"Splinter"
Review!
Written
by Triplet
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NOTE:
Spoilers are revealed in this review! If you haven't seen this
episode, but don't want to spoiled, go watch it now before you
read further or I can’t be held responsible.
Relatively
Brief Recap:
Clark visits Lana to find that Lex has sent her a gift, a strange
meteor rock which pricks Clark’s finger. Confused by this,
he leaves and heads back to Smallville. He is run off the road
by a truck with blacked out windows. Clark gets a call from someone
who says ominously “I know who you are.”
Clark tells
his parents what happened with the truck and the phone call, thinking
someone has discovered his secret. Clark tells Fine (Special Guest
James Marsters) about the truck and Fine gives him the license
plate number. Chloe finds that the plate number doesn’t exist.
Lex denies sending Lana the silver meteor but shows her the ship,
asking for her help in opening it. Lionel wants to help Jonathan
beat Lex in his State Senate run. Clark sees Lionel give Jonathan
money and tell Jonathan he wants to experiment on Clark.
Clark confronts
Jonathan about Lionel but runs off after Chloe tries to subdue
him with kryptonite. Chloe tells them about the Silver Kryptonite.
Clark tells Lana to not believe anything anyone says about him
and that she‘s the only person he can trust. Chloe tells
Lana about Clark’s growing paranoia and that it was the meteor
rock that‘s causing Clark‘s illness.
Lana confronts
Lex about the meteor rock but he denies even seeing it before.
Lana tells him about Clark’s paranoia and apologizes for
not trusting him. Clark watches them kiss and becomes jealous.
Clark confronts
Lex and Lana. He breaks Lex’s wrist and comes close to killing
Lana. Fine stops Clark from killing Lana because he says it would
destroy him if he hurt her. Fine says he’s a Kryptonian too
and uses something like a monstrously huge syringe to remove the
splinter from Clark. Clark comes to his senses and is devastated
by what he did.
Clark makes
up with Lana but she doesn’t admit that her conversation
with Lex about a spaceship was real. Chloe says that she would
die before revealing Clark’s secret. Lionel tells Lex that
Lana will never love him. Fine and Clark talk about the duplicitous
nature of humanity. Fine thinks Clark needs to trust his own people
more than he trusts humans. Clarks says he can trust the people
that love him. Fine is skeptical and says that Clark knows where
to find him when he’s ready to face the truth about humans.
Review
I had been
expecting a great episode and I wasn’t disappointed.
When I’d
read about the episode and seen the trailer, I’d imagined
a more drastic and sudden change in Clark but Tom and helmer James
Marshall successfully created a gradual build to Clark’s
paranoia.
And Tom Welling
was a revelation as the paranoid Clark.
Probably the
biggest risk of doing an episode like this would be the actor
presenting an over the top performance. But not only was Tom’s
performance NOT over the top, it was remarkably subtle and nuanced
at times. He was especially effective during Clark’s scenes
with Fine, Lex, and Lana. Tom Welling has avoided playing “crazy
Clark” too broadly. His jittery nervousness in the third
and fourth acts was spot on for someone with Paranoia. Clark’s
hurt, fear and anger as he realizes that Lana maybe isn’t
as trustworthy as he thought was amazingly well played by Tom;
it was heart wrenching to watch. Tom’s Clark was downright
scary when he was stalking Lex and Lana, by the way. He’d
never really played that before and Tom Welling did that perfectly.
The supporting
players all brought in their A games to boot, with the possible
exception of Kristin Kreuk. Lana seemed to be all over the map,
motivation-wise. However, the character arc for Lana in this episode
was probably the weakest part of it, so maybe the problems she
had in this episode weren’t all her fault. Lana’s mantra
of “Just tell me the truth, <fill-in-the-blank>”
is getting way old and I’m very sorry they trotted that old
crutch out.
Have I said
lately how much I love Marsters as Brainiac?
He is just
evil incarnate and is so likeable at the same time yet Marsters
pulls that duality off brilliantly. He adds so many layers to
the already well-written lines, it‘s an absolute joy to watch
him work. I can’t wait for next week’s episode!
Michael Rosenbaum’s
Lex is turning on a hook. His devastation when Lionel jabbed at
him about the impossibility of Lana ever loving him was amazing
to watch. The truth of what Lionel said was so biting.
Allison Mack
was fantastic, even without a whole lot of screen time. Her shocked
realization when she discovers he thinks she betrayed him was
amazing.
John Glover’s
Lionel is always a joy to watch so I love it when he makes appearances
on the show. His spelling out to Lex that Lana will never love
him because she knows him was devastating to Lex and yet he delivered
that line so matter-of-factly… It was beautifully evil.
Scribe Steven
S. DeKnight has penned a very successful episode. The pacing was
well done and the tension kept on building. Also, the act break
cliff-hangers were terrific and kept me on the edge of my seat.
I’m not totally sure what Fine’s motivations were for
fooling with Clark’s mind, but I gotta love the creativity
behind it. And Fine’s own duplicity with Clark even as he
condemns humanity for its penchant for betraying people was brilliantly
evil.
Director James
Marshall never disappoints and he created a great episode. And
was that Michael Rosenbaum’s voice as the ominous caller
on Clark’s cell phone? If so, that’s a great attention
to detail.
DP Barry Donlevy
filmed yet another gorgeous episode. I especially loved how creepy
the scene the mansion was when Lex was looking for Clark. Dark
scenes often lose any sense of depth and end up just being dark,
but Donlevy still kept some color in the scene. It was beautifully
shot.
Actually when
the lights went out and Lex was out there creeping around looking
for a crazy Superman, I think I forgot to breathe…
Hair and make-up
even outdid themselves. By the end Clark looked truly nuts and
physically stressed. For someone as gorgeous as Tom Welling, that‘s
probably a pretty neat trick.
This was a
wonderful episode.
I give this
4.5 silver kryptonite splinters out of a possible 5.
Note:
The views of Triplet don't necessarily represent the thoughts
and feelings of everyone at KryptonSite. Send
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