The past two weeks we were treated to a two-part mid-season finale for The Blacklist. The show gets exponentially better every week and the finale was no exception. Every episode is action-packed and the writers jump write into the fight with "Anslo Garrick". Just like any mid-season finale should be, this was filled with more questions than it answered. Just when we thought we knew where the show was headed or who the major players were the writers throw us a curve-ball in form of Anslo Garrick, or as I like to call him, Wile E. Coyote. Ritchie Coster played the role of Anslo Garrick superbly and his lines gave us laughs as well new information into Red's covert background.
We open with Lizzy mourning her dearly departed. We get a nice flashback to the incident that left her scarred as a child, and sadly that's all the info we will get on that until hopefully the second half of the season. I intrigued to find out the relevance between the scar shape and the marking on the box she found beneath her floorboard.
We find Reddington in Germany getting tricked by the FBI who think they are protecting him. He jumps at the chance to help Liz only to find the FBI have fumbled again and detained Red based on intel that was meant to do just that, to bring Red into the black site so a former antagonist of Reds, Anslo Garrick, can capture, and most likely, torture and kill him. Ressler is tasked with babysitting Red which always makes for a fun and interesting back and forth and this time is no different. I love when these two characters are together and was glad to get more info on their back story. We learn that Agent Ressler was engaged to be married but it fell apart due to his "engagement" in tracking Red. I'm sure it was Red who called Ressler's ex-fiance at the end of the episode but we will not find out the truth until next year, if at all. At this point we find Red and Ressler inside the safe box while Red's former associate and current tormentor, Anslo Garrick, is outside waiting. Garrick seems a formidable foe to both Red and the FBI and it would have been interesting had he lived and not knowing where and when he would strike. There is a definite connection between the two criminals, one that we haven't seen in past black-listers. They have definitely worked together in the past but it's not clear what exactly went wrong between them. We know at some point the two clashed and Red shot Anslo in the face in the hopes of killing his partner. Anslo lived with with scar ever since, using it as his motivation for revenge. It's obvious Red was the brains and the leader of their past criminal relationship; if you look closely you can see an echo of this a few times in the episode when Red yells and Anslo stops at attention and also the apparent neediness of Anslo in the presence of Red. Garrick provided small doses of comedic relief throughout the episode and I thought it funny when he referenced the Coyote and Road-Runner cartoons only to meet his demise at the hands of Red by being just as foolish as the titular coyote. Although they are both criminals and have no doubt done some terrible things in their respective pasts, together and apart, they couldn't be more opposite now. The scene where Anslo ineffectively and pointlessly shoots at the glass at Red is the perfect example of this. Inside, Red is saving someone's life, whether he cares for that life or not, while outside, Anslo Garrick is carelessly murdering his own men and instead of saving the man's life just puts him out of his misery. Where Red has a cool and collective demeanor, Anslo is reactive and acerbic.
Part 2 of finale was just as action-packed as the first and James Spader's character, Red, does not disappoint. In true Blacklist fashion we were meant to believe one thing while something entirely different is fast approaching in the background. Last week we were left thinking Dembe was shot and killed only to find out the gunshot was from Liz. I like Dembe's character and was relieved to see he made it out alive and watching him chase down the ambulance Red and Liz were kidnapped in was incredible and speaks to his close relationship with Red. After some heroics by Liz in the ambulance and making her escape, Red is brought to a remote site where he is tortured by Anslo and it's hard to see Reddington in such a vulnerable position after a season of him always being two steps ahead of everyone. Per usual, Red never wants to show his true emotions, his poker face being one of his best assets, and literally smiles in the face of his torturer. You can't help but think that Red always has a Plan B. At that moment the action heats up even more when Red's very own mercenaries show up to attempt his safe, yet failed, extraction. In another bait-and-switch tactic used by the writers we learn Anslo was hired by someone else, Mr. Fitch, someone who appears far more dangerous and played by the great Alan Alda. It was interesting to see Red in such a disadvantaged position, something we never saw in episodes prior. Even when we thought he was in peril he always seemed to turn it around to his advantage. Now with the emergence of a new enemy, whom we know virtually nothing about, we will possibly see Red in more vulnerable situations to get himself out of, which will make for some amazing television.
Now we know the connection to those men that were spying on Lizzy and Tom across the street, as Aram (who was great in this episode), cracks a code for Liz that leads her right to them. Liz is desperately trying to save Reddington's life knowing that he has done the same to help her and she is returning the favor. Liz is definitely getting tougher as the season progresses, as is evident by her killing bad guys at will now, thinking faster and taking bigger and bolder risks.
The Episode ends with Ressler recovering and enjoying a visit from his former fiance. We are left to wonder if he is possibly the mole feeding information from the FBI to criminal enterprises looking to keep better tabs on the ever elusive "Concierge of Crime", Raymond Reddington. Red looks to be hiding in plain sight, but hiding none-the-less, and without his comfortable, luxurious lifestyle. He makes one last phone call to Lizzy and she asks him flat out if he is her father. Red's answer of "no" seemed as honest as his criminal lifestyle would make you believe. As the audience, we were trained in the first 10 episodes that criminals lie and are not to be trusted and I am holding Red to that standard in regards to this subject. That's part of the beauty of this show, we can't wait to find the answers to all the mysteries that come our way...and there are plenty puzzles to piece together and I for one can't wait for more clues come January 13th, 2014.
The success of The Blacklist is in no small part due to it's action-packed episodes and the overarching mystery. We are treated to both in large doses in the final two installments before the winter break. It appears Anslo was working for some larger clandestine operation whose goals and illegal activities we don't know yet. We do know that that organization is hesitant in killing Red for fear of what he has in play in case of his death. The mid-season finale may have left us with more of a mystery and more questions but we are certain about Red's tenacity and dedication. He is always two steps ahead of everyone and was at least a step ahead of Anslo Garrick. Anslo deserved the end he got but what of Red's end? Where Red once gave the FBI "black list" criminals he now is the lists sole occupant. He makes one final phone call to Liz to whom he says he will always be watching over and protecting.
The episode was by far my favorite of the season and I can't express how much I love James Spader on this show. I like seeing how cool and confident the singular and magnetic Reddington is even in the face of imminent and certain defeat and Spader portrays him flawlessly. "And if you've surmised nothing about me by now, I'll be around for the sequel" Red says to Ressler as they are trapped inside the bullet proof box with no chance of escape.
Thoughts & Questions For The Break
-The conversation in the safe box between Ressler and Red, I think, is a comment on the entire show. "Allegiances change. Friends today, enemies tomorrow." That's exactly what Red has done since Episode One. He's wanted to change alliances to be closer to Liz. He doesn't want to be just a criminal anymore and wants to become friends instead of enemies with the FBI and be able to protect Elizabeth in the process. By the end of the finale Red is once again an enemy of the FBI and in perfect poetic fashion is now the ONLY criminal on the black list.
-Who else knows about Red's contract with the FBI?
-What did Red mean when he told Liz at the end of the episode to watch out for Tom? What does Red know about Tom? What is the truth about Tom? And, most importantly, why doesn't Red just come out and tell Lizzy what Tom is all about?
-I like how we got to see part of the flashback of the fire that caused Lizzy's scar but what does it stand for or represent?
-Why did the box under Lizzy's floor board have an etching similar to her scar?
-In Episode 5 Grey and Red speak of an adversary of theirs, is Mr. Fitch that adversary?
-Any other thoughts and or questions please list in the comment section below. I would love to hear your thoughts and ideas for the next set of episodes. This is also my first post on this amazing site so please let me know if I am too detailed or not enough.
Thank You.
Congrats on your first review George! Welcome to the team.
ReplyDeleteWelcome Geo
ReplyDeleteGlad to have a Blacklist reviewer for the site.
TBH I felt like from the pilot Tom was a very high player in the entire game, sort of untouchable. Someone Red can't very well come out and expose or kill - otherwise he'd have done that already.
ReplyDeleteVery good review George.
ReplyDeleteShame we have to wait so long till I see my new favourite show!
Very good point. I did not even think of that. But he genuinely didn't know Red when Red was sitting next to him at the coffee table a few episodes back when Tom found out about Lizzy's fathers death. If he was a major player, he would know who Red is. Tom would also know that his house was being bugged, I think. I could be wrong and Tom is a major player and is playing it so well that he doesn't need to acknowledge these things or show that he knows Red. That would be great for the overall mystery behind him. I really enjoy that story arc.
ReplyDeleteThank you Mike! I agree, 6 weeks is way too long.
ReplyDeleteThanks Sharon!
ReplyDeleteThank you Andy, I appreciate it!
ReplyDeleteExcellent review, you summed it both episodes pretty well.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you about not trusting Red's response to Lizzie asking if he was her father, he paused and to me it came across as if he wanted to tell her but he knows by doing so he'd put he in even greater danger, so for now at least he'll keep it to himself.
I don't think Fitch is the adversary, something about the interaction between the 2 men makes me think he's just another player in the game, almost as if there will be 3 or 4 major players before long, with the adversary being one of them.
One thing i disagree with you on is not so much the review but in your response regarding Tom and Red's sitdown meeting, imo he does know Red and if you rewatch the scene both the subtle body language and the words they're speaking take on a different meaning if you accept they do know each other.
Tom's expression when Red sits down is a giveaway, he gulps and then re-composes himself which then leads to the conversation.
I'm guessing Tom works for the adversary.
All in all though you've summed things up brilliantly.
If Tom is a good a player as he's made to be, he'd pretend really well. Or if he was only posed to watch Liz with a need to know information, he wouldn't know Red. I don't know, there are so many possibilities really. I guess the point of Tom's mystery is that we don't know who he is or if he's really bad.
ReplyDeleteI think Ryan Eggold said himself in an interview that he doesn't know who Tom is (up to when the interview was made).
It still bugs me that he found the box when the only reason Liz found it was because she removed the carpet to get rid of the blood. And in last night's episode Liz asked him to call the FBI and he didn't do it.
But in any case, if Red is telling Liz Tom is bad, I'll choose to believe him because I doubt he'd be wrong.
Excellent review.
ReplyDeleteAbout Tom, what I like so far is that we're not suppose to trust him based on what Red and the people who were watching Tom and Liz said, but the character hasn't given any indication of his duplicity, only a couple of suspicious looks. If he's living a double life, he's really, really good at pretending.
About Red being Liz's father or not, well, I'm not 100% sold on his "No", but it could go either way. Megan Boone seems to believe the "no" is the real thing according to what she said in the Beyond The Blacklist video, I don't think she knows the whole truth either. Maybe he isn't her father, and she's the daughter of someone very close to him, and he made a promise to protect Liz.
I hope you can continue to review the show next year. With all these questions, I like reading others theories.
Thank you very much! I will definitely go back and re-watch that scene between Tom and Red. Lol, now I'm anxious to leave work and see Tom's reactions.
ReplyDeleteThank you! I will be doing the reviews next year and look forward to hearing your theories as well as everyone else's.
ReplyDeleteI agree with you about Tom. As a matter of fact, if you have an opportunity, go back and watch the exact moment Tom finds the box under the floorboard. I will have to go back and look at my notes to find the episode (I think it's Ep 5) but Tom definitely looks as though he is smiling. It's the only sign I have seen that reveals what could be his "other side". Also, commenter "alperez" made a very good point about Tom's reactions while sitting at the table outside drinking coffee when Red walks up and sits down next to him. I am going to go back and watch that scene for any "tells".
I saw all the episodes last week, to remember what happened in early episodes, and to find those clues as well. I remember the episode when Tom finds the box, but I'll check again to see what you're saying. Ryan Eggold has been very subtle with his looks, but it's true that the scene with Red was the most "telling" so far. It looked like fear when Red said that Liz's father was always going to be there to keep her safe, but who knows. I hope there's more interaction between those two on the second half of the season.
ReplyDeleteSeems to me like Meera Malice is the mole. She had the Intel on the hit at the beginning last week. She interrogated Tom who I believe is also CIA. Alan Alda will be CIA as well. He said Red had found new friends at the FBI in reference to his old friends at the CIA. Red has dirt on them and I think his end game is to cripple them from within. Tom and Lizzy might just be a coincidence and Tom might be good working for the bad. Red just knows he works for ye wrong people and might assume he was placed with Lizzie.
ReplyDeletegreat review, the episodes both were great i really Tought Dembe was killed last episode and teh beggining of thsi one was a total surprise for me to see him alive, i dont know but i found really funny that after almost geting killed he was the only one that jumps out and go alone to Red`s rescue before he lost them (a man cant do much when the others is on car) it was great and show how much he cares for Red!
ReplyDeleteAbout Tom: I cant really see Tom as a bad guy and Red never tells anything concrete, i for one believe that if Tom has a double life would be Protecting Lizzie from Red i mean who is the one that has put Lizzie in a bunch of deathly situations since he got in¿?, It was Red and maybe Tom knew that from you know how many years before and someone ask him to protect her from Red (i know i must be completely wrong, and Tom would be the huge a** Villain at the end, but i really think that).
Ressler being a bad guy at the end would be really cool to see i mean the guy looks like he has imepcable standards but one cant really tell much if you dont know the background story to it!
Abour the scar, i didnt saw it tbh i was amazed on how people noticed those details! so i dont mknow what would mean!
Thanks! That's interesting, I never thought of Tom being someone who is protecting Liz from Red. I'm going to watch a few episodes over again and see if I can see that.
ReplyDeleteAnd i agree about Ressler, we need more info which is one of the reasons I can't wait for the remaining season 1 episodes.
Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThat's really interesting what you said about Tom because I was just reading another comment about it being strange Tom never called the FBI when Liz asked him to and clearly the part where he "subtly" tells Liz her job is disruptive to their relationship.
And I completely agree with you about Mr. Fitch. We don't know the whole story but I think there are even greater players in this game we haven't heard of or seen yet. This show has such great potential with all the avenues it can go down.
Your thoughts on The Mole are exactly what I thought. I thought fowler looked suspicious as well, possibly with Meera working for her.
The one thing I don't understand and can't wait to find out is if Red knows Tom is dangerous then why doesn't he do something about to better protect Lizzy than just saying "he's dangerous, watch out for him Lizzie". Maybe I'm missing something.
Thats an interesting theory about Tom being CIA. It's possible but why would Red tell Liz that he is dangerous and to watch out for him? Do you mean a CIA agent who has criminal intentions? That would be a great aspect to the whole story.
ReplyDeleteYeah a few tings stick out to me about Tom like assuming he would be telling Lizzie about his entire trip to visit her dying "dad" in the hospital, why didn't he mention the disturbing man he met (Red)? Maybe he did and the show just did not show very much of that conversation.... Personally, that conversation with Red would really stand out to me as something odd and I would tell my significant other.
ReplyDeleteI guess it is not so much that he has done something specific to make me suspicious, but it's the things he has not done that make me suspicious. If that makes sense? XD
As for why Red would not just kill him or expose the specific truth to Keen...
Maybe Red does not know the whole detailed truth about Tom. He just knows enough to suspect and that combined with years of working with criminals and spies gives him a strong and accurate intuition.
The other issue I see is that he wants or needs to keep Agent Keen in his world and if he killed Tom or pushed her away from Tom faster than she is ready to move he could lose her.
Re: Tom
ReplyDeleteThank you! I resist to accept Tom is a bad guy just because Red says so, especially when he's not concrete about him putting Liz' security in jeopardy, which he's been abundantly clear that it's not negotiable for him. So if Liz is LITERALLY sleeping with the enemy, Red, to protect her, would have ALREADY dealt with the threat. That Tom is to protect her from Red, THAT's a theory I LOVE, it brings angst (divided loyalties) into the relationships that makes for interesting dynamics.
IKR, everyone seems to believe everything Red says of course he has been right in some things but about Tom he was wrong, he was prove to be innocent and was a set up that Red made just to screw him and that was before he appeared to the FBI, after that he just keep telling her to watch out from him, but why in the hell dont you say things straight¿? i believe that Red knows that Tom is trying to get Lizzie away from that life and he doesnt know how to say it, maybe there is something to do with her father or whatever is going on there... but i refuse to believe that Tom is the bad Guy...
ReplyDeleteI agree with that, you are right on the money. However, there is something to what Red is saying. It can't be a completely and entirely empty warning. There is either A) Tom IS in fact bad and Red is warning Liz instead acting on whatever he knows or B) Tom is NOT a threat to Liz as Red has told her BUT there is a reason he is doing that to her for whatever reason (that is driving me nuts to find out, lol), don't you agree?
ReplyDeleteI'm on the fence about the whole Tom/Red situation and I think about it a lot. On one hand I think there is no issue with Tom just because Red says so, like how you put it above. And, on the other hand I can't see why the writers would out this into half the episodes we've seen so far just so it turns up there was nothing negative about Tom in the end. That would seem odd they would put something like that in the show.
Great point though, I look forward to hearing your other thoughts and ideas as the season continues.
Lol, yes that does make sense...and I agree with you about the Tom/Red conversation. I would definitely tell my wife if I had a conversation like that. Maybe that's something that will be addressed in the Eps to come?
ReplyDeleteRe: Tom
ReplyDeletePersonally I cannot see a way Tom is a good guy.
Even if he is protecting Lizzie (from either Red or just in general) he is not who he says he is and has some hidden agenda. More likely he is working for Red's adversary to either spy on Lizzie or put a wedge between her and Red.
The only way Tom could be innocent is if Red is trying to eliminate him for no reason other than to isolate Keen. That seems very unlikely to me since Red's investigation into Tom seems to go back before he was even trying to be a part of Keen's life..
So far Red's information has been accurate.
He may leave out details, but he has not lied about who someone is or what they stand for.
Who's to say who's good and bad but I don't think it was a coincidence that Meera Mallick was the one to question Tom and I think Tom knew exactly who Red was outside the hospital.
ReplyDeleteB! B! B! B! and I agree! :)
ReplyDeleteI hope, though, that Jon Bokenkamp does know what's going on with Tom or that they have at least the general concept. Writing it as they go, is not a good idea, because then we end up having this kind of little contradictions: Red being adamant about Liz security but not being clear about that very particular and important threat) The "whatever reasons" must be very good to be believable otherwise it'll be a HUGE disappointment but most of all a disservice to what is shaping to be a great show.
I think Tom is a player, but maybe not so major...
ReplyDeleteI think he has been working Keen for their entire relationship for one reason or another. Possibly so Red's adversary can keep tabs on Elizabeth Keen.