrivances and inconsistencies, this episode
actually improved on each viewing and that almost
always gets a high score from me. The fact that
the acting and writing were so far above the
average, and I don't score in quarters, almost
dictated that I grade this episode on a bit
of a curve. I give it 5 gloomy, abandoned tunnel
complexes out of a possible 5.
Note:
The views of Triplet don't necessarily represent
the thoughts and feelings of everyone at KryptonSite.
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