Mastodon Mastodon Mastodon Mastodon Mastodon Intelligence 1.01 "Pilot" Review: The Beginning of a Wonderful Partnership


    Enable Dark Mode!

  • What's HOT
  • Premiere Calendar
  • Ratings News
  • Movies
  • YouTube Channel
  • Submit Scoop
  • Contact Us
  • Search
  • Privacy Policy
Support SpoilerTV
SpoilerTV.com is now available ad-free to for all premium subscribers. Thank you for considering becoming a SpoilerTV premium member!

SpoilerTV - TV Spoilers

Intelligence 1.01 "Pilot" Review: The Beginning of a Wonderful Partnership

Jan 11, 2014

Share on Reddit
    Intelligence is one of a spate of new shows premiering mid-season. Originally, it was scheduled to air in February, and I’m really glad they moved the release date up. This show is going to do a lot to dispel the January blahs!

    The “Pilot” uses the trope of a new team member, Riley Neal (Meghan Ory), to provide a lot of the background information we need to hit the ground running as viewers. We learn about the clockwork program headed by Lillian Strand (Marg Helgenberger) who is the directed of the United States Cyber Command. The project has implanted a computer chip in an agent’s brain – Gabriel Vaughn (Josh Holloway), making him a super agent who is connected directly to the world’s information grid. This gives him the unique ability to hack into any computer or intel network in the world and either extract – or as we see in the opening sequence – implant information. Neal is brought in to protect Vaughn from both outside forces and himself. As it turns out, he is reckless and a bit of a loose cannon, not to mention, on a crusade to find his wife, Amelia.

    The background on Neal is provided by Vaughn, who can, of course, provide a complete profile of anyone with an electronic footprint. Neal, who is on the youngest ever on Secret Service detail to the President, is reluctant to join the team. The only thing in her record that isn’t squeaky clean is a sealed juvenile record. To Vaughn’s credit, he doesn’t open it and waits for her to divulge the information herself. As it turns out, rather than a misdemeanor for joy riding or car theft, Neal committed manslaughter by killing her mother’s abusive boyfriend after years of enduring the abuse.

    This was a very enjoyable first episode that managed to bring in a lot of the background necessary to flesh out the characters and story without having to skimp on the action. Ory and Holloway both deliver on that front with some great fight and escape sequences. Ory and Holloway have great chemistry, but I’m hoping that they don’t play this into a romantic relationship. Ory’s character in particular is smart and strong and she holds her own in a male dominated world – I keep saying we need more of these characters on tv! Neal earns both the viewer’s and Vaughn’s respect by the end of the episode.

    I particularly liked the dynamic Neal brought. To Strand, Gabriel has just become a tool at her disposal, but Riley sees the person underneath and understands his need to find his wife. I have to admit, though, that I hope they tie up this story within this first season. Amelia is supposed to be another agent who turned five years ago and has been missing ever since. Riley calls Strand on it when Strand refers to Gabriel as “it,” reminding her that he’s a human being. She tells Strand that he is a human being and he’s not going to just let go of trying to find his wife and furthermore, he shouldn’t. Riley also tells Gabriel that she isn’t there just to protect him. She was tasked with stopping him from finding Amelia, but she also tells him, “Hell with that!” We learn by the end of the episode that Amelia is still alive. While Strand has at least partially decided to support Gabriel’s quest to find his wife, she does send the partners off on another case before allowing him to follow the lead on his wife, which is already a few months old. That didn’t ring true for me – if he was that obsessed, you wouldn’t think he’d let the lead get any older.

    The episode was written by Michael Seitzman who is also credited with creating the series which is loosely based on the book Phoenix Island by John Dixon. The book is scheduled for release this month. The episode was directed by David Semel, who also directed No Ordinary Family, Hannibal, Heroes, and Angel among others, so is no stranger to dealing with special effects. While I have some quibbles about the script, the special effects are fantastic.

    One of the things that Gabriel is able to do that they didn’t anticipate is what he calls “cyber-rendering.” He’s able to create a virtual evidence wall and then walk through it, reviewing all the information. He tells Riley that it’s part fact and part extrapolation; it’s like dreaming. The sequences of him walking through the evidence are stunning. I also really enjoyed him being able to walk through the paintball course using the infrared readout. Of course, if he could use the satellite to do that, you would also think the satellites would have been able to prevent him from having to jump off a cliff at the beginning of the episode – I know, picky, picky!

    The episode also introduces us to Shenandoah Cassidy (John Billingsley), Gabriel’s slightly eccentric, retired “creator” and surrogate father. I’ve loved Billingsley since he played Dr Phlox on Star Trek: Enterprise, but he’s been in countless other shows. Happily, after his kidnapping, it looks like he will be back at cyber command and is listed as a regular for the series.

    The acting is top notch throughout the episode. Helgenberger nails the officious, high ranking administrator. I have to admit that I never cared for her character on CSI, but quite enjoyed her here. This marks the much anticipated return of Holloway to series television since Lost. Holloway delivers and while Gabriel shares Sawyer’s snarky banter, I never felt like I was watching Sawyer. I think I was most impressed by Ory, who was last seen as the very sexy Red on Once Upon a Time. Frankly, her talents are put to much better use here! She holds her own in every scene with Holloway and their banter is terrific. I particularly like the scene in which she corrects Gabriel’s Mandarin. Rounding out the regular cast are Michael Rady (Emily Owens MD, The Mentalist, Melrose Place) as Agent Chris Jameson and PJ Byrne (The Wolf of Wallstreet, Horrible Bosses) as Shenendoah’s biological son, Nelson.

    This is definitely one of the new shows to catch. Great acting and special effects and a good plot with lots of action – I’m disappointed we only get 13 episodes, and I’m hoping for more next season! What did you think of the “Pilot”? Will you be tuning in for more? Are you hoping to see Riley and Gabriel become a couple? Let me know your thoughts in the comments below!

18 comments:

  1. Great review, thanks. I agree with you that Megan was the one who impressed me the most with her acting because I wasn't expecting it to be as strong. Holloway was great as expected and yes, it had traces of Sawyer if you thought about it but it didn't remind me of Sawyer while watching. I really loved the pilot and I think it has lots of potential, I hope it makes it!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I too feel the potential in the pilot, but the episode wasn't really alluring to me. It was too much of everything. As if the writers didn't trust that the audience would come back for the next one, so they squeezed all the (probably) coming topics into 40 minutes. My opinion is that if they think the characters are interesting only if we know their pasts, it's not a very promising start. I didn't feel the chemistry between the (obviously intended) couple-to-be either. I know, it was only the pilot and thanks to the pretty good ratings they very likely will have the time to remedy those things, to develop the characters both in the writers' room and on the set. I hope very much it will happen and I hope they will not take themselves too seriously - fun could make the world class heroism much bearable.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Good review! I liked a lot about this show, from the concept through the performances. For me, the one big eye-rolling element is the by now really tired cliche of the missing, presumed-dead figure for whom the protagonist must seek. It ranks right up there, with the unsolved murder of a loved one that the protagonist must continue to investigate, as the most irritating thriller/detective show trope in recent memory. How the microchip thing works seems (at this point anyway) to be more of a convenient device than something the implications of which they've really thought through--and another troubling element for me is that by the end of the first episode (!) our hero already has an antagonist with his exact same powers! I still like the idea, but I hope they show more evidence of giving it serious thought.
    However, I agree that the show makes very good use of a talented cast. I confess I had my doubts about Meghan Ory going in, but she did a very plausible job of playing a tough-as-nails agent who also happens to be totally hot. and John BIlingsly is always fun to watch, so I'm glad he'll be a regular too.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I was a bit disappointed. I found the show a little far fetched. Lillian was too harsh, and a little too "Catherine", Gabriel was too 'Sawyer'. I like Riley, but I wish they had done a slow tease with her sealed juvie record. I hate it when they tell us everything at once! That also put me off Sleepy Hollow, the way they tell the whoooooole crazy thing in the Pilot, and don't keep much secret to keep us coming back.

    I'll probably keep watching just for Megan Ory, but I think Intelligence could have done way better. The CGI is pretty good, and the banter is fun, but so far Chicago PD has won the Pilot wars for me.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Thanks for the review! I love the part where she corrects his Mandarin too!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Great review. I liked the pilot overall and definitely see the potential despite some rough spots in the writing - notably the ending where they capture the main bad guy but they didn't get the traitor tech guy and more importantly retrieve the other "improved chip" from the unconscious Chinese agent when they were all at the same location... of course this is just setting the stage for Gabriel's nemesis, and they could smooth it out in the next ep with an explanation of sorts, but in the ep it didn't feel handled correctly imo. But nevertheless, I enjoyed the show and will be watching.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Thanks! I definitely think this one has legs. It certainly had terrific ratings for the pilot which alone should ensure a second season. Of course, when it moves to Monday it will be up against Castle...

    ReplyDelete
  8. I actually thought they did a good job with the banter in the episode. I hope they keep Riley and Gabriel as partners and not as a romantic couple - I think there's more interest there. I felt like they were getting the background stuff out of the way so that we could focus on the cases and so forth going forward. I guess we'll see with the next few episodes!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Thanks! Yes - fingers crossed that Amelia is dealt with quickly and we can move on. I think having a female with the chip is going to be really interesting - I'm wondering if she will have different unexpected results? Also, I wonder if they will be able to tap into each other? Ory was fantastic - I'm just SO impressed with her as an actor now!

    ReplyDelete
  10. Thanks for reading! Ah. That explains why coming in in the 3rd episode for Sleepy Hollow, I was completely at sea! I kind of liked that they got all that out of the way - and a lot of it won't be really necessary going forward. I often find I don't really get into a show until we see some "regular" episodes and see it get its stride. It seems that there are a few casting changes and additions from the Pilot forward, so maybe they did tweak it a bit...

    ReplyDelete
  11. Thanks! I guess they had to have somebody who get get the Chinese agent up and running, so Amos was the one who had to get away with her. It looks like we'll see her again pretty soon. I just assumed that while Gabriel and Shenendoah were saving Riley, the other two got away... I'm very much looking forward to this one!

    ReplyDelete
  12. I don't think they would be a couple anytime soon (I mean in two-three seasons), and IMHO the very urgent clarification that Gabriel has a missing SO was for getting a leeway for the rest of the season. However I seriously doubt that with this cast - and putting the show directly against Castle - they plan to keep their relationship completely platonic on the long run. As for the banter - it's not either/or with romance. The banter is a battle of wits and personalities, the romance is emotional. Typical Hollywood mistake that having romantic feelings means losing both the quick wit and the sense of humour.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Great review, wonderful show, can't wait for the second episode. It already has so many potentials and Josh/Meghan's chemistry's amazing.

    ReplyDelete
  14. "who is the director* of

    *tries not to get sucked to a new show* Josh looks so much better with shorter hair. I liked Josh Marg too better than the supposed pairing. I would have ended up shocked if it didn't do well especially with lead in but was surprised the demos are only 2's whoaa. I thought too much was explained too wish the momentum gets fixed. .and tropes as long as it is a unique twist and not the boring same take can be quite good.

    ReplyDelete
  15. I hope Amelia is found and he is back with her. A more interesting turn. But most likely a triangle or she will be killed.

    ReplyDelete
  16. That's true. Intelligence is worth sticking around a little longer for. I may like it better a few episodes in!

    ReplyDelete
  17. great review. very interesting first episode. loved what you said about Riley's character and agree that we need more of those in today's shows. Her and Gabriel's chemistry is perfect and I loved the scene with the Chinese/Mandarin corect translation! Can't wait for more episodes!

    ReplyDelete
  18. And yes, hoping for Riley and Gabriel as a couple after a while

    ReplyDelete

NOTE: Name-calling, personal attacks, spamming, excessive self-promotion, condescending pomposity, general assiness, racism, sexism, any-other-ism, homophobia, acrophobia, and destructive (versus constructive) criticism will get you BANNED from the party.