Posted on April 24, 2014 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Wendy Mericle & Beth Schwartz (story)
The Story: Long live the Queen.
The Review: I used to think of Arrow as having a very compact cast, but with all the new additions of this second season, the population is starting to get a little unwieldy. Despite efforts to give everyone his or her due in due measure, the show consistently struggles to find compelling things for certain characters to do. Two of them are featured in this episode, and by the end of it, the show chooses to continue investment in one and pull the plug on the other.
Had Arrow been an original series, I would’ve said the show had made a mistake in its choices. In any other circumstance, Roy would’ve been more suited for the chopping block, being the one-dimensional set of abs he is. Most episodes, he’s a foil for someone else rather than a distinctly motivated character, and here, he’s reduced to a plot device, a means to distract Team Arrow and the audience from the threat of Slade until the mercenary wrenches attention back on himself in the most shocking way.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S02E20, Arrow S02E20 review, Beth Schwartz, DC, DC Comics, Deathstroke, Felicity Smoak, Green Arrow, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Roy Harper, Sara Lance, Slade Wilson, Thea Queen, Wendy Mericle | 1 Comment »
Posted on April 5, 2014 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Marc Guggenheim & Drew Z. Greenberg (story)
The Story: Have you seen this girl? If so, call the Arrow on his encrypted phone line.
The Review: When Slade swore revenge against Ollie, you assumed he was seeking retribution equal to the suffering he believed Ollie caused him—an eye for an eye, appropriately enough. By that calculation, and factoring in Shado’s death, you expected this meant the death of all of Ollie’s loved ones. But we’ve seen since that Slade’s vengeance is nothing so simple. He’s had ample opportunity to kill everyone in Ollie’s orbit since he came to Starling City, yet he’s held back every time.
Of course, Slade has changed objectives since the island. In “Three Ghosts”, he promised anew, “I am going to tear everything [Ollie] cares about away from him. Destroy those who choose to follow him. Corrupt those he loves.” Ollie dies only after “he has lost everyone and everything he values[.]” It’s a psychological breakdown Slade wants for Ollie, not unlike the one he’s experienced since the dual trauma of being injected with the Mirakuru and losing Shado.*
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S02E18, Arrow S02E18 review, DC, DC Comics, Deathstroke, Drew Z. Greenberg, Felicity Smoak, Green Arrow, John Diggle, Marc Guggenheim, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Quentin Lance, Roy Harper, Slade Wilson, Thea Queen | Leave a comment »
Posted on February 6, 2014 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Jake Coburn (story)
The Story: It should be common sense that you should never cross an assassin in love.
The Review: Arrow constantly surprises me with its obviously deep, committed knowledge of DC continuity. There have been a lot of times on this show when I thought it was introducing a completely original character or concept, only to discover, a quick Wiki later, that it had instead found some obscure part of the DCU to repurpose for its own uses. More power to them, I say. Why not make use of that colorful universe and simultaneously update it for a modern audience?
Interestingly enough, while most of the New 52 comics have been recycling familiar, bankable material, it’s Arrow that’s exposed me to the more obscure corners of DC continuity. Case in point: I had no idea that Ra’s al Ghul ever had any other children than Talia. I was sure that Nyssa Raatko was just a stand-in for her more famous sister, probably because of highly complicated legal and proprietary reasons. That she is a character in her own right, one in many ways more nuanced and intriguing than Talia, is the pleasantest of surprises.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S02E13, Arrow S02E13 review, Brother Blood, DC, DC Comics, Dinah Lance, Felicity Smoak, Green Arrow, Jake Coburn, League of Assassins, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Quentin Lance, Sara Lance, Sebastian Blood | 6 Comments »
Posted on January 30, 2014 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Marc Guggenheim & Drew Z. Greenberg (story)
The Story: Starling City takes the integrity of the political process to a whole new low.
The Review: Have you ever noticed that even though ninety-five percent* of all hiring decisions are based on how closely the candidates followed rules and conventions, the people who rise to the top are usually the ones who break them? Fiction tends to follow suit. Characters who stick to the program more often than not become the dutiful, straight-man sidekicks to the rebellious heroes, with the possible exception of Star Trek’s Spock.
So the chances of Roy actually following through with Ollie’s training regimen were pretty much nil. Part of the issue is that instead of explaining how each exercise is supposed to help Roy, Ollie just repeats the same stale line about “control” a dozen times. On the other hand, just taking Roy out in the field proves to be counterproductive as well. What Ollie fails to recognize is that as serious as his new protégé’s physical symptoms are, Roy’s problem is essentially an emotional one.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S02E12, Arrow S02E12 review, DC, DC Comics, Drew Z. Greenberg, Felicity Smoak, Green Arrow, John Diggle, Marc Guggenheim, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Roy Harper | Leave a comment »
Posted on January 16, 2014 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Jake Coburn & Keto Shimizu (story)
The Story: Sebastian Blood’s rally is going to blow through the roof.
The Review: After pointing out Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’s reliance on the monster-of-the-week episode format, it’s only fair to discuss how the format works in Arrow. In season one, Arrow acted much like any other CW drama, each week introducing a new villain for Ollie to tackle and learn something from. Since then, however, the show has mostly outgrown that formula, sustaining itself almost entirely on material from ongoing storylines.
Transitions like this usually happen across a long period of time, so I can’t point out exactly which episode marked the start of Arrow’s evolution. Somewhere along the way, however, the showrunners must have realized the short-term benefits of developing corporate scumbags and various other criminals, only to put them away after a single episode. From that point, Arrow invested fully in building continuity to last, drawing in new characters only in service to the long-term plot. The show has done this very well for quite a while now, so when this episode falls back on old tricks, it’s noticeable and disappointing.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S02E10, Arrow S02E10 review, Brother Blood, DC, DC Comics, Dinah Lance, Felicity Smoak, Green Arrow, Jake Coburn, John Diggle, Keto Shimizu, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Quentin Lance, Roy Harper, Thea Queen | 5 Comments »
Posted on December 5, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Greg Berlanti, Andrew Kreisberg, Geoff Johns (story)
The Story: No time for nerd love when there be superhumans romping about.
The Review: Not that Arrow has ever been ashamed of its superhero roots, but for a long time, the show shied away from anything that would classify as “super.” Obviously, this was part of an attempt to present Arrow as a semi-realistic and grounded superhero adaptation in the mold of the recent Batman movies, but there’s also always the risk that bringing in characters flashier and more powerful than our hero himself would marginalize him in his own show.
That doesn’t quite happen in this episode, but you can see the potential threat the moment we’re introduced to a bona fide superhuman as well as the mere promise of one. The former, gifted with most basic gifts of prodigious strength and durability, gives Ollie so good a thrashing that his allies are forced to resort to the most drastic measures to save his life. The latter, even with no special powers to speak of at present, receives such prominence—which is due just from his iconography—that he at times overshadows even Ollie’s presence in the episode.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Andrew Kreisberg, Arrow, Arrow S02E08, Arrow S02E08 review, Barry Allen, DC, DC Comics, Deathstroke, Felicity Smoak, Geoff Johns, Green Arrow, Greg Berlanti, Malcolm Merlyn, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Slade Wilson, The Flash | 2 Comments »
Posted on November 21, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Marc Guggenheim & Drew Z. Greenberg (story)
The Story: Vertigo’s out of order, Moira’s out of order, this whole city’s out of order!
The Review: Moira Queen is an interesting figure within the Arrow universe. Central as she is to some of the show’s most important storylines, she’s never been much of an active player in any of them. This is partially the fault of her character makeup; as an upper-class socialite with few discernible skills, she has little choice but to fall back on classic feminine wiles to exert her power. She deceives, schemes, bargains, but rarely do you see her actually do anything.
Yet even in this limited capacity, Moira does far more than other characters in her position, which is mother to our hero. Usually, these women are relegated to little more than sounding boards for their children’s exploits and had Moira been trapped in this role, she’d have a much smaller presence in the show. As she is now, her sole purpose seems to be generating drama for the other principals to grapple with, a function which she serves very well.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S02E07, Arrow S02E07 review, Count Vertigo, DC, DC Comics, Deathstroke, Drew Z. Greenberg, Felicity Smoak, Green Arrow, John Diggle, Malcolm Merlyn, Marc Guggenheim, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Roy Harper, Shado, Slade Wilson, Thea Queen | 2 Comments »
Posted on November 14, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Ben Sokolowski & Beth Schwartz (story)
The Story: To Russia with love.
The Review: Almost every TV series, even the best ones, goes through the same pattern of growth, particularly during the early seasons. The first season is all about setting tone: the characters’ core personalities, the general dynamics among them, the style, pace, and purpose of the show. It’s usually the second season where things get exciting; with the basics out of the way, the writers can focus on having fun and expanding the bounds of the world they’ve created.
Arrow’s second season easily falls into this model as it steadily incorporates more and more elements from the comic book mythos which inspired the show. In addition to passing references to particle accelerators and WWII-era genetic experiments, the show has officially opened the revolving door of DC character appearances, this time allowing Amanda Waller to step through and be her usual coercive self.*
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: A.R.G.U.S., Amanda Waller, Arrow, Arrow S02E06, Arrow S02E06 review, Ben Sokolowski, Beth Schwartz, DC, DC Comics, Deadshot, Felicity Smoak, Floyd Lawton, Green Arrow, John Diggle, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Roy Harper, Shado, Slade Wilson, Thea Queen | 2 Comments »
Posted on November 12, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Jeff Lemire (story), Andrea Sorrentino (art), Marcelo Maiolo (colors)
The Story: We have a knight and archer in the same room. Now where’s the mage?
The Review: I confess that I have a certain amount of cynicism about crossover events in comics, viewing them usually as schemes to capture readers (and their dollars) who wouldn’t read these books otherwise. The farther spread the crossover, the more suspicious I get, and Zero Year’s infection reaches far, indeed. Having just read an Action Comics tie-in that was only marginally related to events in Zero Year proper, I wondered if Green Arrow will fare any better.
Lemire gets a leg-up on Action Comics #25 by actually setting his story in Gotham and allowing Ollie to run into the early Dark Knight himself. True, it’s a little too fortuitous that Ollie’s return from the island coincides exactly with the chaos erupting in Gotham, but it’s a narrative necessity that mostly pays off, so you don’t take too much issue with it.* At the very least, you get to see some interesting parallels and contrasts between two of DC’s most prominent non-powered superheroes.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Andrea Sorrentino, Batman, Bill Sienkiewicz, Bruce Wayne, DC, DC Comics, Denys Cowan, Gotham, Green Arrow, Green Arrow #25, Green Arrow #25 review, Jeff Lemire, John Diggle, Marcelo Maiolo, Matt Hollingsworth, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Roy Harper, Zero Year | Leave a comment »
Posted on November 7, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Jake Coburn & Drew Z. Greenberg (story)
The Story: When assassins come calling, calm yourself with Chinese food.
The Review: As much as I happen to love WCBR’s letter-grading system, it does lead me into some tricky quandaries, not the least of which is the separation between an X-, X, or X+. It’s easy enough to get a sense of what letter-grade something deserves, but justifying those tweaks, slight as they are, is a more difficult task. I didn’t start out this review with the intention of making insights into my grading rubric, but I think this episode is a good sample for just that.
Last week, I gave “Crucible” a B. Today, I’m giving “League of Assassins” a B+. But why? What did last night’s episode do just ever so much better than its predecessor that gives it that edge? What did it not do to creep over into A territory? Does Minhquan really have any objective criteria for this kind of distinction or is he just an arbitrary critic who also apparently likes to refer to himself in the third person?
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S02E05, Arrow S02E05 review, Black Canary, DC, DC Comics, Detective Lance, Dinah Lance, Drew Z. Greenberg, Felicity Smoak, Green Arrow, Jake Coburn, League of Assassins, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Quentin Lance | 4 Comments »
Posted on October 25, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Marc Guggenheim & Keto Shimizu (story)
The Story: Yet another reason to be suspicious of men who collect dolls.
The Review: I never thought I’d see the day when a TV series from DC featuring Green Arrow—and on the CW, for crying out loud—would inspire greater enthusiasm than a Marvel series. But when I found myself suddenly very much looking forward to the next showing of Arrow as a palette cleanser from the disappointment that was Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’s fifth episode, it made me realize how much confidence Arrow has earned since its debut.*
Obviously, it’s unfair to compare a show that has already won a second season to one that hasn’t even reached the halfway point of its first just yet. Arrow comes now with the benefit of nearly a year’s worth of character work and interrelationships, so your emotional investment will naturally be greater. This episode in particularly puts all that development on full display, and you may be surprised by how potent some of the character combinations turn out to be.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S02E03, Arrow S02E03 review, DC, DC Comics, Deathstroke, Detective Lance, Dinah Lance, Green Arrow, Keto Shimizu, Marc Guggenheim, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Slade Wilson | 8 Comments »
Posted on October 9, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Greg Berlanti, Andrew Kreisberg, Marc Guggenheim (story)
The Story: Nothing like a good island getaway to relieve the stress of a devastated hometown.
The Review: Even though the first season of Arrow came with all the growing pains every new show experiences as it settles on its voice, it built a lot of confidence with viewers like me because it not only knew exactly what kind of story and tone it wanted, but it also had the humility to make changes as needed. That makes Arrow’s second season job much easier, when the goal is to capitalize on early strengths while rejiggering the things that didn’t quite work.
The cold open does both tasks at once and thus sets a good for the rest of the episode. No matter how poignant Ollie’s interactions with his family or intriguing his romance with Dinah, the relationship that truly drives the show is the dynamic between Ollie, Diggle, and Felicity. Kicking off the season with Diggle and Felicity (now promoted to series regular), skydiving towards Lian Yu and barely escaping death by land mine thanks to a grappling-line rescue by Ollie, makes for a very good start indeed.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Andrew Kreisberg, Arrow, Arrow S02E01, Arrow S02E01 review, Black Canary, DC, DC Comics, Dinah Lance, Felicity Smoak, Gerg Berlanti, Green Arrow, John Diggle, Marc Guggenheim, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Roy Harper, Thea Queen | 3 Comments »
Posted on May 16, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Greg Berlanti, Marc Guggenheim, Andrew Kreisberg (story)
The Story: Sometimes it feels like your whole world is tumbling down around you.
The Review: Phew. Let me tell you: covering a TV series from start to finish requires quite a bit of commitment, and the task is made even more difficult by a show like Arrow, which is still, even here in its first season finale, trying to find itself. It’s a show that’s got so many genres and elements mixed together that finding the right balance among them all could take another season or so yet. But here, it proves itself worthy of investing in its evolution, however long it takes.
This episode works because while it has the same over-the-top energy that defeated the show’s credibility in other instances, it channels that energy in all the right places. Malcolm’s speech to a trussed up Ollie starts as a drag of a villain’s monologue, crowing and condescending at the same time: “You can’t beat me, Oliver. Yes, you’re younger, and you’re faster, and yet you always seem to come up short against me.” But after all that’s out of the way, he reveals his choicest lines: “You want to know why? Because you don’t know in your heart what you’re fighting for—what you’re willing to sacrifice. And I do.”
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Andrew Kreisberg, Arrow, Arrow S01E23, Arrow S01E23 review, DC, DC Comics, Detective Lance, Dinah Lance, Green Arrow, Greg Berlanti, Malcolm Merlyn, Marc Guggenheim, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Roy Harper, Thea Queen, Tommy Merlyn | 5 Comments »
Posted on May 9, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Drew Z. Greenberg & Wendy Mericle (story)
The Story: Every good mother-son relationship is built on honesty—even if you have to threaten it out of them.
The Review: Last night I was talking to a friend online and when I mentioned that I watched Arrow, he asked, “Oh, yeah—how is that?” I told him what I felt was the truth. “It’s a truly mixed bag.” And it really, truly is. There have been some standout episodes this season, and ones that I could very easily forget, but overall, the average showing of Arrow is usually an uneven combination of high points and low points.
For example, can we be spared the pointless and awkward exposition already? Dinah meets with Ollie at his club, then proceeds to give him a recap of what happened between them last week, starting, unbelievably enough, by saying, “Last week, I told you that I wanted to get back with Tommy—that I needed you to go to him and explain to him that you didn’t still have feelings for me. But instead, you told me that you did.” She might as well have preceded the line with, “Previously, on Arrow…”
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S01E22, Arrow S01E22 review, DC, DC Comics, Dinah Lance, Drew Z. Greenberg, Felicity Smoak, Green Arrow, John Diggle, Malcolm Merlyn, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Tommy Merlyn, Wendy Mericle | 6 Comments »
Posted on May 2, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Jake Coburn & Lana Cho (story)
The Story: Felicity and Ollie take a bet on their teamwork as a duo act.
The Review: With the season winding down, it’s just about the time for the show’s writers to start tying all their various plot threads together into something suitable for the finale, a big task for a series as active as Arrow. Over the last twenty episodes, we’ve seen a number of characters introduced, killed off or shooed away, then returned; a handful of romances sparked, some of which have already petered out; and the addition of several major cast members.
Through it all there was always the looming threat of Malcolm Merlyn’s Undertaking, ostensibly a final attempt to clean up the Glades for good, but really just an extreme strike back against the place which took his wife. With all the other craziness happening in the show (e.g. Tommy discovering Ollie’s secret, Diggle going after Deadshot), the Undertaking has taken a bit of a backseat, and we really don’t know too many details as to what it’ll entail just yet.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S01E21, Arrow S01E21 review, DC, DC Comics, Dinah Lance, Felicity Smoak, Green Arrow, John Diggle, Malcolm Merlyn, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Thea Queen, Tommy Merlyn | 2 Comments »
Posted on March 28, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Drew Z. Greenburg & Wendy Mericle (story)
The Story: Proof that neglect of public transit will just come back to haunt a city someday.
The Review: Not that this show has shied away from violence, but it’s always been the kind of unalarming,* almost campy kind of violence where people tend to die suddenly or bloodlessly (unless, of course, one is being stabbed, in which case the actual piercing takes place off screen and only afterward do you see the bloody blade next to the crazed grin of the stabber). In Arrow, as in comics, death has been taken for granted; it usually doesn’t have the force it should.
Greenburg-Mericle try to change that in this episode’s villain-of-the-day, another would-be vigilante who picks up various folk he believes deserve punishment, strings them up, then asks them for last words before shooting them point-blank. What makes this otherwise melodramatic scene convincing is the fact that he actually broadcasts these executions to Starling City at large.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S01E18, Arrow S01E18 review, DC, DC Comics, Detective Lance, Dinah Lance, Drew Z. Greenburg, Felicity Smoak, Green Arrow, John Diggle, Malcolm Merlyn, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Roy Harper, Thea Queen, Wendy Mericle | 6 Comments »
Posted on February 28, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Geoff Johns (story)
The Story: For once, it’d be nice to get decked out for a party and not get shot at.
The Review: While I can’t claim to be the kind of critic who can, just from writing style alone, tell who the writer is, I can usually notice when there’s been a change in the storytelling duties. So though I couldn’t quite pin it while watching this episode, I knew something was very, very different. Later, I went online to check for the writing credits, as per habit, and when I saw that it was Johns who wrote the screenplay, suddenly the whole thing made sense.
I’ve often observed (read: complained) that while the show has introduced a lot of interesting elements and characters, it’s never done a terrific job melding them all together into a cohesive whole. Figures that it’d take Johns, the master of continuity massage, to do what nearly every previous writer could not figure out. Instead of every plotline and its players keeping their distance from each other, they finally feel like they exist in a close, interactive world.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S01E16, Arrow S01E16 review, China White, DC, DC Comics, Deadshot, Detective Lance, Dinah Lance, Felicity Smoak, Geoff Johns, Green Arrow, John Diggle, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Tommy Merlyn | 2 Comments »
Posted on February 21, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Beth Schwartz (story)
The Story: The pressure of working with a vigilante is enough to make Felicity’s head explode.
The Review: I’m a pretty big West Wing fan, and one of my favorite things about the West Wing was the rise of Donna Moss on the show. Here you had this college dropout with little more to recommend her except a willingness to work overtime, good Midwestern/Canadian values, and a sense of humor, and soon she’s privy to the inner workings of the White House and helping to change the nation in her own, special way.
I mention Donna because she has a lot in common with Felicity, or rather, Janel Moloney has a lot in common with Emily Bett Richards. I’m focusing mostly on their ability to make the most out of their parts on their respective shows, delivering their dozen lines with such good-natured personality that they stick with you far longer than they have any right to. Even if the producers didn’t make Richards a regular for next season, you’d consider her one anyway, just like people did Moloney in season one of the West Wing.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S01E15, Arrow S01E15 review, Beth Schwartz, DC, DC Comics, Felicity Smoak, Green Arrow, John Diggle, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Roy Harper, Thea Queen | 2 Comments »
Posted on February 14, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Greg Berlanti, Andrew Kreisberg, Marc Guggenheim (story)
The Story: Past-Ollie steps on a mine; Present-Ollie gets shot by his mom. Rough day.
The Review: I’ve been pretty tough on the most recent episodes of Arrow, occasionally to the consternation of the WCBR readers, but believe me when I say I’m not tearing down the show out of pure malice. Mostly, my frustration has been with the show’s refusal to capitalize on its own potential. It really can be so many things, yet it shirks on nearly all fronts, and nearly every time it tries a game-changer move, it winds up sticking with the same game in the end.
Nowhere does that appear more obvious than in Ollie’s fretful position on how to deal with his mom. His adamant refusal to even consider Moira a threat last episode already reflected poorly on his integrity. He had a huge opportunity to redeem himself here when he crashes through her office and convincingly scares the bejeezus out of her. And then, in a moment that begs you to throw your popcorn at the television, he lets her go.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Andrew Kreisberg, Arrow, Arrow S01E14, Arrow S01E14 review, Billy Wintergreen, DC, DC Comics, Deathstroke, Felicity Smoak, Green Arrow, Greg Berlanti, John Diggle, Marc Guggenheim, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Slade Wilson, Yao-Fei | 4 Comments »
Posted on February 7, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Lana Cho & Beth Schwartz (story)
The Story: The awkward moment when a father and daughter realize they’re after the same man.
The Review: In all my television-viewing years, I don’t remember a time when the WB (now CW) had a real, big hit on its hands. It never had a beloved sitcom like Friends or an anchor drama like Law and Order. If the network ever won an Emmy, it was rare and far in-between. Seeing as how I’m in the business of guessing at things I have no direct experience in, my theory is that WB/CW shows never really manage to take risks that break them free of old formulas.
Arrow provides an interesting case in point. A mix of different genres, it doesn’t really excel in any one, nor does it manage to balance its various stories well. The characters generally feel like second-grade, cookie-cutter carbons of other, more famous figures. The show often seems to take plotlines from a recycle pile of stories, gives them a good buffing, then integrates them into an episode. It all comes across as vaguely knockoff, like clothes from Gorgio Armooni.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S01E13, Arrow S01E13 review, Beth Schwartz, DC, DC Comics, Detective Lance, Dinah Lance, Green Arrow, John Diggle, Lana Cho, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Tommy Merlyn | 6 Comments »
Posted on January 31, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Wendy Mericle & Ben Sokolowski (story)
The Story: No one tries to put Green Arrow’s little sister in the slammer—nobody!
The Review: Although it’s taken some creative fudging and narrative necessity, the show has finally established a somewhat enduring familial relationship between Ollie, Thea, and Moira. Time will tell if the Queen family dynamics can carry the show over the long term. For now, it’s enough that you get a sense of sincere affection among the trio, though tested by frequent, sudden switches in their personality or temperament.
Ollie’s vacillations between caring and coldness have become second-nature by now, but Thea’s unpredictable attitudes seem patented for the sake of injecting conflict and drama as needed. She begins the episode pale and nervous about her court hearing, is visibly shaken when the judge rejects her plea agreement,* but all of sudden displays a rather condescending, jerky side to Dinah when the older gal offers her an alternative to prison time. All this to get back at her mom, which only makes Thea seem a bit petty and lame.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S01E12, Arrow S01E12 review, Ben Sokolowski, Count Vertigo, DC, DC Comics, Detective Lance, Dinah Lance, Felicity Smoak, Green Arrow, John Diggle, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Thea Queen, Wendy Mericle | 2 Comments »
Posted on January 24, 2013 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Gabrielle Stanton (story)
The Story: Diggle attempts to get someone off of Ollie’s naughty list.
The Review: For the last couple episodes, the show has started drifting away from its usual pattern of crossing off names in Ollie’s list in favor of some more spontaneous heroics, drawing us a little closer to the Green Arrow we know and love each time. I heartily approve of this transition, because the list has long become an extremely gimmicky plot device, fitfully generating a passable conflict for Ollie to tackle when all else fails.
Basically, stories drawn from the list have resulted in safe but bland episodes for the show. Even last episode starring Firefly, which I largely panned, at least had some risk you could enjoy. Here, ex-military and present military nut Ted Gaynor breaks somewhat out of the corporate mold of previous list names, but even he proves to be fairly pedestrian as an opponent. He’s just mercenary, which makes no villain stand out unless he’s Deathstroke.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S01E11, Arrow S01E11 review, DC, DC Comics, Dinah Lance, Felicity Smoak, Gabrielle Stanton, Green Arrow, John Diggle, Malcolm Merlyn, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Thea Queen, Tommy Merlyn | 1 Comment »
Posted on December 13, 2012 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Greg Berlanti, Marc Guggenheim, Andrew Kreisberg
The Story: The Arrow that saved Christmas.
The Review: You should know that I’m a total sap for Christmas, which makes me and people like me something of an oddity in a world where people mostly see the cynical, materialistic, socially conditioned side of the holiday—but I don’t care. Even if you don’t celebrate it, you have to appreciate that Christmas, in its purest form, is about finding ways to give and care for the ones you love, and that’s always a good thing in my book.
In the gritty confines of Arrow, it seems unusual, then, for the spirit of Christmas to rear its head, particularly from no other than the driven and hardened Oliver Queen. Who’d expect him to get so sappy about his dad’s old Christmas parties when he’s so focused on crushing corporate moguls? At any rate, Ollie’s eagerness to revive his family’s holiday tradition brings out a sweet, lovable side to him that’s in short supply these days, although when things don’t go the way he plans, his eagerness quickly turns into resentment.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Andrew Kreisberg, Arrow, Arrow S01E09, Arrow S01E09 review, DC, DC Comics, Felicity Smoak, Green Arrow, Greg Berlanti, Marc Guggenheim, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Thea Queen | 5 Comments »
Posted on November 29, 2012 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Andrew Kreisberg, Geoff Johns, Marc Guggenheim (story)
The Story: Shouldn’t the fact that you and your date end up sparring after dinner be a red flag?
The Review: I have a friend who has an obsession for instant noodles—you know, the bags, cups, and bowls of slippery Asian-styled soup. Actually, that statement is somewhat misleading because in reality, my friend doesn’t care for the actual noodles so much. I’ve seen her cook up a whole pot of the stuff, only to dump everything but the broth and drink the whole thing down, every last, savory, MSG-enriched bit of it. It’s the culinary version of missing the point.
I can somewhat relate because as the show goes on, I find myself in the awkward predicament of liking nearly everything about it except for its lead character. In fact, the closer characters get to Ollie, the less I like them. I’ve noticed that lately, Ollie only interacts with the rest of the cast so as to get nagged by them. He looks pretty tired of it, but he should keep things in perspective. It can’t be half as tiresome as for us to needlessly watch him get nagged.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Andrew Kreisberg, Arrow, Arrow S01E07, Arrow S01E07 review, DC, DC Comics, Dinah Lance, Geoff Johns, Helena Bertinelli, Huntress, John Diggle, Marc Guggenheim, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Thea Queen, Tommy Merlyn | 2 Comments »
Posted on November 15, 2012 by Minhquan Nguyen

By: Moira Kirland & Marc Guggenheim (story)
The Story: Thanks to the recession, even bank robbers are down on their luck these days.
The Review: A few weeks ago, I was on a late plane going to D.C., bored with nothing to do except stare out into the inky darkness and ponder my meaningless life in the endless void, so I pulled out my laptop to watch an episode of Arrow. A friend of mine who was also on that flight suddenly piped up excitedly, “Is that Arrow?” I told her it was. “I love Arrow,” she told me, in much the same way someone might have said, “I love Mad Men” a year ago.
I should say my friend is a sweet, feminist law student whom I would never imagine watching a weekly action-drama featuring a comic book character who fought crime with preposterously antiquated weaponry. But after that revelation, I started paying closer attention to the show and began to recognize its crossover appeal. This is ostensibly a show about Green Arrow, but in execution, he’s merely a platform to deliver all the things people want out of TV—action, crime, justice, relationships, and family—but with more breathing space for the fantastic.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arrow, Arrow S01E06, Arrow S01E06 review, DC, DC Comics, Dinah Lance, Felicity Smoak, John Diggle, Marc Guggenheim, Moira Kirland, Moira Queen, Oliver Queen, Royal Flush Gang, Thea Queen, Tommy Merlyn | Leave a comment »