If you hadn’t noticed, the Batman Begins show is back this season. That’s what Arrow started out as, with a side helping of soap opera family and relationship drama, but things got seriously wonky in the second season, seemingly to the extreme delight of the many and dismay of the vocal few. Now, season 3 is pulling back on season 2’s craziness, returning to Oliver battling a series of more reality-based foes. They are using Sara’s death to push the story forward but not so fast that they can’t stop to focus on Thea for an episode or Felicity for another. “Guilty” put its focus on Laurel and Roy, giving us yet another false lead in “Who Killed Sara Lance?” mystery. It’s still early, of course, and Arrow won’t be able to keep this up, not with it sharing a fictional universe with The Flash and its endless supply of meta-humans. However, I appreciate the effort to perhaps course-correct even if a great many fans don’t think there was anything which required correction.
The strange thing, though, is that I can’t seem to give into the new season’s charms. I read other reviewers who will praise an episode’s attributes while acknowledging but seriously downplaying plots holes, bad writing, questionable acting, and I appreciate the optimism. However, all of those bad parts are the things that jump out at me the most when I watch Arrow now. My thought process when I watch Arrow plays out like a series of questions and rationalizations, as if I’m ready to pounce on the mistakes but too nice to leave it at that. So, for “Guilty,” an episode I didn’t particularly enjoy despite some admirable character development for Laurel, I am not going to write a traditional review. Instead, I’m going to walk through the random questions I had and eventual rationalizations I reached while watching the episode, presented below like an interview with the questions in bold print and the rationalizations in normal print:
Is it bad that I laughed out loud when one of the cliffhangers before a commercial break was Ted Grant’s announcement that he used to be a vigilante? Like that’s a totally normal thing. Oliver being a vigilante and inspiring others to follow him I can accept, but some boxer who has nothing to do with Oliver turns out to have gone out years ago to deliver vigilante justice with his fists? That’s just harder to accept.
It’s not like Oliver Queen invented vigilantism. Someone could have put on a mask and brass knuckles and gone out and beat people up all on their own. Sure, it’s odd that no one on Team Arrow has ever heard stories of any kind of vigilante attempting to clean up The Glades (and Starling City) years before Malcolm Merlyn made it go ka-boom, but maybe that just means Wildcat and apprentice were better at flying under the radar than Team Arrow. Plus, comic book canon and blah blah blah. Note to self: go to Wikipedia to brush up on Wildcat from the comics.
Seriously, Oliver? You’re really going with “Ted once killed a man and is therefore never to be trusted by anyone ever again.” That’s your play here?
Oliver Queen can be a bit of a jerk. He is consistently hypocritical. This is nothing new. His high and mighty stance on Ted is supposed to relate to Team Arrow’s concurrent moral dilemma over what to do with Roy if he actually killed Sara. Diggle argues they can’t have different sets of rules of justice, one for the heroes and one for the bad guys, yet Oliver is being judge and jury for Ted and patient defense attorney for Roy. Plus, Oliver’s reaction to Ted isn’t really about all that. It’s more about male ego (Oliver boasting that his Batcave is bigger than Ted’s), misplaced anger and frustration that Laurel has sought out training on her own, and a knee-jerk impulse to control Laurel to ensure her safety, jumping to easy conclusions about Ted because it means removing a potential threat to Laurel’s wellbeing.
Oh, come on! Oliver ratted Ted out to the cops, and then when Laurel confronted him about it he puffed out his chest, raised his voice to defend himself before quietly acknowledging that, yeah, Ted’s totally innocent. I’m supposed to like Oliver, right? Why is this episode making that so hard?
See the above answer: Oliver is often a jerk and a hypocrite. He is a flawed dude, in this case proving himself unwilling to even actually apologize to Laurel for getting her friend unjustly thrown in jail. Maybe I’m just more annoyed by Oliver’s behavior this season because Barry Allen over on The Flash is so much more likable, providing a stark contrast to broody Ollie.
Since when can Felicity test blood, create fancy virtual MRI’s of corpses, and derive authoritative forensics conclusions (or lack thereof) based upon her analysis of the evidence? I thought she was just a computer hacker.
Roy was going to turn himself in for Sara’s murder, but no one knows she’s dead. How is Roy going to explain any of this to the cops, particularly the part about where Sara’s body is buried?
None of those details matter. What matters is that Roy did the stand-up thing and came clean to the rest of the team about what he did, consequences be damned. This is the same guy who existed in a land of perpetual secrets last season, and here he was not even waiting one full episode to fess up.
Oliver actually knew the whole the time that Roy was simply recovering his memory about killing the cop. So, by letting Roy run free after his confession to the team wasn’t he risking that Roy would simply turn himself into the police for the wrong crime?
Yeah, um, shut up about that. Oliver told Roy not to turn himself in, and Roy clearly follows orders. You’re nitpicking again.
Is Roy an interesting character yet? Because try as I might I just don’t really care about him.
Hey, that’s your issue. They’ve held him back purposefully this season and given him a moral crisis in this episode only to tease continued drama for him in the short term as he deals with the “I killed a man!” fallout. So, they are finally giving him something to do, even if Colton Haynes suitability to the material is forever up in the air. Plus, you like Oliver, right? Right? Roy is an extension of Oliver, and after totally dropping the ball on that last season they are trying to re-focus on the mentor-mentee relationship between Oliver and Roy this year.
Did they seriously have Laurel walk out the side of the police station with Ted Grant with no indication whatsoever as to how exactly she got him freed of the 17 cases of homicide he was facing? No alibi, no “Laurel uses D.A. powers to blackmail someone” moment, nothing. He just convinced Laurel he was innocent, and, poof, he was free to go. Am I just supposed to let that go?
Isn’t it just a little bit too convenient that at the exact same time Oliver is contemplating cutting his sidekick loose he encounters a retired vigilante who did just that with his own sidekick only to have that poor bastard return with a righteous vengeance?
Well, yeah, but that’s how TV shows work a lot of the time. Storylines with guest actors improbably mirror the exact same set of emotions or circumstance our main characters are facing at that moment in the season. It’s just dramatic symmetry, often times used as a way to get our main characters to make some important decision or open up about their emotions. Even so, geese, this was pretty darn heavy-handed. Heck, Roy probably would have died there at the end if his attacker hadn’t stupidly stopped to spell everything out for us, e.g., “He’ll abandon you too! You’re nothing to him but a weapon to use in his arsenal!”
Seriously? They recover memories by simply sitting around a candle and speaking in hushed tones? Plus, was it actually a tad offensive when the concept was introduced in the flashbacks via the Japanese sidekick from The Wolverine and heavy-handed oriental music played in the background?
What do you actually know about memory retrieval techniques, huh? For all you know, what they presented was totally valid. In fact, I bet if you Google “Memory Recovering Candle” you’ll probably get something [Leaving to Google that now] Okay, it turns out there are absolutely zero Google results for that exact phrase. However, it does take you to a Wikipedia page for “Recovered memory therapy” which states that there are “several controversial and/or unproven interviewing techniques, such as hypnosis and guided-imagery, and the use of sedative-hypnotic drugs” which are used for the purpose of recalling memories. So, that candle must have had some drug in it or something. I bet they mentioned that and you just didn’t notice [Leaving to Re-watch the scene in question in “Guilty”] Okay, it turns out there’s absolutely no reference to any kind of drug, and you probably couldn’t really call what they did guided-imagery. But, hey, you’re still no expert. A writer was paid good money to come up with that idea and write that scene. They probably did a little research or were referencing some movie or comic book you don’t know about. Then again, sometimes a stupid scene is just, well, you know.
THE BOTTOM LINE
When I look at all of “Guilty”s perceived sins and try to rationally think my way through it I come out of with an episode that appeared to do a lot right. It finally gave Roy something to do, saw Laurel seizing more agency in her life and not cow-towing to Oliver’s patronizing efforts to protect her, and, well, I’ve run out of nice things. However, my actual experience of watching the episode was of pretty consistent eye-rolling and failed efforts to truly care about Roy Harper. Regardless of how admirable it was, whatever they were trying to do with this episode just didn’t really hang together very well, at least not for me. Part of that might simply be on me and my preference to actually like my lead characters, and I didn’t particularly like Oliver Queen for most of “Guilty.” However, when an episode begins by literally spelling out its central theme (guilt) on the floor beneath upturned dead bodies you should probably adjust your expectations accordingly. Maybe I just never did.
THE NOTES:
2. How many of you had totally forgotten that Roy killed that cop last season?
3. I noticed that redhead in the background immediately, and though I’d yet to see any pictures of Amy Gumenick as next week’s villain Cupid that’s who I assumed it was because I knew this season was going to have a female villain who’s stalking Arrow. However, if you didn’t know any of that I’d be curious if you noticed Gumenick in her two background cameos before her surprise arrival at the end of the episode.
4. Several times during this episode there were act breaks or scene transitions that were supposed to seem dramatic yet didn’t really pack as much of an oomph as needed. The first one that comes to mind is the moment at the end of the flashbacks when Katana announced that Oliver could repay her efforts by getting out of their lives as soon as possible. “Thanks, Katana. That’s pretty much exactly what we’ve been planning to do anyway.”
5. Laurel has Felicity on her cell phone’s Direct Dial folder. Good to know.
6. I hope that “Guilty” is the last time we ever have to hear the word Mirakuru.
7. If you haven’t read Marc Guggenheim’s interview with TVLine, here’s the link. He reveals some spoilers for the next couple of episodes and a little further down the road.
8. If you haven’t seen it yet, here’s what Laurel’s Black Canary costume looks like.
SECOND OPINIONS:
ScreenCrush.com – “Overall, there was enough to enjoy amid the entirety of “Guilty,” with some intriguing developments on Ted Grant’s dynamic with both Laurel and Oliver, and a renewed bit of focus on Roy’s emotional investment in the crusade. Introducing Grant’s former protégé and tying their strained relationship to Roy, Oliver, and Laurel’s respective arcs took place just a bit too quickly to resonate, but certainly explored some larger questions about the show’s sense of vigilante justice, and deepened the multiple mentor-partner dynamics we’ve seen forming this year.”
TV.com – “Guilty” was a very good episode for [Laurel], and in no small part because she’s rejecting pretty much everyone’s attempts to keep in her a little box where she’ll be safe and protected. She’s reacting to things in an assertive, self-propelled manner, as opposed to a passive, self-destructive one
I’m done with my ramble. What about you?