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 Strike back season 3 ep 9

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Alize
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Alize


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Strike back season 3 ep 9 Empty
PostSubject: Strike back season 3 ep 9   Strike back season 3 ep 9 EmptyFri Oct 05, 2012 11:13 pm

http://www.craveonline.com/tv/previews/197391-exclusive-strike-back-season-2-episode-9-preview-scene

Exclusive ‘Strike Back’ Season 2 Episode 9 Preview Scene

Scott and Stonebridge track down a truck containing one of the stolen nukes as Section 20 hunts for Knox.
By Blair Marnell
October 05, 2012

After managing to stay ahead of Section 20 for weeks, Conrad Knox (Charles Dance).is finally on the run as a fugitive. But Knox’s nuclear endgame has only just begun.

In our exclusive clip from the penultimate episode of “Strike Back” season 2, Sgt. Damien Scott (Sullivan Stapleton) and Sgt. Damien Scott (Sullivan Stapleton) prepare to take a truck containing one of Knox’s stolen nuclear weapons before Scott and Stonebridge suffer a little communication breakdown...

And in our second clip of the week, Major Rachel Dalton (Rhona Mitra) close in on the truck’s location as one of the guys reveals a certain fondness for a famous sci-fi franchise.

Cinemax’s synopsis for this week’s episode is pretty spoiler filled, so skip ahead if you don’t want to know what’s coming up!

Now a wanted man, Knox hatches a plan for the nuclear bombs that involves several African nations plagued by political unrest and unstable militia factions. When the transport for one of the nukes is recognized at the scene of a crime, Stonebridge and Scott mount a dangerous pursuit. Dalton confronts Christy Bryant (Stephanie Vogt) about the CIA’s dealings in Africa. Matlock (Vincent Regan) reveals his true motives behind joining Knox to Hanson (Shane Taylor), who continues to be a major distraction for Stonebridge.

“Strike Back” season 2 continues tonight at 10pm on Cinemax!
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Alize
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Strike back season 3 ep 9 Empty
PostSubject: Re: Strike back season 3 ep 9   Strike back season 3 ep 9 EmptySat Oct 06, 2012 9:14 pm

http://www.avclub.com/articles/season-2-episode-9,85973/

Strike Back
Cinemax Philip Winchester, Sullivan Stapleton
B-
“Season 2, Episode 9” S2 / E9
by Myles McNutt October 5, 2012

This season of Strike Back has been building to a final showdown between Michael Stonebridge and Craig Hanson, and so it was strange to see the two characters standing face-to-face on the outskirts of Johannesburg at the end of the penultimate episode as opposed to the finale. Although, it was less strange to see the scene turn into an anti-climax, the arrival of a police helicopter signaling one more near escape for Craig Hanson.

I’m honestly still unsure what this scene is signaling. On the one hand, this could be your typical tease: Hanson will escape from the authorities, Stonebridge will intercept, and we’ll get the cathartic vengeance we desire. However, on the other hand, this could be the end point itself. Stonebridge demonstrates he isn’t so blinded with rage that he’s willing to get himself killed (which would have happened if he had shot Hanson), while Hanson lives to scheme another day and pop up as a recurring villain (not unlike Nina on 24, if we want to draw a comparison and you don’t mind me spoiling a show that’s over a decade old).

Strike Back is officially returning for a third—Cinemax—season next year, so there’s every chance they’re planning ahead for the future. Shane Taylor brings a compelling energy to the character, and I like the idea of recurring villains popping up on occasion, so I see the logic behind potentially leaving Hanson in play. However, at the same time, this really did lack any of the sense of climax I would have expected from such a showdown. “Episode Nine” was largely focused on cleaning up loose ends and introducing new characters to vamp for time, and so the idea that this could also provide Stonebridge and Hanson with their proper resolution strikes me as counter-intuitive.

Of course, penultimate episodes always end up seeming at least a bit counter-intuitive, as writers are forced to hold off on actual resolution while still delivering a sense of finality and maintaining momentum. It’s why Game of Thrones, for example, has taken to treating the penultimate episode as its climax, and then using the final episode as a denouement. Unless that really was the resolution to Stonebridge’s battle with Hanson, “Episode Nine” chooses not to go in this direction, with Conrad Knox still on the loose and Scott off to track down the now rogue Christy Bryant as the episode comes to a close. Instead of bringing stories to an end, it’s focused on finding a way to provide an exciting 45 minutes of television where nothing of consequence happens.

“Episode Nine” demonstrates why Strike Back is in a good position to make a filler episode exciting, as it’s still capable of delivering strong action sequences. The opening car chase has some stunning long shots of the two vehicles driving through the town, and it was great to see some actual aftermath from the explosion of a nuclear warhead (as opposed to everyone just casually going on with their lives without being checked for radiation, etc.). Similarly, the final sequence was a nice case of misdirection: Whereas Conrad being at another camp last week was predictable, there was a chance they would catch Conrad this time around, making the switch with the shoe tracker more effective. I had forgotten about the homeless guy before he showed up in the elevator, and while no one we know died in the explosion it was still a nice bit of narrative trickery.

But is there anything to show for it? The introduction of a new character—terrorist lawyer Christian Lucas—at this late stage in the season seems pointless when you’re going to kill him forty minutes later, and Knox’s expansion into other countries—Nigera, Somalia, and Sudan—is exposition more than plot development. The introduction of the South African authorities to take over the investigation proves useful at the end of the episode, but the unceremonious way they’re introduced—with Dalton just stumbling upon the Special Task Force commander—only calls attention to the show’s need for some generic law enforcement types to be set on fire later on.

What’s strange is that Strike Back episodes rarely feel like filler, at least in the traditional sense. While I’ve talked in the past about how the first part of the two-part episodes can occasionally lack resolution, there’s a clear promise of resolution in the second part of the episode. Here, however, everything that’s introduced is removed by the end of the episode, existing purely to ensure that the show has something to do while it delays the climax until the finale. Rather than streamlining and simplifying, the show inelegantly tells Christian Lucas’ story in an expedited fashion, a decision that turns “Episode Nine” into a rare stand-alone segment of a show known for at least aspiring to two-part narratives.

Does this temper enthusiasm for the finale? Not necessarily: Charles Dance is still doing some great work as Knox, I still have an interest in how Matlock plays out this endgame given his morality struggle, and Cinemax’s unwillingness to announce casting for the third season means that everyone is in play as far as life and death is concerned. But instead of was adding to these circumstances, “Episode Nine” was more calling attention to them. Matlock cleaning his U.N. medal was too on-the-nose, while Knox’s plan was rehashed more than evolved (even if it was done in yet more beautiful locales, such as the vista that opened the episode). When you’ve been writing about the show every week, and when you go into the final episodes of the season expecting something close to a climax, it’s a bit of a buzzkill to discover that part one of the finale isn’t really part of the finale at all. As much as I appreciate the long shots and explosions that make the show distinctive, they can’t hide the fact a penultimate episode that plays largely as filler is a disappointment.

Stray observations:

I mention it above, but I appreciated the attention to detail in demonstrating what would happen if the nuke exploded in the way it did. It would have been really easy to skip over that, and they didn’t.
I feel Charles Dance’s performance has successfully sold us Knox as someone who wants power and is willing to go to any lengths to get it, so why does Dalton have to keep telling us she “knows him” and that he will play every card he has? It’s a lot of “Tell, don’t show” logic, and it felt particularly obnoxious here.
Knox and Matlock’s method for killing Lucas seemed incredibly dangerous to me. Like, couldn’t Matlock have lost a finger if Knox’s aim wasn’t perfect? Or if Lucas struggled in a particular direction?
Scott on his love for Star Trek: “You gotta love a show where they keep asking Mr. Scott for more thrust.”
I have to say that I really appreciated Cinemax’s decision to avoid mentioning any cast members for season three lest it spoil the finale. Do we think this is just a smokescreen and everyone makes it through alive? Or is it possible that Winchester or Stapleton are actually moving on? Or is it just a way to hide the more typical departure of Mitra after a season-long arc?

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PostSubject: Re: Strike back season 3 ep 9   Strike back season 3 ep 9 EmptyTue Oct 09, 2012 7:32 pm

http://www.craveonline.com/tv/reviews/197495-strike-back-209-review

STRIKE BACK 2.09 Review
By Blair Marnell

With Knox on the run, the nuclear weapons are sold in Africa as Stonebridge finally catches up with the man who killed his wife.

After building up Conrad Knox (Charles Dance) as a threat throughout the current season of “Strike Back,” it’s somewhat disconcerting to see the man brought so low.

Once, Knox was rich and powerful with a private militia at his command and nuclear weapons at his disposal. But after last week’s episode, all Knox has left are the warheads and a few mercenaries who haven’t already been killed by Section 20. Knox is also apparently willing to sell the weapons to terrorists if it will further his own agenda.

Knox’s motivation for his actions has been somewhat less than clear. Earlier in the season, Knox laid out his ambitions to turn Africa into a nuclear superpower. However, it was left unsaid if Knox expected to be the person leading Africa into a new age as a way to grab even more power for himself. It’s funny when Major Rachel Dalton (Rhona Mitra) attempts to predict Knox’s next move and she assures the people around her that she knows him... because even we, the audience don’t really know Knox.

As a villain, Knox hasn’t been developed very well this season despite Dance making the most out what little material he’s been given. But there’s only so much a performance can bring to the role. Now that we’re so late in the game, “Strike Back” is also attempting to flesh out Craig Hanson (Shane Taylor) and Karl Matlock (Vincent Regan). In a brief scene together, Matlock is able to tell Hanson what drove him to become a mercenary while Hanson offers the bleak reason that he is staying with Knox: he has nothing else.

Less convincing is Stephanie Vogt as CIA operative Christy Bryant. In small doses, Vogt has been tolerable. But as Christy’s role has grown larger (and her alliance with Knox was revealed) the character has become incredibly annoying. It doesn’t help that Section 20 knew that she was acting against their interests and yet they still allowed her in their new control room where she learned who was turned into their newest asset against Knox. That’s pretty sloppy writing.

Sometimes, Sgt. Michael Stonebridge (Philip Winchester) and Sgt. Damien Scott (Sullivan Stapleton) really are the only thing holding this show together. Winchester and Stapleton have developed their chemistry so well that even brief exchanges about “Star Trek” and the proper way to count down before storming a room were hilarious. I can’t imagine “Strike Back” without Scott or Stonebridge, but I suppose there’s always the possibility that one or both of them could be killed off eventually.

The action in this episode was on par with the rest of the season, particularly during an exciting sequence in which Scott and Stonebridge pursued a truck with one of the stolen nuclear weapons... which exploded when local police fired on the truck without realizing what was inside of it.

That was a great and startling moment which was almost immediately undercut by the fact that few people (if anyone) appear to have been dosed with harmful or fatal doses of radiation. It’s irresponsible storytelling to show a nuclear weapon going off without major consequences. What is this, “24” season 6?

The second major action sequence was the nice fakeout that led to the explosive deaths of several local police officers. Another weakness of “Strike Back” is its tendency to use stock characters. This week, we got a friendly (if a little egotistical) police liaison who ignores Dalton’s tactical advice and ends up getting most of his men killed. That character was such a cartoon that the deaths of his men had very little dramatic impact.

We do care about Stonebridge’s quest to avenge his wife and take out Craig Hanson. And while I enjoyed their confrontation here, this story has already played out. It literally took an act of God (or a conveniently timed police helicopter to keep Hanson alive and presumably ready to fight Stonebridge one last time. It may have been a mistake to let Hanson stick around throughout the entire season. But that’s a flaw that can easily be overlooked if Stonebridge and Hanson get a memorable ending for their feud next week.

As far as cliffhangers go, I wasn’t impressed by Knox’s willingness to use the two remaining nukes in Africa as a means to send a message and possibly resurrect his dream of a more powerful and relevant Africa on the global stage. Knox may have been sincere about his plans, but the moment lacked the impact that “Strike Back” has previously managed to achieve in older cliffhangers.

That said, I’m still looking forward to next Friday’s season finale. And hopefully, both Scott and Stonebridge will make it through the finale alive so we can have another full season of the best action duo on television.




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