norwich36: (Lexana regal)
norwich36 ([personal profile] norwich36) wrote2007-04-26 11:42 pm
Entry tags:

SV: Nemesis

Also known as the BEST EPISODE EVER.



Ok, I had a meeting that ran very late, and then watching the recording of the ep took about two hours because I kept rewinding and watching certain scenes over and over, and now it is very very late, so I think the heavy analysis will come later. This is all just total SQUEE at the BEST EPISODE EVER. Warning: extreme abuse of exclamation points. Proceed at your own risk.


--Clark and Lex's conversations in the tunnels=completely made of win. EVERYTHING we've ever wanted to see, other than actual kissage, right? I mean, Lex is not stupid--he know's Clark's invulnerable, even though he's now confronting disconfirming evidence. And that amazing line about how he NEEDED to believe Clark was special. And they actually have the "secrets" conversation! And instead of denying, Clark practically confirms it by accusing him of just looking for new ways to exploit people with special abilities. And later on, Clark feels guilty because maybe he's made Lex who he is! And he doesn't want to give up on Lex!

--And Lex saves him! Even after Clark thinks he has abandoned him (Lex! Lex!) Thank goodness, by the way, because I really needed to see some humanity in Lex again after last week, and we got that in spades. Yay! He saves Clark, and then Clark saves him--very reminiscent of Jitters, actually, only this time Lex actually is responsible for the crazy person taking him hostage--but I thought Clark having to hold him as they're climbing the ladders, even though he only has human strength, was a direct callback to Jitters.

--And yet, though Lex has been rehumanized for the audience (and Clark), he's still doing the master villain stuff, too, as we see at the end of the ep, which is the best of both worlds, as far as I'm concerned.

--And omigod, Lana completely kicked ass in this episode. I LOVE that she's completely gotten her Luthor on: threatening Lionel, and then coolly acquiring the suitcase, and shooting off the locks, and finding the tunnels, and then DOING NOTHING (and omg, the look on Chloe's face when she realized what Lana had been doing, or more accurately not doing, was priceless), and then BLACKMAILING Lionel, and then--that scene with Lex--just insert gibbering noises. I was absolutely screaming with glee at how well she played Lex in that scene, how every single thing she said was a dagger deliberately aimed at him, and a couple of them apparently struck home. I guess Lionel convinced her that Lex is a threat to Clark so she's going to continue playing him? And as far as I'm concerned, she can Lady MacBeth her way through all of next season, because I completely love this incarnation of Lana.

--And Martha! Finally we got to hear what she was thinking about Lionel, and I have to say I'm very glad she's not trusting him. And thank goodness Clark brought up the Lex-Lionel parallels in that conversation, because it was really about time.

--Oh, I almost forgot about Chloe, and that priceless bit where she's calling Clark "like a stalker ex-girlfriend, not that I was ever your girlfriend, it was just an analogy." Hee hee hee! I thought that was hilarious.

I love my show SO VERY MUCH. And next week looks fabulous too.
ext_1774: butterfly against blue background (Bound Together -- Lana and Lex)

[identity profile] butterfly.livejournal.com 2007-04-27 02:53 pm (UTC)(link)
That really was fantastic! All of the Big Three were amazing, but Lana was just so spectacular. The way she took all those things that she used to use subconscious and innocently and just manipulated and covered and worked with them... it blew me away. She was so incredibly smart in this episode, too. She's always been clever, but this is the first time we got to see her think so quickly on her feet and use what she knows.

And I loved seeing the difference between Clark and Lana/Chloe's morality. Chloe brings up the idea of maybe not saving Lex. Lana sits on the info to save Lex until she needs it to save Clark. Neither of these things thrill Clark. This is a very good, solid reason why Clark and Lana could never actually work out in the end -- Clark couldn't live with the things that Lana would be willing to do.

[identity profile] norwich36.livejournal.com 2007-04-27 03:40 pm (UTC)(link)
The way she took all those things that she used to use subconscious and innocently and just manipulated and covered and worked with them... it blew me away. She was so incredibly smart in this episode, too.

Oh yes! This reminds me of a conversation I had after last week's episode, I think maybe with [livejournal.com profile] huzzlewhat, about Lex using his past losses to manipulate people, straddling the line between sincerity and manipulation, but Lana's learned to do this much more rapidly and I think maybe even more effectively. It was fascinating to watch.

And I loved seeing the difference between Clark and Lana/Chloe's morality. Chloe brings up the idea of maybe not saving Lex. Lana sits on the info to save Lex until she needs it to save Clark. Neither of these things thrill Clark. This is a very good, solid reason why Clark and Lana could never actually work out in the end -- Clark couldn't live with the things that Lana would be willing to do.

Yes, and those scenes were interesting, because both Chloe and Lana had very valid reasons to be angry with Lex this week, so they were actually I think representing the more human perspective and Clark got to present the heroic perspective, which is always nice to see. Though I've seen a certain amount of criticism of Lana for sitting on the plans while just waiting for Lex to die, and while that certainly seems to be what that scene with Chloe was implying, if you actually do the math with the timeline (that bomb timer was set for 20 minutes, wasn't it?) or even just watch onscreen, Lana had *just* discovered the schematics to the tunnels right before Chloe walked in, so it's not like she had even really had time to make a definite decision to leave Lex there.

[identity profile] latxcvi.livejournal.com 2007-04-27 09:02 pm (UTC)(link)
but Lana's learned to do this much more rapidly and I think maybe even more effectively. It was fascinating to watch.

No, she's always been able to do this -- it's how she made off with a $160,000 car of Lex's in Void last season and it's what she used against the stalker in Trespass. This is just the first time where she's done it multiple times in one episode and with an array of people.

Lana had *just* discovered the schematics to the tunnels right before Chloe walked in, so it's not like she had even really had time to make a definite decision to leave Lex there.

You know, I actually thought it was odd that Chloe characterized it that way to Clark, to the point that I just read it as Chloe projecting her own feelings onto Lana, because you're right about the timeline. But then I decided to give it a pass because while I knew that Lana had only discovered the schematics right before Chloe walked in, Chloe didn't necessarily know that. From her perspective, it could have looked like Lana'd been ruminating over them for a while.

[identity profile] latxcvi.livejournal.com 2007-04-27 09:11 pm (UTC)(link)
No, she's always been able to do this -- it's how she made off with a $160,000 car of Lex's in Void last season and it's what she used against the stalker in Trespass. This is just the first time where she's done it multiple times in one episode and with an array of people.


I didn't mean to sound pedantic, btw. I was just noting that Lana's always had this capacity and she has used it in the past. This is just the first time we've really seen her use it a lot in one ep and with many different people (Lionel, the doctor, the two deputies, Lex).

[identity profile] norwich36.livejournal.com 2007-04-27 09:50 pm (UTC)(link)
No, she's always been able to do this -- it's how she made off with a $160,000 car of Lex's in Void last season and it's what she used against the stalker in Trespass. This is just the first time where she's done it multiple times in one episode and with an array of people.


Oh, no worries--that's actually a very good point. We've definitely seen her manipulate other folks with her own pain before; just never quite so effectively, I think. Really, my favorite part about this whole storyline, long may it continue, is that it is actually building on organic components of Lana's character, just changing her motivations a little bit and amping up her reasons to draw more on the less savory parts of her character.