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Legends - Lords of War - Review

2 Sept 2014

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The third episode of Legends moved the spy drama’s plot forward a little, with the completion of the development of a chemical weapon, the rescue of the Hubbards, and Martin’s (or Dante’s) infiltration of the major players behind the weapon’s creation.

The episode had some good. It was mostly solid in its pacing and progression of the story, if a little predictable in its ending. We were introduced to an intriguing guest character, Ana Paulanos. We learned an interesting detail that reminded us of Odum’s fragile mental state, and that is that while undercover he’s transferring details of his legend to his real life, as he confused the details of Dante’s marriage proposal with his own to Sonya. And finally, we saw how hard Odum’s job is – and the toll it takes – as he was forced to murder a stranger to maintain his undercover alias.

But there were several small details that strained credibility. For starters, Maggie was able to geo locate the phone of the weapon’s buyer and identify its location as a hotel. This is believable enough, but how did Odum know which door within the hotel to knock on?  I found the fact that the FBI had a voice sample of the Colonel and was able to identify him so quickly too convenient, and wondered what information Maggie was able to pull out of the word cloud of the very common words being spoken (with the exception of a few proper names, which would have been flagged and researched anyway without a word cloud).

While last week I appreciated the fact that Agent Rice wasn’t playing by Odum’s rules, this week I felt the point was stretched a bit beyond believability. Rice was visited in his office by Gates – a great scene between the two – but I found it uncredible that Rice (an FBI agent), didn’t seem to understand that there are ops more important than his case, the murder of a homeless man on a subway station. If he’s so put out that a fellow undercover operative lied to him, that he’s taking it personally to the point where he’s willing to risk his own career and potentially thousands of lives, then the FBI needs to work on their hiring personality-screening methods.

I rolled my eyes a little when the last shooter emerged from the warehouse the team had just raided – took everyone by surprise, and then fired rapid machine gun fire at an upward angle into the air and didn’t hit anyone. Of all of the swat team personnel gathered outside in this location, Crystal was the only one who reacted and got the shot to take him down.

My final criticism is that three episodes in, I was hoping to start to see deeper character development for the two main female characters on the team. Crystal – whose character I had hoped last week was beginning to deepen – this week regressed and she mostly delivered snipes meant to diminish Odum’s successes. She’s got a chip on her shoulder. We get it. Meanwhile Maggie has yet to have much of a role other than being the amazing tech genius and exposition girl, as she narrates in detail everything that is going on in the op as the group monitors Odum’s undercover missions.

While I'm still enjoying the series and have high hopes for it, I felt like this episode took a step backward. What did you think? Was I being too hard on it? Let me know in the comments.

12 comments:

  1. I thought it was pretty good

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  2. Thanks for commenting. It was good, and I liked the undercover scenes with Odum - but for me it just fell short in areas. Maybe I was in a hypercritical mood this week. It's the third episode, so we're not going to be seeing their best stuff yet. Hopefully next week it will be a little stronger.

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  3. Banged by Corey Stoll2 September 2014 at 14:55

    I was a little skeptic after the pilot, but the nerve-gas storyarc is really impressive.
    Also, Sean Bean is excellent, his acting is clearly well above the other co-stars.

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  4. it was good but i think they are making the legends too convenient..they should show infiltration and the making of the character,not just the end product..

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  5. I enjoyed it. Very fast-paced and a lot of action. Can't wait for the next episode!

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  6. Cool. As I said in the review, I'm still enjoying the series. Looking forward to seeing where it leads.

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  7. I'm not sure if this was the case before this episode too, but the convenience of everything really jumped out to me in this episode. Everything's too easy. We get it, Martin Odum's awesome, but it shouldn't be that easy to infiltrate the enemy. And Odum has so many legends going on, I'm wondering how he accounts for all of the lost time for his legend when was being someone else. It seems like someone would catch on that he's not who he says he is, or that he'd get caught in a lie occasionally.

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  8. Bean's acting has impressed me every episode so far, I'm not someone who is quick to gush. He's clearly the star, but I think the show needs to start adding more depth to the supporting characters as well too, for the story to develop layers.

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  9. I really want to like Legends but I find myself bored most of the time while watching this show. I'm not sure how much longer I'll stick with it.

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  10. I'm not sure what to think yet. I had wished for more depth, but at the same time there's a level (in the background in this episode) that suggests that what we're seeing isn't what we think we're seeing. So I'm still holding out hope that there's a reason why some of this seems flatter than I had hoped - because it's not real - and at some point everything might get turned on its head and become suddenly fascinating. While watching this episode it was hard to keep in mind that there's more building to this story than the FBI undercover cases.


    I understand tuning out though. I've been like that with The Strain this year. The first couple of episodes didn't grab me - to the point where I flipped off the TV after about 5 minutes of watching the third. And then I got bored one afternoon and went back and started watching the episodes from where I'd left off, and now I'm engaged enough to keep watching, for now.

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  11. The biggest problem on Legends for me are the characters. Everyone (except for Bean's character) is so plain and nondescript. There's nothing unique or remotely interesting about any of them.

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  12. I agree. I thought they were starting to develop them out more in the second episode, and then they seemed to flatten again this episode - with the possible exception of Gates, who still seems somewhat mysterious.

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