greenlantern248
Sidekick
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2004
- Messages
- 1,334
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 31
Does anyone know where I can download this episode, I was working thursday so I missed it.
Thanks
Thanks
torrentsgreenlantern248 said:Thanks, and I do purchase the dvd I have all the seasons
its a type of glove archers use, it helps A LOTThe Sage said:Green Arrow's three fingered gloves. A nitpick, but a guy who's thief would usually cover his entire hand. Wouldn't his fingerprints be on the last thing he stole? Or if he touched anything in the area?
Venomfan said:its a type of glove archers use, it helps A LOT
![]()
AWESOME review!The Sage said:The SmarkVille Rant - "Arrow"
Ollie boma-ye! Ollie boma-ye!
It's all about the Ollie.
Was it me, or was this episode very Batman 1989-ish? With the mystery surrounding Green Arrow and the reveal at the end?
Let's get down to business.
.90 Run? I'd say so.
The Good -
Oliver Queen/Green Arrow. My first thoughts initially from his debut was..."they used the same cheesy vigilante music from that episode with the stupid Huntress ripoff! Hahaha!!" Fortunately I was jumping to conclusions, as that generic Elfman theme was only heard once. I initially thought the shot of Green Arrow ascending up the Luthor Corp looked cheap. Upon second viewing, it looked much better. The debut of the Emerald Archer was handled very well, from his stealing to his one-line quips to his trick arrows.
A very famous staple in his myth, the trick arrows are just as revered as the batarangs. I was hoping to see the boxing glove arrow, but no go. Maybe next time.
They also have alluded to Ollie's origin:
To my knowledge, Ollie landed on a deserted island after being washed overboard during an ocean cruise. I never read anything about his parents, so can't say whether this is right or not. But it's another great tie-in.
I loved the pacifist/fascist comment, and I hope to hear more about Ollie's political stance since that's one of the things he's known for. He was kinda Batman-ish, though that is to be expected. Crossbow was sweet, the regular bow was borderline ridiculous and almost had me flashing back to some of the crazy utlity belt gimmicks from Batman incarnations. But, it worked. Ollie's a millionnaire, so using he'd have the money to fashion a weapon like his bow. I've got comments on the costume for later. The voice synthesizer...nice touch.
I'm also digging the Green Arrow theme, or whatever gets played when Ollie is on screen. It has a swashbuckling flair to it which suits the character. Being a fan of Robin Hood and Zorro, it pulls my heart a bit.
Lex was smooth this week, and this is two weeks where I have been happy with Lex. His paranoia for Lana is well-warranted considering his last relationship ended with a nasty betrayal.
Clark was okay this week. I have my nitpicks about some of the things with him, but that's for later. His view of right and wrong is becoming blurred (though you'd think it already was). Ollie seems to be the one who will take Clark on the next step towards heroism, having going out helping people instead of waiting for someone to come to him like he's a private eye. Clark being concerned for Lois dating someone leading a double-life...good. He's experienced the consequences of it with Lana and knows how it will end. More specifically, it sets up the future romance with Lois, as he knows that he has to be completely honest with her in order for the relationship to work. Speaking of metaphors...
Hey, Lana seemed interesting for once.
The double-life metaphor was all over the place. Clark Kent - Smallville farmboy/superpowered alien; Lois Lane - Inquisitor writer/Chief of Staff. Oliver Queen - Boy millionnaire/Robin Hood styled vigilante. Then you have Lana playing Lex and showing new sides to her character. And of course, you have to wonder if Lionel really is leading a double-life himself.
The Bad:
One thing that annoyed me was Clark's reason for entering the investigation: He doesn't want his mother to be in debt to Lionel. Didn't make any sense to me. Lionel gives Martha a necklace to wear for the ball, he loans it to her. It gets stolen. Don't see how she would be in his debt. Just seemed like a forced way for Clark to get involved. Maybe I'm thinking too much about it.
The Queen coat of arms' shot made it way too obvious that it would be important to the story, especially since they hung the camera on it too long. You knew it would get referenced later. Nothing serious.
While Lana being curious about the technology made for interesting development, especially with the intentions of protecting Lex, her blackmailing people? Don't buy it. Felt way out of character for her. I can't imagine her blackmailing anybody. It felt very awkward. And maybe I don't remember, but did she know about the technology in Lex's possession before moving in?
Clark had me rolling my eyes this week. First, why didn't he use his x-ray vision to peer through Green Arrow's disguise? Wouldn't that be his first instinct? Next, he tosses GA through some museum artifact, not only revealing his abilities but setting off the alarm. At this stage, I would think Clark has gotten smarter in publicly using his powers. Now GA knows he has abilities, and museum cameras probably caught them on video. I mean, the videos caught Clark's blur on camera in season one. And couldn't the security guard have gotten a good look at CK before fading out?
Ollie gets defensive when Clark questions Green Arrow's code of honor. Then, he reveals that all of the stuff that's been stolen has been bought off of the blackmarket. Ollie has inadvertently given away that he's Green Arrow...and Clark is only in shock over the blackmarket scams? Ha, amazing. Is Clark thickheaded or what?
Green Arrow's three fingered gloves. A nitpick, but a guy who's thief would usually cover his entire hand. Wouldn't his fingerprints be on the last thing he stole? Or if he touched anything in the area?
Other thoughts:
I also found it funny that Lionel told Clark it's not wise to advertise your vulnerabilities, then later on Clark advertises his powers to Green Arrow. Some neat foreshadowing.
Does it anger Chloe that she's stuck writing obituaries in the basement while her cousin Lois, who is just now doing journalism while Chloe's been doing it since high school, is now writing headlines? Yeah, it's a tabloid, but it's a headline. Then top it off that Lois asks her to help with research. Feel the burn!!
The costume: I thought it looked like something an action figure would wear when basing it off of the stills. Seeing it in action and movement, I think it works great. A modern take on the classic GA/Robin Hood look.
If I had to nitpick anything, it'd be the gloves and the sunglasses. See above comments about the gloves. I think he should've worn a domino mask. He's Green Arrow, not Blade. And I don't think it would've looked anymore ridiculous. How could the mask stick to his face? Spirit gum. Batman & Robin sucks, but I like how they designed Nightwing's mask. Maybe a dark green mask could've worked. With lenses that have nightvision. Those starlight lenses that are the rage with millionnaire vigilantes. Too campy? Umm, hello, trick arrows?
In his early days, Ollie didn't have a beard. So he used a fake one when he went out as Green Arrow. Wish that was incorporated here. Would've made it even better.
Clark's thinking issues and Lana blackmailing people aside, this was a very good episode, especially because of Hartley's work as Green Arrow. I'm guessing this arc will carry first part of the season, which is great but kinda sad and awkward at the same time.
****1/4 stars for this one.
boyscouT said:"Let's take off those glasses....."
-Lois Lane
AHAHAHAH!!!!!111 classic superman!!!!!
The Batman said:GA is too much like batman.
And ASS is right....if they really wanted bruce on the show, they couldve given him an alias. Adam Knight wouldve been perfect for that.
The Batman said:GA is too much like batman.
And ASS is right....if they really wanted bruce on the show, they couldve given him an alias. Adam Knight wouldve been perfect for that.
celldog said:No he's not. Batman would never steal from the rich.
But if you know GA history, he's really a copy of Batman. Arrow cave, Arrow car etc..........
The Sage said:Aren't there other gloves that fit the entire hand that can work? Leaving a few fingers exposed doesn't work for a guy who steals from the rich and gives to the poor, IMO.
AgentPat said:Oh, one more thing, regarding the Robin Hood M.O. and stealing from the rich to give tot he poor - I thought that was all part of Ollie's plan? Based on future episode's spoilers, he's doing that to flush out other "heroes," right? He had his suspicions in Sneeze when his employee told him there was somebody else in the room with special abilities when Lex and Lana was saved from the fire. Whether or not he set his sights on Clark by targeting Lionel's gift to Martha is debatable, but he apparently knew that Flannel King Clark - based out of a Kansas farm loft no less - was saving people.
The Question said:Archery requires a good deal of finger dexterity. You want some fingers covered so you don't injure yoruself, but others exposed so you can handle it delecately.
The Batman said:Yes...he kind of is too much like batman.
And guess what? That was the golden age. You know what happened after that? Green Arrow actually became his own character.
How about that?
The Sage said:Understood, but for a guy who goes around acting like Robin Hood with the stealing from the rich thing, aren't there other alternative gloves he could use? Have fingers exposed could leave behind fingerprints. That's all I'm saying.
AgentPat said:Regarding Clark showing off his abilities to Oliver in the museum, he had just caught Queen's arrow in mid flight and stopped Ollie's useless girlyman attempt to clock him to the floor with a thrown fist. Green Arrow doesn't have any superpowers, so punching Clark is like punching a brick wall. Probably hurts more, too LOL. The 30 ft. chuck just capped it off, not to mention the fact that such a gag is a SV staple. I also think it's logical to assume Oliver disabled any cameras before he entered the room. He casually reset the laser motion detectors, so any cameras would have been a no-brainer.
AgentPat said:Contrary to popular opinion, Clark isn't dumb LOL, but it's no secret that he thinks with his physicality first before intellect. I always get a chuckle from Gene Hackman's Lex Luthor in S:TM when he says, brains over muscle, or something to that effect. Batman in the comics is the same way to Superman.
SV's Clark is true to Superman form when it comes to the "I'm not here to play games" 'tude. He's an immovable object and he knows it, but stopping somebody without hurting them is difficult. So when somebody continues to push Clark's buttons, he tosses them around like a rag doll. In the Smallville-verse, the Kryptonian super chuck stops all non-superpowered villains without killing them. It's a cliché that works - whether Lexod does it to Lionel, Alien Barbie does it to Lana, or Eric Summers does it to Clark.
AgentPat said:Oh, one more thing, regarding the Robin Hood M.O. and stealing from the rich to give tot he poor - I thought that was all part of Ollie's plan? Based on future episode's spoilers, he's doing that to flush out other "heroes," right? He had his suspicions in Sneeze when his employee told him there was somebody else in the room with special abilities when Lex and Lana was saved from the fire. Whether or not he set his sights on Clark by targeting Lionel's gift to Martha is debatable, but he apparently knew that Flannel King Clark - based out of a Kansas farm loft no less - was saving people.
avidreader said:Why is it so hard to assume that he wipes away his fingerprints from whatever he steals. Do they have to show you every minute little detail?
The Sage said:Heh, I honestly doubt he wiped his fingerprints while moving. That's too many fingerprints to be wiping away.