"Traveler"
Review!
Written
by C.M.
Houghton ("Triplet")
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her feedback
WARNING:
If you don't like to be spoiled go watch the
episode and come back when you're done. This
review will spoil you rotten. So, what are you
waiting for? Fire up your TiVO or warm up your
VCR and watch this episode now. It was awesome!
This episode, unlike "Hero," sounded
fantastic from the time I read the official
description. Clark gets kidnapped by Lionel,
of all people, and held in a kryptonite lined
cell?
Wow!
That's a great description and the episode held
to the description's promise. What a wonderful
episode. It was full of loyalty, betrayal, bravery,
intrigue, cruelty, love, duplicity, anguish,
joy and murder.
Holly
Henderson and Dan Whitehead wrote the script
based on a story by Al Septien and Turi Meyer.
They all did a wonderful job, but they were
helped a great deal by the director and cinematographer.
Its hard being on the outside looking in to
really know what was a writing decision, a directing
decision or a photographer decision, so I will
move those two guys up.
Anyway,
the only WTF thing about this story was that
Lana and Chloe had inexplicably disappeared
after the third act. Did they cut something
out that would have explained where the girls
were?
Lana
and Chloe were instrumental in getting Kara's
memories and powers back so she could save Clark.
Their absence from the final two acts when they
were so involved in the first three was an extremely
odd choice. Maybe in a way it makes sense, I'm
going to talk about that more when I talk about
the director since I think it might have been
a directing decision...
Other
than that I had no problems at all with this
episode. The story started off strong. Lionel
getting yet another letter sent to him. We've
seen these before, Lana picked up one of those
mysterious envelopes with the Veritas symbol
when she'd visited Lionel's office earlier in
the season. There was no real clue given at
the time of what was in that envelope.
They
finally showed us Lionel getting one of those
mysterious letters. However, I'm not sure why
the contents were never shown in the episode.
It should have shown us a cryptic message, "Heed
our Warning, The Son of Krypton belongs to Veritas,"
but the only reason I know about that was because
the trailer showed that and I saw a screen shot
of it. I'm confused why the letter was never
shown in the episode.
As
ominous as Lionel getting "another one"
sounded, with how it aired its not really clear
what is in the letter or why it made him so
upset. Whatever the reason, that letter upset
Lionel quite a bit. He looked visibly shaken.
The
next scene, the amazing barn scene where Clark
gets captured, was heartbreaking to watch. He
hadn't expected any danger and wasn't cautious
enough and got caught. It was scary, which was
made more so from how the scene was shot and
directed (more about that later).
It
hadn't been clear at first that Lionel had been
responsible. Or, maybe, it might not have been
clear if the Official Episode Description hadn't
spelled out that Lionel was the one responsible
for Clark's kidnapping. I wish they hadn't done
that and had revealed his involvement only inside
the episode.
Lionel's
reasons for doing that to Clark were mysterious
at first. I thought from the way John Glover
played that Lionel was being forced to do it
for some reason. He looked scared when he got
that letter in the tease and later, when talking
to Pierce, seemed to want to safeguard Clark's
health and safety.
He
said it himself: "I built that cell to
contain him, not for you to use as a torture
chamber." He had apparently built it for
Clark, despite his later denials, so why does
he then try to protect Clark? He actually threatens
Pierce in his next line. "If anything happens
to him, anything at all, because of your appetite
for cruelty you will be held responsible."
Pierce took that threat seriously enough to
look scared by it.
So,
why try to protect Clark once he's in the cell
if Lionel's the one responsible for his painful
capture and imprisonment in the first place?
Why be worried about Clark's well being if he'd
been working on building the facility, and planning
on taking Clark, basically ever since he'd discovered
his secret?
I
thought that maybe the payoff with Patricia
might have made that understandable. As soon
as she showed up with the briefcase, Lionel
was ready to let Clark go. Even after Pierce
had gotten the jump on Patricia, he had ordered
him to take Clark home so it seemed to make
sense at the time.
However,
in thinking about it that doesn't seem like
the only reason he had apparently put Clark
through all that torment. Sure, he had wanted
to get the evidence Virgil Swan had collected
on the murders he'd committed. However, I think
his reasons for taking Clark might have only
been partly explained by getting Patricia Swann
to hand over those files her dad had on Lionel,
especially since he had Clark captured before
it was clearly Patricia Swann who had been sending
those letters. Was it really to protect Clark,
as he had later claimed? How is painfully capturing
him and keeping him locked up against his will
protecting Clark? Is there some kind of logic
there that only a Luthor can understand?
The
odd thing about what Lionel had done was that
once Pierce had turned and threatened Clark,
Lionel killed him to protect Clark. Despite
his betrayal and capture of Clark, that action
again puts his real motives back into question.
He's not completely evil, apparently, but it
is chilling that Lionel is willing to make Clark
suffer like that only to achieve goals that
maybe still aren't completely clear. It's manipulative
and sadistic. Despite Lionel apparently being
severely conflicted on taking Clark, the fact
remains that he still did do it. The question
is now why?
Maybe
we will learn more in the next episode, "Veritas,"
since the title is the same as the name of the
program that was created to protect Clark.
Lex
is getting more and more evil each episode.
Last week ended ominously for Kara, with Lex
shutting her in with him without comment. There
had been good reason for me to be worried for
Kara at the end of the last episode. He was
planning on making her a lab rat, despite her
stupidity in trusting of him, or maybe because
of it.
I
also want to know why Lex felt it necessary
to kill Patricia Swann. He could have had her
apartment burglarized or had her mugged to get
the necklace. He probably didn't have to kill
her, so it makes me think that maybe he remembers
more of Veritas as a child than he had admitted
to her. Maybe he remembers that locket and that
there is something important enough about that
made him kill her for it.
While
not perfect, the script was pretty darn close.
Holly and Don had kept up a good pace and the
act break cliff-hangers were all terrific. I
liked Lana getting in on the scoobying with
Chloe. Also, Clark acted so brave and resolved
to keep on fighting despite the overwhelming
odds against him ever escaping on his own. He
was every inch Superman in this episode, although
him not trying to use any of his powers back
in the barn was maybe a bit of a stretch. However,
it was a contrivance I can live with since the
story that arose from his inexplicable carelessness
was a terrific one.
I
loved Glen Winter's directing of this episode,
for the most part. I think he had some poor
shot coverage evidenced by several of shots
of Clark first moments awake inside the cage
getting used again later in the episode.
I
hate it when they do that, but maybe things
happened that were out of Glen's control. However,
it does show maybe some things didnt happen
according to plan with this episode. Is that
also the reason why Lana and Chloe didn't appear
in the fourth and fifth acts?
Saying
that, I must admit that it probably worked out
for the best them being absent in the final
acts. I mean, what would you have cut from Clark's
or Lex's scenes in Act Five? I know I wouldn't
have wanted to cut a single second from Clark's
scenes with Patricia, Lionel and Kara. Those
were great scenes and revealed a lot more about
Clark's character than a chick-flick moment
with either Lana or Chloe would have ever done.
And I know I wouldn't have wanted to cut a second
from that murder scene or Lex's contemplative
cleaning of Patricia's locket. So, I can understand
why any later scenes with Lana and Chloe were
sacrificed; it was likely for the good of the
episode as a whole, and for Clark's character
arc in particular.
So
all in all, I thought Glen had done a terrific
job. The acting was all above average and the
blocking of the scenes was terrific. Clark's
capture scene was a hard scene to watch, but
it was probably the best single scene in the
episode. The way it was shot helped (which I'll
talk about more in a minute), but the way it
was blocked (where the actors are in relation
to the camera and each other and how they move
while interacting with each other) was terrific
and helped reinforce how trapped Clark was.
I liked the way the scene had escalated as well.
Clark started out in quite a bit of trouble
from the first moment he stepped into the loft,
but he just wasn't aware of it. The danger revealed
itself gradually until he was shot with that
first taser. The danger and tension increased
beautifully until it climaxed with Clark's capture.
It was an extremely well done scene.
The
episode was shot by a Director of Photography
new to Smallville, Gordon Verheul. According
to his IMDB page, he's usually a feature film
cinematographer (aside from a few direct to
video films and TV episodes he's done), but
I think he did an excellent job here. I loved
when he had shots that were in Clark's POV.
It helped make the scenes in the cell especially
underscore the fact how alone Clark was; how
cut off from everything he was, the only voice
he heard came from a tormentor shut behind a
two way mirror.
At
the end of that scene, Gordon shot it from Clark's
POV. The low angle as Clark knelt, trapped by
the men who had surrounded him, as Pierce came
up and grabbed him was a remarkably affective
shot. At first all "Clark" could see
was the green leads from the Tasers and the
bright lights the men held. The men were nothing
more than silhouettes. The only person Clark
could see clearly was Pierce and he could only
see him once he leaned into the shot. It was
a dark, scary and confusing moment for Clark
and the way it was shot made it even more so.
Another
scene I loved was the murder scene. With Vancouver....
err... Metropolis off in the distance, the scene
was beautiful and the murder happening almost
casually, and off in the distance, helped to
underscore how I thought Lex might be feeling
about it. It was made matter-of-fact, business-like.
It was very different from the last times Lex
had murdered on screen. His murder of the doctor
in "Promise" was desperate; his murder
of Grant/Julian in "Persona" actually
seemed to trouble him quite a bit, what with
all that screaming in the rain later.
However,
this murder was so casual, almost not worthy
of even a look of concern, to him. So, the way
that Gordon filmed it, in cold grays and in
a long shot, was perfect. The way it was shot
perfectly suited Lex's attitude about it. It
was just business and a cold blooded murder
in every sense of the word. It was a beautiful
moment.
The
whole episode had a very cinematic feel to it,
which is never a bad thing so I hope Gordon
can come back. If he comes back to work his
magic again with Glen directing, all the better.
Tom
Welling was perfect in this episode. I'm not
sure how he does it, exactly, but he does pain
better than anyone that I've ever seen. It must
be a surreal thing. The script says, "Clark
is painfully poisoned by KRYPTONITE" and
Tom does his thing and makes it seem so real.
The
last time I'd mentioned this, the editor of
the Smallville magazine actually contacted me
about it. He pointed me to an upcoming article
where Laura Vandervoort explained that Tom had
told her to act like she's got a really bad
stomach ache. That's a great explanation, but
I'm not sure that's the whole story. Either
more is going on in Tom's head, or he's had
some really bad tummy pains in his life. I'm
not sure how he does it, but I'm amazed how
easily Tom makes a little green light look like
it's the most painful thing in the world.
Despite
the extreme nature of Clark's confinement, Tom
still managed to be subtle. Oddly perhaps, one
of my favorite moments in the episode is when
Clark first woke up in the cell. Tom had him
wake up slowly. And Tom must have worked with
the director and director of photography on
that moment as well. The camera started on just
his hand, as his fingers started to move just
a little. Then as his fingers moved more and
as he pulled his arm closer to his body, Clark
still not quite awake, the camera moved with
his hand. When Tom's eyes opened, Clark seemed
confused and it took several seconds for him
to take in his new situation. It was the perfect
response given the confusing change in Clark's
circumstances. The point of view shots that
I talked about earlier helped that immensely.
I
think probably my favorite parts were when Tom
had Clark show how resolved he despite the danger
he faced and Lionel's betrayal. When Clark first
came to understand what had happened, he fought
to get out, even when it was clear he wouldn't
succeed. Once his cell was obviously escape-proof,
Clark tried to talk his way out. The emotions
that played over Tom's face were amazing to
watch as Pierce talked to him and taunted him.
The moment after Pierce walked away, leaving
Clark literally on his knees, was another amazing
moment.
Tom
played all the emotions that Clark had gone
through in this episode perfectly. It was a
terrific performance.
Michael
Rosenbaum was awesome in this. He plays Lex's
descent into evil very smoothly. Lex is so casually
evil now, using Kara's naïve trust of him
to try and learn her secrets so he can finally
what it is that Clark had been hiding from him
for so long.
I
also loved Michael's performance in Lex's scene
with Patricia in the library. He showed Lex
has having seemingly recognized that something
more than a childhood friend dropping by was
going on. He played that scene perfectly.
Kristin
Kreuk played Lana as tenacious and highly protective
of Clark. However, I'm not sure I totally bought
her threat to Lionel that she was going to kill
Lex is he ever hurt Clark. Even with that, the
way that Kristin had Lana deal with Clark missing
was marvelous. I did like that she seemed to
take the bull by the horns early on in the episode
and came up with the plan that got Kara out
of the Luthor mansion.
Allison
Mack was absolutely fantastic as Chloe. She
had made her strong because her best friend
was gone, but there was still vulnerability.
Her best scene was the one in the Fortress as
she pleaded with Jor-el to cure Kara so she
could save Clark. As she begged Jor-El to listen
to her and not let her issues with Kara interfere
with giving her back the powers she needed to
save him, Allison portrayed a near perfect mix
of hope and fear.
Even
though this episode was all about Clark,
John Glover totally owned it. Lionel was
going through some sort of self-imposed
hell. It's not completely clear yet why
Lionel felt forced to capture Clark and
put him through such a tortuous imprisonment,
but from the way John played it Lionel
was definitely conflicted about it. So
much so, John had Lionel seemed to be
beaten down by the end of the episode.
In his final scene with Clark, Lionel's
shirt collar was open and he was drinking
heavily, but it wasn't just that. John's
body language was all different. Usually,
John plays Lionel standing upright, his
stance confident and assured. His chest
is even pushed out a bit, but as the episode
unfolded, Lionel started to get more hunched
and his movements became hesitant and
unsure.
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For
example, he played the confident MB in the scene
with Patricia Swann, even leaning in aggressively
into her personal space. He was confident and
sure and told Patricia that she is out of her
depth. Then, it was true. A later scene with
Lex, dealing with some of the same revelations
Lionel was far less confident. His tie was loose
and his shirt collar opened. In his last scene
with Clark, his shirt was open further, his
tie further loosened, as he walked to and around
Clark. Clark was clearly the stronger man in
that scene. By that scene, Lionel had completely
lost whatever power he had. It was a brilliant
performance and John perfectly played Lionel
as a man getting worn down by the stress of
the choices he obviously didn't like, but felt
he had to make.
The
two guest stars, Gina Holden as Patricia Swann
and Aaron Douglas as Pierce were both perfect.
Gina
is elegant and an extremely capable actress.
She is graceful and has an aristocratic air
about her, perhaps due to her background in
dance, but that was just right for the part.
I'm very sorry Lex felt it necessary to kill
her, mostly because we'll probably never see
her again.
Aaron normally plays the far more easy going
Chief Petty Officer Tyrol on Battlestar Galactica,
but he totally owned this part as the completely
sadistic Pierce. He didn't take it too far over
the top, which would have been easy to do and
would have made the part too campy. He was quietly
angry and cruel, nothing big or overblown about
the performance at all. He played the part exactly
the way it needed to be played.
Production
Designer James Philpott did a marvelous job,
again probably squeezing blood from stone because
of the cheap bastards at The CW. There was some
nice touches, I loved how beautifully detailed
the journal was. The Kryptonian symbols, the
laborious notes, it was a wonderfully involved
prop.
Show
music composer Louis Febre did another wonderful
job. I loved how the music built when something
important was about to happen and then the music
stopped with a chord, sort of similar to the
cha-chung sound that happens on Law & Order,
almost to punctuate the character's thoughts.
He used that especially effectively in the scene
with Clark and Lionel. Lionel was trying to
cover his betrayal with lies and claimed to
have changed. Clark thought about it, Tom performing
the moment of resolve perfectly, and just before
he spoke the telling line, "No you haven't,"
the music climaxed to a single chord to emphasize
his point. It was beautiful.
Also,
the music inside the episode was well
chosen. The aria Lionel listens to is
s particularly demanding aria. It is "Queen
of the Night" aria, but the German
name for means "The vengeance of
Hell boils in my heart" ("Der
Hölle Rache kocht in meinem Herzen"),
from Mozart's The Magic Flute (Die Zauberflöte).
(Okay, I'm no opera expert. I looked it
up, but I only recognized the aria to
begin with because it figured prominently
in the film Amadeus.)
Anyway,
in reading more about the opera and that
aria, I think it's a perfect choice for
Lionel to listen to at that moment, just
before Clark is captured. The aria is
essentially about betrayal in an opera
that has secret societies, treachery,
kidnapping and murder.
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The
Queen of the Night aria is also a technically
difficult aria to perform, requiring a soprano
with two octave range hitting a high note not
common in opera, an F6. (Yeah, I looked that
up too.) The musical complexity of the aria,
its beauty, combined with the message of betrayal
is particularly apt for Lionel to listen to.
This
isn't quite a perfect episode, I think I would
have preferred closure for Chloe and Lana, but
as I said: in the end I didn't mind that so
much since it served the story better in the
long run. Also, aside from a few contrivances,
the story was well told, exciting and got better
with each viewing. Since I don't give out quarter
points, I give "Traveler" 5 kryptonite
tipped taser electrodes out of a possible 5.
Although, if I had just been grading on Tom's
and John's performances, this episode would
have gotten a 6 or 7... They were both amazing
in this episode.
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