Pulling off the deceptive character turn is a tricky thing for a TV show. The success rate is usually tied to how long you continue lying to the audience about it and the amount of explanation you give whenever you do finally pull your “Gotcha!” moment. In Arrow’s case, they devoted an entire episode (“Al Sah-him”) to convincing us that Oliver Queen had become a brainwashed member of the League of Assassins. Four minutes into the next episode (“This Is Your Sword”), they relented and explained Oliver and Malcolm were actually in cahoots to dismantle the League from the inside. Likely due to his prior membership in the League, Malcolm knew Oliver’s first task as the new Ra’s al Ghul would be to destroy Starling City. So, the two hatched a plan, but Malcolm figured they would have several months to work away at the League, not a mere couple of days. Thus, “This is Your Sword” was all about Malcolm letting everyone else in on the secret and rallying them together along with Katana to stop the League before it destroys their city, traveling to Nanda Parbat for an extended action scene before they were ultimately caught and jailed.
As far as save-the-world plans are concerned, killing the beast from the inside is not a terrible way to go. Genre television is filled with episodes in which the good guys merely pretend to be in league with the bad guys. Joss Whedon did it with David Boreanaz’ Angel multiple times across Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel, but in that case it always made sense because Angel had turned legitimately evil for half a season on Buffy. So, there was precedent. Plus, by his very nature as a vampire with a soul, Angel was a monster forever fighting the temptation to give in to evil, making him a metaphorical alcoholic always one bad day away from falling off the wagon. It was not a violation of his character to make us believe he’d turned evil again, and when they pulled that trick they’d only do it within the confines of a single episode, revealing the truth of his deceit in the episode’s climax, be it [Buffy/Angel spoiler warning] him tricking Faith and The Mayor to get information with Buffy and Giles’ help or tricking everyone, good and bad, to set up a Godfather-esque simultaneous hit against all the bad guys on Angel.
We don’t actually know when Oliver and Malcolm hatched their plan. It was presumably on the flight to Nanda Parbat when they were transporting a nearly-dead Thea to the Lazarus Pit. But if you think back over the events of the past two episodes it brings up some questions. Why did Malcolm go along with Felicity’s attempt to break Oliver out instead of simply letting her know what they had in mind? Or did they actually completely anticipate something like that, thinking it would make Ra’s believe Oliver more if he rejected a chance to escape and sent his friends away? Moreover, when Oliver killed that poor victim he mistook for Diggle due to the effects of some “magical plant” did he in fact know it wasn’t really Diggle even though the plant made him see that person as Diggle? Would he have killed Nyssa if Diggle and Laurel hadn’t stopped him? The same goes for when Ra’s al Ghul stopped him. And what exactly would have happened if Thea hadn’t shot Oliver in the arm as he had a sword raised and ready to fall on Diggle? What was Oliver’s endgame there? Clearly he wasn’t going to really kill him, but what was his plan if no one happened to stop him?
The funny thing is that Arrow actually pulled this same exact stunt a couple episodes back when it wrote out Roy Harper, and in that case it followed the Buffy/Angel model of mostly containing its trick to a single episode which used climactic flashbacks to very briefly explain everything. Everyone was lying to Oliver in that scenario whereas now we’ve returned to our default setting of Oliver being the one living the lie and keeping everyone in the dark. It’s perfectly in keeping with Oliver’s behavior, but it does beg the question of whether or not he’s actually developed at all since the pilot. The guy who’d spent 5 years on an island struggling to make connections with people and constantly lying to them about his past makes sense; the guy who’s been back in society for 3 years, gone through multiple girlfriends, gathered multiple friends and family members around him, and still treats deceit as his go-to move and abhors hearing anyone else’s opinion feels like a character who’ll simply never actually change. Then again, Supernatural’s gotten 10 seasons out of a set of brothers who are constantly lying to each other, failing to ever learn their lesson, and beyond picking up a sense of humor along the way Angel never really changed.
Moreover, we saw crystal clear signs that Team Arrow is not going to easily forgive Oliver, nor should they. He kidnapped Diggle’s wife in front of his infant daughter! He’s lost Diggle’s respect. It seems pretty apparent that he would have absolutely killed Nyssa if he hadn’t been stopped, and that shouldn’t go down well with Laurel. And he’s lost Felicity’s trust, although this episode’s handling of Felicity was very problematic.
THE BOTTOM LINE
If you can forgive Arrow’s far-too-delayed reveal of Oliver’s deceit and its very problematic handling of Felicity, “This Is Your Sword” is everything Arrow’s penultimate episodes usually are: big, crazy expensive action scenes, cliffhanger ending setting Oliver up to rush to stop a mad man with a bomb (in this case, a disease bomb I guess). However, there are some pretty hard pills to swallow along the way.
THE NOTES
2. Spin-Off Pitch: Oliver and Nyssa in a wacky sitcom in which they’re an Odd Couple type who have to stay married for Visa reasons but can’t let their pesky next door neighbors know.
3. Kudos to Nyssa for refusing to go out without a literal fight.
4. Kudos to Oliver for completely anticipating Nyssa’s knive attack, handling it quite nonchalantly.
5. Boo on Arrow for constantly having Nyssa lose just about every fight she has.
6. Boo on Arrow for trying to make Ra’s al Ghul interesting for half a season before deciding he’s pretty much just a generic villain.
7. Good for Thea getting closure with Roy.
NEXT TIME
SECOND OPINIONS
GirlOnComicBookWorld – Overall I can’t say I even know what to make of Arrow season 3 episode 22. Everything seems to be bordering on the line of absolutely ridiculous. The season finale looks like it’s bringing us another episode of Starling City in chaos, yay. I’m really hoping that the showrunners have a great plan to set-up season 4, because right now I can’t say I have loved season 3, which is a shame because season 2 was completely awesome.