"Bizarro"
Review!
Written
by Triplet
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her feedback
WARNING:
I warn you that this review will be more spoilery
than usual. So, if reading anything spoilery
bothers you, you will need to wait to read this
until after you've seen the episode.
Reviewer's
notes:
One
thing I have to start out saying is that this
season I will be doing one thing very differently.
I
will be avoiding spoilers.
You
learn one thing too much and it ruins the episode,
like last year me learning about Lana's "death"
in the season 6 finale, "Phantom."
I'd mentioned it in my review at the time that
I felt like it had spoiled my enjoyment of the
episode. I had said in a very flip comment that
I was going to go spoiler-free but I hadn't
really done that. Over the summer, I had fallen
back into old habits and learned a thing or
two about "Bizarro." Most
early stuff was so general I didn't mind it,
like the fact that Supergirl would be showing
up. However, when I learned specifics like Kara
saving Lex from drowning and Chloe waking up
in the morgue... I decided enough was enough
and that my promise to become a spoiler-phobe
that I had made in the "Phantom" review
should be one I stick to...
This
year, I decided that I wanted to try to see
if not finding out specifics, not finding out
too much, might help me enjoy the episodes more.
Right now, for any future episodes I'm keeping
to only to the official descriptions, trailers
and director's cuts from the CW website. Although,
I have to say the recent change in the video
player on that site doesn't play well on my
computer. I'm not sure why they changed it to
begin with since what they did isn't an improvement.
It's harder to find the clips you want and it's
locked up my Internet Explorer more than once,
actually, and it's not like I have an ancient
computer either. I hope they improve the usability
of that.
The
Review:
This
episode started out with a better than average
"Previously on Smallville" montage.
Wow, what a way to sum up the season 6 finale!
It was less than a minute and a half long, but
it gave an excellent overview of what had gone
on before. I don't know who does that (The director?
The editor?), but whoever did it, did an awesome
job. The music was marvelous in that as well,
it helped build the tension toward the beginning
of the episode.
Also, the new credit sequence was terrific.
I love the new scenes they chose to reflect
each character, but why has Michael been moved
up to the second lead in the show, Kristin Kreuk
now being third? Does this mean that Clark and
Lex's animosity toward each other will come
more to the forefront this season? If it's true
that Michael won't be back next season, if there
is a next season that is, then making the relationship
between Clark and Lex more important this season
is probably a good thing.
Anyway,
back to the episode: "Bizarro" answered
almost all of last season's cliff-hangers but
brought out questions of its own.
Going
into this episode, writers Kelly Souders and
Brian Peterson had their work cut out for them.
They had a lot of things to wade through before
they got to the meat of the story. Although
the tease was only three minutes long, it set
up the episode perfectly. It showed the escalating
peril that Clark, Lois, Chloe, and Lex were
all in. Clark having to worry about being murdered
so Bizarro can take over his life; Chloe close
to death, trapped with Lois in the crumbling
remnants of the dam; Lex in a car that had washed
away in the flood when the dam broke.
And
wow, what a great job Entity had done with the
breaking dam! That was really cool and then
when Clark evaporated the flood with his heat
vision! All of the Special Effects shots in
the tease were terrific. Sometimes watching
Smallville is like watching a one hour movie.
What an enjoyable 3 minutes!
While
a bit choppy at times, not all the scenes flowed
well as they went from one to the other, in
the episode itself the writers had effectively
covered all of the cliff-hangers left at the
end of last season's finale. At the same time
they had setup things still left explore the
next few episodes: the extent of Chloe's power,
Lex's arrest for Lana's murder, the revelation
that Lana had somehow survived the car explosion,
Kara showing up, Lionel getting pulled out of
the river by an unknown person, and Clark's
growing resolve to come to terms with who he
really is.
I
also loved how important sunlight was in this
episode. Not only did it weaken Bizarro, but
it strengthened Clark. The importance of sunlight
for Clark hasn't been effectively addressed
in the series. They've made passing references
to it, of course. Clark reviving in the sun
after being so sick from Kryptonite exposure
in last season's "Nemesis," for example,
but it hadn't really played a major part in
any episode except for season 3's "Perry."
I love it when they make things like that from
the comic mythos an important plot point in
an episode. For the most part it was a terrific
beginning to the season.
The
only thing that bothered me about this episode
is I don't think that redemption for Lex is
a good thing. Hadn't Lex pushed aside any goodness
he'd had left last season when he manipulated
and ruthlessly toyed with the lives of others,
including a woman he'd loved? I don't think
the addition of that plot point was solely Souders'
and Peterson's doing, mainly because it came
off so lame. I don't think their hearts were
in it and that showed. Bizarro said it best,
"Redemption doesn't suit you, Lex."
Tom
Welling had a lot to do this episode. He essentially
had two parts to play and did an excellent job
portraying both of them.
Tom's
Bizarro-Clark was a revelation. He wasn't just
another version of the lust-puppy-Red-K-infected
Clark with poor impulse control that Tom had
portrayed in previous episodes, like last year's
"Crimson," because Bizarro-Clark was
not Clark. He was truly villainous and without
a conscience. Bizarro-Clark not only killed
just because he could, he also seemed to enjoy
it. It's hard to portray that sort of pathological
lack of a conscience without taking it over
the top. He had just enough of the crazy murderous
intent without making it campy, so Tom had played
the balance very well. And I loved how his voice
was deeper than Clark's and he seemed to hold
himself differently. It helped underscore the
differences between the two men.
As
Clark, I loved the more tender scenes with Chloe
where he was trying very hard to deal with his
grief about Lana's death. He was brave and vulnerable
sometimes in the same scene. Tom had been very
effective in both parts and if Bizarro does
show up again, I will be a very happy Tom Welling
fan. This was an enormously enjoyable performance
from Tom.
I'm
not sure I'm buying Kara-as-guardian-angel for
Lex. Unfortunately, I don't think Michael Rosenbaum
is either. Lex's new-found redemption in the
wake of the miraculous save by the new Kryptonian
do-gooder in town seemed contrived. Michael,
unfortunately, didn't effectively sell that.
His performance in the scenes where Lex talked
about that were flat and unconvincing, although
I thought his speech about missing Lana was
excellent. He had tears in his eyes and it truly
seemed like Lex mourned Lana's loss. Also, the
looks on his face as was just about to drown,
and then saw the angelic-looking Kara, were
wonderful. He conveyed so much without saying
a word...
Maybe
not selling his new found salvation is just
another beginning-of-the season slump for Michael.
Last year he also started out slow. I hated
some of what he did in the early parts of the
season, "Sneeze" was a good example
of that, so maybe he'll get back into his usual
lovely Lex-style evilness before too much longer.
This was a decidedly mixed performance from
Michael.
Allison
Mack had her moments, but I'm not sure
she was totally with it in this episode
either. The scene in the morgue wasn't
her best work ever, and I think it needed
to be. I didn't feel like she'd been traumatized
at all by waking up in a refrigerated
coffin-like drawer. I think being trapped
inside that would be the special guest
star of most people's nightmares for decades...
However, it seemed like Chloe's level
of weirded-out-ness was no worse than
having had just woken up on a stranger's
bathroom floor after a bender. The crying
after she'd found out about Lana's death
I wasn't totally sold on either, although
I thought that scene was more effective
for her in general. Hopefully, she'll
be back to her Chloe awesomeness in the
next episode.
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Director
of Photography, David Moxness, delivered a wonderful
episode. I think the sunbeams were helped out
by Entity a bit here and there, but the way
he shot the episode to emphasize the golden
color of sunlight was terrific. Also, the ending
shot of Lex in prison, with the alternating
light and shadow was breathtaking! What a beautiful
moment! It not only looked good, it implied
Lex's struggle with his dark side in a metaphorical
sense. One moment he was in light, the next
in dark... Awesome.
Overall,
probably not a perfect episode but it set up
the first part of the season so well I have
to let it slide on couple things and grade it
on a curve. 4.5 shiny silver bracelets out of
a possible 5.
Note:
The views of Triplet don't necessarily represent
the thoughts and feelings of everyone at KryptonSite.
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