The people who make Arrow love comic books, or at least the big 3 producers do: Kreisberg, Guggenheim & Berlanti. All three of them had written for DC Comics in some capacity before creating Arrow and The Flash. If all three of them had been on set together during the filming of "Uprising" I imagine they would have exchanged lots of high-fives and "Can you believe we get to do this for a living?" stares. This wasn't a season/mid-season premiere or finale/mid-season finale. It's barely even the start of a Nielsen 2015 sweeps period. Yet here they were with a city block to themselves (granted, not an actual city block but instead some studio backlot) to pit an army of goons led by famed former footballer Vinnie Jones against an army led by a junior Justice League consisting of Arsenal, Black Canary, Sin, Wildcat, and even a character they themselves created, John Diggle. To top it off, the battle's climax would see Stephen Amell swooping back in after a two episode absence. If only Oliver had locked horns with Brick in the middle of the battle for a Batman vs. Bane situation their Dark Knight Rises impression would be complete ( Arrow repeatedly goes back to Christopher Nolan's trilogy). That didn't quite happen, but it again felt like they'd watched Dark Knight Rises and thought, "It'd be so cool to do that someday."
Now they've done it twice. In the three-part season 2 finale, Team Arrow was faced with a scenario of a city under siege, the military blocking off exits and sending in the bomb. The result was a colossal battle between a police force led by the costumed heroes against an army of the bad guy's men. What that lacked, though, was the community organizing part of it, like how Commissioner Gordon, the Joseph Gordon-Levitt Robin and other plain clothed officers had to coordinate their plans in secret and go door-to-door to drum up support among the citizens. So, in "Uprising" it was not an army of cops but instead the disenfranchised citizens of The Glades standing up to injustice, recruited by a plain clothed Laurel and Roy via Sin and Ted Grant's many contacts. Just as in TDKR, the city had abandoned these people after giving in to the demands of a terrorist who controlled his newly won territory with force and fear.
However, this type of story presents more questions than answers (e.g., the nitty-gritty of how the abandoned society works), and not even The Dark Knight Rises really pulled it off. The comic book they took it from, "No Man's Land," devoted all of 1999 to doing the story right. Arrow has far fewer resources than TDKR. So, they paint in broad strokes, high-fiving each other over how cool it is without stopping to give us any kind of sense of who exactly the disenfranchised many participating in this uprising are. I looked at the collection of extras comprising Team Arrow's army and asked, "Who the hell are these people?" The show's answer is mostly "Those poor bastards who live in the Glades." The two non-regular character representatives of The Glades in this episode are Ted Grant and Sin, neither of whom have been seen or even referenced in it seems like forever. It is difficult, then, to feel much of anything when Ted is beaten nearly to death by Brick in the middle of the battle.
It does seem like they are falling into a pattern whereby the extreme escalation they go to is to strip the city or The Glades of outside support thus creating a scenario where only our vigilantes can save the day, albeit with the assistance of a bunch of nameless stunt people. It ultimately comes off as Arrow trying to do something it can't quite afford, but the sheer ambition on display is so, well, cool that I too would be giving them a high five after filming the climactic fight scene in "Uprising."
To his credit, Barrowman completely nailed his final confrontation with Oliver and Brick, particularly the part where he referenced regret for having caused Tommy's death. The problem is that Malcolm has been elevated on this show to such a level of epic scheming and general evil-doing that we're not meant to question how he keeps breaking into the Arrow Cave or how he hacked Felicity's webcam. He's just a badass bad guy, duh. As a result, it's hard not to think that he could just be playing Oliver in that scene with Brick just as you might assume his plan with Thea all along was to use her as a pawn in his game against Ra's al Guhl thus meaning saving her at that train platform last season was simply part of his scheme. So, to be honest, I found all of this business with Malcolm to be a waste of time, but I did at least enjoy seeing Barrowman given something slightly new to play with this character.
NUMBER OF EPISODES LAUREL HAS GONE WITHOUT TELLING HER DAD HIS OTHER DAUGHTER DIED: 11
NUMBER OF EPISODES LAUREL HAS ACTUALLY USED SARA'S VOICE TO FOOL HER DAD: 1
THE BOTTOM LINEMy DVR briefly stopped working and rebooted itself around the time I had just 10 minutes left in this episode - this episode which had tried to make me care about Malcolm Merlyn, breezed through Oliver's rehab and attempted return home, and engineered another Dark Knight Rises scenario. I felt like I was down on the episode, but when faced with the possibility of not being able to actually see how it all turned out I was surprised at how annoyed I was. I simply had to see that final fight against Brick, and I had to see how everyone reacted to Oliver's return. That should tell you that for as down as I was on a lot of elements of this episode I did find it surprisingly compelling, particularly Team Arrow's debate against Malcolm.
THE NOTES1. To borrow a recent joke from Showtime's Episodes, Barrowman is the odd celebrity who might look younger now than he did several years ago. So, seeing him play a version of himself from 20 years ago in flashbacks was interesting.
2. I loved Katie Cassidy's reaction when Roy revealed that Malcolm saved Thea at the train station the night of the siege. It was a classic, "Well, I didn't know that, but I honestly have no idea how to react so I'll just shuffle my feet." I don't meant to pick on her, though. In general, the show's treatment of this revelation was far too overblown as well as reliant upon us remembering that we're 12 episodes removed from when that happened and nobody else knew about it yet.
3. I will seriously laugh out loud for a long time if Quentin actually has a heartache upon hearing the news not just of Sara's death but also of Laurel's cover-up. It will just be so stupid.
4. It is still silly that Diggle would be tied to the Arrow Cave duty while letting Roy and Laurel do the fighting. Unless you explain that they don't want to leave his child without a father. Yeah, they don't even talk about that kid anymore.
5. Oliver has no good explanation for how he's still alive because "I just had the will to live" is pretty shitty.
6. At this point, I almost want Arrow's wigs to be kind of not great, as with Barrowman's in the "Uprising" flashbacks. Where's the fun in it if the flashback wigs on this show suddenly became Oscar-caliber? It's kind of like how old age make-up on Doctor Who is always kind of endearingly dodgy in an "Awww, they really don't have a ton of money, do they?" kind of way.
SECOND OPINIONSTv.com - "The result of all this is that Felicity likely throws herself into herself into making sure Ray doesn't make the same mistakes-slash-compromises that Oliver has...unless she decides she wants to quit that again, too. The show's pinballing her around a lot lately, so I'm honestly not sure what's going to happen with her. I just know that I'm going to need to show to really sell me on the idea of Felicity circling back to Team Arrow after this because, otherwise, why did they bother?"