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Wednesday 1 June 2011

Smallville Season Finale review.








Review: 4 out of 5.






Sorry people, it has been a long time since I reviewed anything for Kbon Reviews. Bad, I know but I have been occupied in the last few months. I wrote a piece on the Fast and Furious 5 plus I am set to examine the music video by Phoenix Da Icefire on the Five Jewels. Before I continue, I would like to recommend all of you to check on the posts by a friend call Andre. His blog is www.nemesisthehunter.blogspot.com and has been doing some interesting stuff recently. Look out for the animation trailer, which is during Nemesis the Hunter's Mark issue 1. Follow his blog and support the cause. Right, now its back to my review on Season 10 of Smallville.





There are so many episodes this show has I would like to comment about but the one I would be glad to review the most is "Finale part 1 and 2". Its been almost a decade since the first Pilot episode aired in 2001. Not many TV shows last this long, hardly any even make it past the third season. For me, I watched it on and off when it was shown on the T4 Channel in the UK and on E4. I got back into the show when it hit Season 8 when Clark Kent (Tom Welling) had to face "the Ultimate Destroyer", Smallville's answer to Doomsday (Davis Bloome) played by Samuel Witwer. It was more interesting, plus I never saw what the fuss was about in their showdown, it was not that great but it wasn't terrible either.

Good:

"Finale Part 1" written by Al Septien and Turi Meyer and directed by Kevin Fair, to be honest, had a very slow pace. It was mostly about Clark's persistence in not being left at the altar, once Lois Lane (Erica Durance) began to have cold feet in the previous episode, "Prophecy". She became insecure of the fact she is taking on a big responsibility with grounding a lover of god-like calibre, especially a superhero. Despite its slow beginning it did have some good points. The messages of not forgetting the past but remembering them and learning from your history in order to put things right in the future was inspiring. These lessons were learned from Johnathan and Martha Kent (John Schneider and Annette O'toole) respectively. When it came down to the wedding, it just went out with a bang. Oliver Queen, Clark's best man, also known as Green Arrow, was unfortunately marked by the darkness in the form of an Omega symbol. It turned out Darkseid wanted to get rid of our Boy Scout for good by slipping Clark with gold kryptonite. This rare meteor rock could strip him of his powers for good.

Smack in the middle of "Finale Part 2", teleplay written by Brian Peterson and Kelly Souders but directed by Greg Beeman, after Clark lifts Oliver from the darkness by a calm, altruistic sense of persuasion, both heroes find an even larger threat in the form of a literal Hell on Earth. At this point, more action sequences kick in (finally) as it is where the script gets tight. One good thing about this 2 hour finale of this series is although it is a TV double bill, if you will, on the CW network, this feels more like a TV movie. This episode has the biggest cast, superbly talented, in season 10 and we have guest star galore with Allison Mack as the inquisitive, Oracle dweller, Chloe Sullivan. John Glover does well as usual in his portrayal of Lionel Luthor, this time of an alternate Earth. So too did Michael Rosenbaum who reprised his role as Lex Luthor.

Bad:

Despite all the highlights of this episode, there were some negative parts as well. Flaws of continuity have been present throughout e.g. the fight between Clark and Evil Oliver at the wedding. One minute they have toppled on a basin near the altar full of Holy Grail, the next shot both men appear dry. One instance, Lois, while in the Daily Planet arguing with a reporter about getting a seat at Air Force One and warning the President of an invasion. Here, Lois knocks out this reporter, but when she is on the ground, the victim is still moving afterwards. Its just these shots are not that consistent within the frames, either the editor did a bad job or its down to the actors. Another thing I am unsatisfied with is Clark's battle with Darkseid, in more ways than one, its the worst ever showdown with a major antagonist on Smallville. I can't ruin the whole show but expect the fight to be less than spectacular, at least his battle with General Zod in season 9 was better. It actually makes Darkseid too much of just a mere presence and not intimidating enough. The villain is supposed to be the hero's share in might or surpasses him/her in one way. Never his/her subordinate, although there are some exceptions but only to serve as comic effect. There is also lengthy montage during the little tussle, which was not at all necessary. Nevertheless, the production team did a great payoff at the end.

Overall:

Executive producers Brian Peterson and Kelly Souders did a fantastic job with the second half in the Finale. The beginning felt slow and unmovable, there were some parts in the 2-hour epic, which need a touch up but the rising force on an intergalactic scale allowed the pace to get more interesting. There was some brilliant set pieces, the lighting was perfect apart from messy cinematography and loud, blaring music in a few places. All the cast did wonderful with one small fluke by Cassidy Freeman as Tess Mercer, but her role has served a purpose that was true in character. As for the Superman suit, very Brandon Routh with a Christopher Reeve edge but its a shame Tom Welling is not seen much inside the costume. This is a must see guarantee, go and buy the DVD along with the box set while you're at it.


- Written by Kbon