Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Review: Gotham Season 2 Episode 19, Azrael [SPOILERS]

OVERVIEW
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Thus episode was gorgeously cinematic in terms of the visuals and action. The supernatural elements and character moments were especially gripping. I have almost nothing but glowing compliments to give about 'Azrael.'

Nygma in Arkham


LOWS
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None.

MEDIUMS
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1. Penguin
Penguin had two brief scenes this episode. The first had him talking to corpses amid torn-up furniture, apparently going mad as he hung around the house with no purpose in life. A promising scene, because it showed an obviously understandable response from Penguin to all the recent losses in his life.

As I have said in nearly every review of Gotham I have written, I am so very pleased with how the Gotham writers have handled Penguin since the loss of Gertrude, his mother. It has had a lasting effect on Penguin, as it obviously should. It's notable, however, because most TV shows tend to gloss over their characters' pain and adjustment to loss. Perhaps most TV writers consider such subject matter too dull to hold an audience's attention for more than an episode or so. The Gotham writers, however, have shown that they trust their audience to be smart enough to appreciate psychologically realistic characters.

Penguin has been shown dealing with the loss of his mother in every episode he has appeared in since that loss. That's at least 12 episodes, over half a season. And he lost his father, too, and has also been dealing with that ever since. Honestly, since the loss of his mother and father, all his responses have been obviously understandable responses to pain and loss.

In Penguin's second appearance this episode, he sees Galavan on TV. "Hello, old friend," he laughs gleefully with no hint of anger. (We will have to wait until the next episode's review to see exactly what this means, but honestly -- tiny spoiler alert -- it might mean the end Penguin's obviously understandable responses, which troubles me.)

HIGHS
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1. Galavan as Azrael
The supernatural aspects of the show were front and center this episode, with the return of Galavan from the dead, and him finding his identity in a story of saints and demons and resurrectected knights. I much prefer Galavan as Azrael. The overly calm attitude that made Galavan boring made Azrael interesting, after he did calm down, that is. And somehow, Galavan's voice sounded so much more badass coming from behind a metal mask. I am really liking Azrael.

2. Nygma
Oh, Nygma.

In just this episode, the audience gets half a dozen new reasons to love Nygma.

For those of us who would secretly like him to be our hero (in spite of everything he's done), he plays the role of a hero to some extent in this episode.

Near the start of the episode, he (very entertainingly) mediates a conflict between some of the lesser minds of the asylum. On more than one occasion, he protects them from getting hurt or from hurting each other. (Take, for example, even the brief moment wherein he fly-swatted one inmate as that inmate reached out to strangle another inmate). He does a better job of being a therapist to the inmates than Professor Strange does, as Nygma himself points out. "Everyone has a story," says Nygma, "and they just need to be listened." What an understanding and empathetic thing to say.

HOWEVER, at the same time, Nygma fulfills the desires of those of us in the audience who want him to be a crazy evil genius.

At the same time as he is 'mediating,' he is manipulating the inmates of Arkham. He says so himself. As he protects them, he earns their loyalty and builds a little group of followers. There is certainly much he can accomplish on his own. At one point, he rather casually escapes the rec room, like he could have done it all along. However,  using his new friends, he's able to do much more than that, and he discovers Strange's secret experiments.

Of course, he's terrified by those experiments and decides to escape alone without his "friends."

The thing is it's still easy to believe that his kindness toward the other inmates was more than manipulation. Slight spoiler alert -- the next episode has Nygma trying to help someone, this time, obviously not expecting anything in return. That's a testament to...well, something!

Nygma is a great balance of good and bad, and he's complicated enough to be interpreted in slightly varied ways.

3. Barbara
Poor Barbara just doesn't fit in, even with her evil friends (as opposed to her righteous acquaintances). Butch thinks she's scary, and Tabatha just doesn't really understand Barbara. I mean, Barbara is clearly in a lot of pain, as she flips hurriedly through TV channels. In a frenzy. With no clear goal except to distract herself from whatever it is she can't stop thinking about anyway.

If you ask me, the fact that she didn't even notice when Butch took the remote away shows that she is desperately trying and failing to forget about something very unhappy. That very unhappy thing is most likely her situation with Jim and her overall loneliness. But all Tabatha can say is, "Relax." Not helpful, if you ask me.

4. Strange's Collection of Books
King Arthur, Shakespeare, Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass...Strange's evil laugh as he held those books in his hands. Can you say exciting? =)

5. Beautiful Visuals
The red and black Gothic theme, the large scope, the cinematic action scenes -- wonderful!

6. Azrael's Effect on Batman
I thought it was interesting that Bruce was clearly affected by seeing Azrael jump around all Batman-like with his cape and everything. I don't know much about Azrael, but I seem to recall that he takes over as Batman in the comics for a while, so maybe that's part of what this episode was alluding to. For me, it was just neat to realize that that's probably what Batman will look like if he ever shows up in this series, and to think that apparently Bruce took inspiration from a villain.

7. Captain Barnes's Ideas about the Moral Compass
Barnes once again brought up his philosophy that the law is the line you don't cross. It was more thought-provoking this time because Gordon was much more resistant to such a philosophy, having seen for himself how the law can fail.

I agree the law is no concrete indicator of where to draw the line, but then you have to ask where DO you draw the line? Gordon said that HE decides that. Of course, if everyone said that, it would be chaos. So, it is interesting to see how this same conversation is different between Gordon and Barnes this time, and it is interesting to ponder where this conversation will go next.

RATINGS
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General: 9/10

Compared-To-All-The-Content-I've-Ever-Loved: 8/10

Monday, June 13, 2016

Review: Gotham Season 2 Episode 18, Pinewood [SPOILERS]

OVERVIEW
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This was a good episode, but, due to the absence of Penguin, it was not as captivating an episode as the average Gotham episode. At least, not in my opinion. Let's go through the lows, mediums, highs of the episode.



LOWS
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1. Penguin
This episode suffered from a severe lack of Penguin. A complete lack of Penguin, actually. Combine that fact with the fact that the promo for Episode 19 showed no signs of Penguin either AND the fact that I was finishing up my classes and graduating college, and you have the explanation for why I didn't finish up Season 2 of Gotham until quite recently.

(Now, having finished Season 2, I do recognize that Penguin's lack of screen time in the last few episodes allowed other characters more screen time. And I did really love seeing more of Nygma, for example. But the simple truth is that Penguin is still the main draw for me when it comes to this show.)


MEDIUMS
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1. Freeze
Freeze was back, and I was glad to see that he had changed drastically as a result of his wife's death and his own near-death. I was glad to see that he was angry. That makes sense. He was only in the episode for a couple of minutes, though, and so, we didn't get much of an insight into what he's really going through.

2. Karen Jennings
First off, I liked Karen for the fact that she, with her awesome crocodile hand, helped edge the show into the supernatural realm it sprang neck deep into at the end of the episode when Strange brought Galavan back from the dead.

I love me a good helping of the supernatural.

However, I feel like Karen was supposed to be -- and genuinely could have been -- this really awesome female version of the type of badass, lives-alone-in-the-woods, tragic-past, heart-of-gold character we all love.

But something about her just didn't click. I don't know if it was the dialogue or the actress they chose for the part (even though she did a fine job, nothing against her, sorry) or what, but it felt like a major missed opportunity.

I feel like, if she had clicked as that type of character we all love so much, we, the audience, would have been much more heartbroken by her death and Bruce's intense reaction over losing her would have been more poignant.


HIGHS
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1. Barbara
I like how well Barbara manipulated "The Lady." Barbara really did have all the answers. And as a viewer, I never really thought that Barbara wanted to team up with The Lady and kill Gordon, but if I were The Lady, I totally would have believed it.

This episode used Barbara and her journey to bring up an interesting paradox -- no one is an island, and yet, at many of the most crucial points in our lives, we all HAVE to be islands.

I mean, when Gordon told poor Barbara that, if she wanted to be a good person, that was entirely her responsibility and he couldn't help her at all? Half of me said, "Well, how can you expect her to be a good person with no support from anyone?"

The other half, however, said, "You know what? You're absolutely right, Gordon. To be a good person, the desire to be good has to come from inside yourself." If Barbara wants to be a good person, she has to do it because it's the right thing to do, and not simply to please Jim. If she does it simply to please Jim, it won't last. It can't.

And it made me realize the answer to a question I had been pondering. Remember how Penguin couldn't change and be a good person, and I was like, "Why not? What are the Gotham writers trying to show by having Penguin and Barbara return to a state of innocence only to relapse?"

The answer was so obvious that I completely missed it: the desire to be good was simply not an authentic desire of Penguin's. It was a product of his environment (if you can call Strange's horrible experiments an "environment"), and it was dependent on his environment. Placed in a murderous environment, of course Penguin relapsed into his murderous ways.

Barbara gave me a lot of food for thought this episode. I still don't see how she can be a good person without any support, and yet, I see why she has to be.

2. Gordon
I liked that Gordon didn't appreciate what Barbara had done. I liked that he didn't feel "gratitude" just because she'd gotten him the information he wanted. After all, she accomplished her task by kidnapping Gordon and threatening him with a electric...zapper thing.

The emotional damage from something like that doesn't just go away because it "turned out alright in the end," although the narcissists and manipulators of the world would have you believe otherwise.

This is what I love about Gotham. It's a smart enough show to consistently express the fundamental truth that emotional damage is the only real damage you can do a person.

3. Timeless Atmosphere
Another thing I love about Gotham is the timeless atmosphere of the show. I know that this atmosphere was purposefully created in the show by combining elements from several different eras. Cell phones from the early 2000s, computers from the 80s, architecture from the Middle Ages, etc.

When I binge-watched the first season of Gotham last Fall, I KNEW that it was a current show, barely more than a year old, but I FELT like it was an old classic from the 80's or 90's. It was in fact jarring to start watching the show weekly, as new episodes were released, because it forced me to acknowledge the fact that... well, it's not an old classic from the 80's or 90's.

Now that I've gotten used to watching it weekly, however, it's just like it was last Fall. I KNOW it's a current show, but it's so hard to remember that as I'm in the midst of watching any particular episode. It feels so much like a timeless classic, and I love that about it. =)


RATINGS
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General: 7.5/10

Compared-to-All-the-Content-I've-Ever-Loved: 7