"Onyx"
Review!
Written
by Triplet
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SHORT
RECAP
Lex (Michael
Rosenbaum) gets split into good and evil Lexes in a Luthorcorp
kryptonite experiment gone awry. The evil Lex imprisons the
good Lex in the mansion's wine cellar and finally turns Lionel
(John Glover) back into the Magnificent Bastard we all love.
Clark (Tom Welling) and Chloe (Allison Mack) gets attacked in
the lab and the bad Lex witnesses Clark using his powers and
tries to take advantage of the situation using kryptonite.
REVIEW
Wow. All
I gotta say is. Wow.
What a great
episode, it has all the little geeky comic references that make
the Superman fan inside me sing and it was some fantastic TV
to boot.
Rosenbaum
was brilliant. As an actor, he has been perhaps a bit too constrained
by the limits of Lex Luthor has he has been written. Lex is
stiff, serious, and (frankly) doesn't have much fun. While it's
delicious to watch him work, I would guess that perhaps Lex
isn't as wide ranging a character as Michael Rosenbaum would
like him to be. The chance to play this dual role, and to let
the "real" Lex out, has given Rosenbaum the perfect
opportunity to show what he's got.
From the
pitch perfect evil twin taking joy in finally being free, to
the fear and doubt clouding the good twin's trying to deal with
the unexpected after effects of the failed experiment, he played
both halves perfectly in what could have easily devolved into
scenery chewing camp. Other actors have dealt with similar storylines
in genre TV but probably none as well as Rosenbaum.
One particular
example of this genre staple that comes immediately to mind
is the classic Star Trek episode, The Enemy Within.
That's the one where Captain Kirk (William Shatner) gets split
into good and bad Kirks by a transporter accident. Shatner was
at the height of his campy overacting best.
Rosenbaum,
on the other hand, takes this all too common plot device and
makes it his own. His evil Lex is deliciously so. He smiles
and laughs and enjoys the new found freedom of not being burdened
by a conscience. What fun and what a great nod to the comic
version of Lex Luthor. The evil megalomaniacal Lex that all
Superman comic book fans know and love to hate: the perfect
arch-nemesis of the heroic Superman.
Rosenbaum
also played the good Lex so well. He was even pathetic at points.
Weak, weepy and fearful. I think the only wrong note for Rosenbaum
in this episode was when the chained up good Lex was screaming
in frustration at the bad Lex. It just seemed forced.
It was a
brilliant writing job by the newest writer on the team, Steven
S. DeKnight, late of Angel and Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
Although the evil Lex Bad Lex was probably a little more
over the top than he would be when otherwise tempered by his
more cautious good half, I feel DeKnight got to core of what
is probably the best portrayal of Lex Luthor ever in live action
media. The daily struggle of Smallville's version of
Lex Luthor, a friend of Clark's who fights to keep the good
in him from becoming overwhelmed by the evil we all know that
will win out, is externalized by being split into two. In the
final confrontation evil Lex told the good Lex, "I drive
you. I give your life meaning. I'm your soul..." For a
man destined to be the ultimate superhero's foil and arch nemesis,
that line brilliantly hits the nail on the head.
As extraordinarily
stellar (and far above even his normal excellent work) as Rosenbaum's
acting was, the entire cast (with the possible exception of
John Schneider) all shone in this episode. John Glover totally
sold the change from the goodie-two-shoes Lionel to the Magnificent-Bastard
Lionel. In the early scene with good Lex there was remarkably
subtle work on his part. Later, after bad Lex pushes him in
that great fencing scene, without a single word spoken Glover
perfectly portrays Lionel's dismay, shock and cold realization
that Lex is right. Realizes that maybe he's not such a good
a man after all
.
And I have
to believe Glover's relieved that the MB Lionel is back and
in full swing. He was so much fun to watch, and I would imagine
very fun to play, so I'm ecstatic the Magnificent Bastard is
back.
Tom Welling
has really grown this season as an actor. Even though he wasn't
in this episode as much as more Clark centric episodes, he showed
possibly the most Superman like moments in the series so far.
Clark's voice was deeper than ever and he seemed more sure of
himself. That was sexy, as well as being very supermanly. Excellent.
John Schneider,
on the other hand, seemed all wrong in this episode. Especially
in the scene where he confronts evil Lex in the barn. He seemed
flat. Also, wouldn't he have fallen down completely after getting
shot in the leg? Yet, there he was kneeling on one knee as if
getting shot hurt little more than getting punched in the stomach
I would
think his leg would be totally useless at supporting any weight
at all after getting shot, so that seemed odd to me. The other
thing is that John Schneider has made it clear he's not happy
with the direction of his character in particular, and the show
in general. His apparent increasing lack of enthusiasm might
be effecting his normally spot on performance as the moral center
of the show. That's a shame. Hopefully this isn't a sign that
Schneider is going to start phoning it in.
Oh, and
I'm getting bored with the interminable oblique references Chloe
keeps making to Clark's secret. Hopefully that song and dance
will be over soon. From the spoilers for the upcoming episode
Blank, it looks like that it will. Thank Goodness.
The episode
was beautifully shot and directed. The lighting was striking
in this episode and well framed. And the blocking was perfect
in the loft scene between the evil Lex and Clark. The fact that
Lex was above Clark for large parts of the scene was a nice
touch, underscoring the upper hand that Lex had in that scene.
I think
ultimately, I'm excited about the possibility of the newly combined
Lex remembering more of what he did and found out about Clark
than he claimed. It would finally put Lex's feet more onto the
path of the evil that we all know he will one day follow.
All around
excellent episode, it's one of the best episodes not just for
the season but of the series. Five stars out of five.
Major
Episode Faux Pas:
I think
Steven S. DeKnight needs to watch The Pilot again.
In the first
wine cellar scene Lex refers to having been accidentally locked
in the wine cellar as a child after "Dad" warned him
to not play down there. It is actually a very effective scene
highlighting the differences between the two Lexes and how the
bad Lex has always been there. However, according to dialogue
in The Pilot, Lex told Clark that his father had never even
been in the mansion.
"My
father never intended living here. He's never even stepped through
the front door."
If that's
the case, how in the world did he tell the child Lex not to
play in the wine cellar? By fax?
Oops.
Note:
The views of Triplet don't necessarily represent the thoughts
and feelings of everyone at KryptonSite.
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