"Trespass" 
                  Review! 
                  Written 
                  by Triplet
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                NOTE: 
                  Note: If you don't want to learn pivotal plot points before 
                  you view this episode, go watch it and come back because you 
                  know the drill: this review will spoil you big time otherwise.
                Hmm... Well, 
                  I guess the winning streak had to end sometime.
                While not 
                  a terrible episode, Trespass wasnt exactly the best one 
                  ever either. Following after some of the best of the series, 
                  it had some hard acts to follow so maybe I can cut it a little 
                  slack.
                The stalker 
                  storyline had been done, to some extent, several times before. 
                  Lana, it seems, has a stalker story almost every season. So 
                  maybe it was only a matter of time before they had another one, 
                  but at least this one brought up slightly different aspects 
                  of stalking, getting more into stalking celebrities, than before 
                  so maybe it's not so bad. That carries forward some of the story 
                  ideas from "Hydro" and the gossip mongering going 
                  on around Lana and Lex and is good in terms of the show's continuity.
                Also the 
                  story gave Lana a good opportunity to be strong and decisive 
                  without a man telling her what to do. I'm no feminist but its 
                  frustrating to see how she's often been written as being very 
                  dependent on the men around her. She doesnt do the independent 
                  girl thing very often, so it was terrific to see her stand up 
                  for what she believed was best, despite the fact that other 
                  people disagreed with her decisions.
                Probably 
                  the weakest part of the story was the fact that the guard was 
                  the bad guy. Although I suppose that's a bit better than the 
                  "butler done it," I'd still figured out the guard 
                  was looking good to be the bad guy about an act before the reveal. 
                  However, I still didn't mind it too much but mostly because 
                  the actor who played Mack, the guard, was a better actor than 
                  your average Smallville villain gets. He helped make it work.
                There were 
                  some terrific scenes between the main cast. Seeing Clark openly 
                  acknowledge to Jimmy how futile it would be trying to beat him 
                  up was funny, but touching. "It's nice to see that you'd 
                  risk being ending up in traction to protect Chloe's honor..." 
                  That moment didn't last long and had little really to do with 
                  the main story, but the exchange was terrifically character 
                  revealing for both men. 
                Lex wasn't 
                  in this much. Michael was probably busy doing preproduction 
                  work for his directorial debut for next week's "Freak," 
                  but when he was in it he was terrifically written. It's like 
                  the writers distilled down the essence of Lex and made his scenes, 
                  as few and as short as they were, the best Lex they could. 
                And the 
                  barn scene was probably one of the best angry scenes between 
                  Lex and Clark in a long time. Lex's attacks on Clark and the 
                  reason he wanted his old friend to go to the wedding were fantastic. 
                  Lex may have been visiting Clark at his place, but it was Lex 
                  who had the upper hand throughout the whole scene and it put 
                  Clark on the defensive. It was a nice turnaround from the more 
                  usual scene with Clark busting through the doors of the library 
                  and making accusations. 
                The episode 
                  was thrilling and had some good twists and turns and kept me 
                  interested up until the terrific final barn scene between Lex 
                  and Clark. It was some solid writing by scribe Tracy A. Bellomo.
                  The actors were all terrific. Tom Welling had some great moments. 
                  In both saves he did for Lana, Clark was being very heroic and 
                  almost matter of fact about it. He was direct and amusingly 
                  to the point when the guard asked what Clark was doing when 
                  he knocked the photographer into the wall: Your job. 
                  He also did really well in the barn scene between Clark and 
                  Lex. Clark was off-balance most of the scene and Tom played 
                  Clark's discomfiture well. 
                Kristin 
                  Kreuk was wonderful as Lana, even though she was apparently 
                  nursing a cold during filming. Probably her best scene was the 
                  one with the guard in the library after hed supposedly 
                  saved her. After the reveal of him being the bad guy, Lana had 
                  a vulnerability to her that was touching as she tried to handle 
                  the situation. She played it cool and very smart, while apparently 
                  giving him the kind of validation that he wanted: she needed 
                  saving and he was just the person to do it. Yet, the way that 
                  Kristin played it made seem that maybe there was a grain of 
                  truth in her desperation. It was a remarkably subtle reading 
                  of the scene up until she whacked in the head with the decanter. 
                  That was an awesome scene for Kristin... Also, in her ending 
                  scene with Lex I loved it when Lana's faced changed when she 
                  knew Lex couldn't see it as he kissed her cheek. Maybe Lana 
                  was telling the truth when she said she was looking for a way 
                  out. That was a very nice touch by Kristin.
                The actor 
                  who'd played the guard, Mack (guest star Jordan Belfi), was 
                  terrific and made more out of the role than was probably there 
                  on the page. The scene with Lana in the library was amazing. 
                  Him removing the IFB (that ear piece thingy for those of you 
                  who don't know what I'm talking about) was a subtle touch. It 
                  was like he was removing a reminder of his real place in Lana's 
                  life, he's her body guard, and hid the evidence under the collar 
                  of his jacket. That was a very subtle thing. Later in the scene, 
                  tears actually welled up in his eyes when he saw how vulnerable 
                  his princess, Lana, was and that he could in fact save her. 
                  He was so earnest and emotionally open to her, up until she 
                  hit him over the head and tried to escape, when he became furious 
                  and ready to kill her. Jordan made it seem like Mack hated that 
                  he HAD to kill Lana since he couldn't save her and didn't take 
                  any joy in it. He totally sold the extreme change without going 
                  over the top with it, which would have been easy to do. Jordan 
                  did an outstanding job even with such a small, yet vital, part.
                Michael 
                  Rosenbaum wasnt in this episode much but what little screen 
                  time he had was pure gold. The best scene for him, as I mentioned 
                  for the writing, was the barn scene with Clark. Lex had a lot 
                  of different intents to play in the scene, sometimes changing 
                  intent within the same sentence, and Michael played it perfectly. 
                  I especially loved how he turned the invitation to a chance 
                  to make sure Clark would suffer as he witnesses Lexs triumph 
                  in marrying Lana. I loved how Michael made the last line, Lex 
                  telling Clark to RSVP, an order and not a request. The schadenfreude 
                  Lex felt was perfectly portrayed by Michael.
                Allison 
                  Mack and Aaron Ashmore were both terrific in this episode. Chloe 
                  was her usual perky self but was troubled by the recent change 
                  in the relationship with Jimmy. Allison perfectly played the 
                  fact that keeping Clarks secret was in part responsible 
                  for the break-up. Aaron was again terrific, especially when 
                  Jimmy told Clark that he was willing to risk getting injured 
                  to protect Chloe. His resolve to protect her no matter the consequences 
                  was touching. I just love how Allison seems to light up when 
                  Chloe sees Jimmy. They're a great couple so I'm glad they patched 
                  things up in the show.
                David Moxness 
                  photographed this episode, and he really does darker scenes 
                  very well. Most of this episode was filmed at night and it was 
                  gorgeous. Throughout the episode, he had a very mobile camera 
                  and made good use of hand held shots to suggest the creepy point-of-view 
                  of the stalker. When the photographer was chasing Lana through 
                  the abandoned parts of the hospital, David's photography was 
                  especially effective. He had very dark shadows, bright down 
                  light, sharp side light, an over-exposing strobe going off from 
                  time to time all combined with shaky (and sometimes blurred) 
                  hand held shots. Put together, they just made the scene all 
                  the more tension filled as the action built to Clark's rescue 
                  of Lana. 
                Probably 
                  one of the best moments David had filmed was Clark's catch and 
                  the way he photographed the reveal. He just made a slow tracking, 
                  floor level shot from Mack's dead, staring eyes to Clark's feet. 
                  That was awesome.
                And I must 
                  give serious to kudos to Production Designer James Philpott's 
                  props department. It was hilarious seeing "Lexana" 
                  mentioned in that newspaper headline! I actually laughed out 
                  loud when I saw that. Also, it was a nice touch to have Lana's 
                  old changed necklace in the cigar box. Despite the pain the 
                  necklace had caused him before it'd been neutralized back in 
                  Season two's "Visage," I still don't think Clark would 
                  have thrown it away. However, he couldn't very well explain 
                  how it got changed without explaining a lot of other things 
                  to Lana therefore he couldn't really have given it back to her 
                  either. So I can see him hiding it away inside his dresser instead. 
                  Also, the drawer in his desk was wonderfully, and believably, 
                  cluttered. It didn't look like it'd been staged, like those 
                  things so often do. The props people took great care to try 
                  and make it look realistic and it showed. 
                Usually, 
                  I love Mark Snow's atmospheric music but I hated it in this 
                  episode. It was too over the top and intruded too much into 
                  the show, pulling me out of several scenes. 
                Also, another 
                  problem I had was the fall Lana and Mack took down into the 
                  library. For some reason I couldn't pin down, the fall didn't 
                  visually make sense to me when I watched the first time so I 
                  went back and watched it again. It was only after viewing it 
                  several times that I figured out why it looked wrong. 
                It started 
                  when Mack and Lana broke through the glass. Viewed from the 
                  top as they went through the skylight, Lana was to Mack's left 
                  in what looked to be an actual filmed stunt. However as the 
                  camera switched to watching them from below as they fell, which 
                  looked to me like a composited green screen visual effect, Lana 
                  was suddenly on his right. Then, after Clark had "caught" 
                  Lana in an onset filmed shot, she and her rescuer were on Mack's 
                  left as he lay dead on the floor. That doesn't make sense since 
                  the implication was that Clark got there just in the nick of 
                  time to catch her... 
                That's a 
                  pretty big oops from the usually spot on Visual Effects people. 
                  
                  Although this is probably the weakest episode since the end 
                  of the winter hiatus, that still is saying a lot since the other 
                  episodes have all been stellar. 
                  I give this episode 4 neutralized kryptonite necklaces out of 
                  a possible 5.
                A couple 
                  of side notes:
                Now, just 
                  how far is Smallville from Metropolis? I think in one episode 
                  way back when, I believe it was in "Truth," Chloe 
                  put it at a three hour drive from Smallville. However, the commute 
                  seems shorter than that nowadays with how easily people move 
                  back and forth between Metropolis and Smallville. I think someone 
                  needs to bring it up on the show so we can know just how far 
                  it is now... 
                [sarcasm] 
                  Maybe they could explain it by the earthquakes on Dark Thursday 
                  having moved Metropolis closer to Smallville... [/sarcasm]
                Also, just 
                  when does the spring semester for Metropolis U start? It's now 
                  February in the show so I would have thought that someone, Chloe 
                  especially, might have started taking classes again. If school 
                  is still closed, as Lana mentioned in "Sneeze," I 
                  would have thought someone might have mentioned that the university 
                  didn't reopen when they'd expected it to. Either way, we haven't 
                  heard one word about it. As nice as the continuity has been 
                  lately, not talking about that is a fairly big faux pas. 
                  
                
                
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