It's very rare that I want a show to come back from hiatus as much as Burn Notice. A case can be made that the fourth season is its best to date. Thankfully, the wait is over.
I don't think it shocks anyone that Michael is alive after being shot at the end of "Guilty As Charged." "Eyes Open" takes place a mere three days later, as all of John Barrett's misdeeds are being exposed, and he's recovering from his injuries in the hospital. There's a great callback to the Burn Notice pilot when Fiona kicks him in an attempt to get him to come around, just as she did to wake him up when he was first dumped in Miami.
Once Michael is up and moving, he wants to pick up where he left off, much to Madeline's annoyance. The hospital is the last place he'd like to be. However, being there means that he's in the right place at the wrong time, as he and Sam learn about a bomb that kills several people and injures more. Deafened in the blast is a guy named Walt who worked for the now-late Dale Lawson (Michael Rooker) - the kidnapper we met in "Guilty As Charged." Who would want Lawson and his people out of the picture? The lawyer whose daughter they kidnapped, of course! The lightbulb goes on over Michael's head and he pays a visit to Adam Scott (Danny Pino), who is much more cranky and much more armed than he was when we first met him. I know several of my regular readers picked up on the vibe that he was coming back, so have a cookie if you were one of them. I liked Danny Pino when he was on Cold Case, so I'm not complaining.
Scott's become kind of a smarmy pain in the behind in the last seventy-two hours, and while he doesn't admit to anything, it's obvious that he hired someone to do his dirty work. As if that's not bad enough, Vaughn is waiting for Michael to get home, just to say that he's leaving Miami and that "someone new will be in touch when the dust settles." I'm surprised he leaves so quietly, but I can only wonder who's going to be taking his place.
Once he's gone, Fiona tells Michael that she and Sam believe one of Barrett's men must have made off with the briefcase, and they've identified the one rogue among the bunch: Mark Sweeney. Sam is batting 1.000 this episode, as he has also done his legwork on Scott's clients, and fingered Dennis Barfield, who's not only a bomber but a clinical narcissist, and whom he describes as "a trust fund psycho." Michael tries to sneak into Dennis's apartment, but can't escape in time and finds himself looking another gun in the face. He makes the best of it and convinces Dennis that he's an admirer of the man's handiwork. It keeps him from getting shot, but Dennis tells him there's more mayhem on the way.
During the commercial break, we meet Artie Maleschi, the stunt coordinator for Burn Notice. The man deserves a cookie. Probably the entire bag of cookies.
Although unenthused that he didn't just shoot Dennis, Fiona tells Michael that Mark Sweeney's car is sitting in a police impound. He advises her to take Jesse with her, and so she meets Jesse at her brand-new house. Jesse is still cranky, which I can't exactly blame him for considering that it's only been 72 hours, but he agrees to help her. The two of them put on a great performance as a discordant couple, and bribe the impound lot attendant to get access to the car. Jesse finds a University of Miami parking slip in the vehicle and Fiona surmises Sweeney may have taken the Bible there for help in decoding it.
Michael picks around in Dennis's brain a bit more, so Sam can sneak in and search his place. Sam calls Michael to tell him that he's uncovered the existence of more bombs. Michael deduces from his chat with Dennis that they probably have some unreliable radio detonators. Armed with that information, he shows Scott just what Dennis has been up to. Scott tells him that Dennis said Walt is his next target, and where the bomb is. He decides to follow Michael's advice this time, and tries to call Dennis off, getting himself shot. "He's dead," Dennis says, calling Michael from Scott's phone. "Guess who's next?" Aw, Danny Pino. Your character turned into a real jerk this episode, but I'll still kind of miss you.
Michael and Sam find Walt and Alicia at the address given to them by Scott. They find the bomb is inside a mysteriously delivered flatscreen TV. To make things worse, Walt is legally deaf after the South Beach bombing so he can barely hear anything they say.
At the University of Miami, putting Coby Bell's years of chasing suspects on Third Watch to good use, Jesse pursues a guy who dealt with Sweeney. Once caught, the kid confesses that while he couldn't decode the files, he gave him the name of an engineer named Justin Walsh at a place called SXG.
Michael has the insane idea of putting the bomb in the pool, letting it blow up on schedule, and triangulating Dennis's location from the trigger signal. They find out he's in Fiona's neighborhood, and Michael realizes that Scott must have told Dennis about him and Fiona before he was killed. Fiona barely escapes before Dennis shoots her, and the cops turn up shortly thereafter. Realizing that he has to get Dennis to tell him where the bombs are, Michael goes into Fiona's after him, while Sam and Fiona get the cops to stay off their radios, lest the bomb in her house accidentally detonate.
Dennis knows that he's done for, and so does Michael. Appealing to Dennis's need for attention, Michael coaxes the locations of the bombs out of him by pretending that he can finish the crazy man's work for him. Once he has them, he walks out pretending as if Dennis had him taken hostage.
That's when Jesse, radio in hand, decides to detonate the bomb in order to prevent the cops from going in and getting blown up. Without hesitation, he says, "Sometimes you gotta put the rabid dog down." He certainly is right that a lot of cops could have been needlessly killed should Dennis have detonated the bomb when they tried to apprehend him, but it doesn't take a genius to realize that's not his entire motivation. One look at his face makes that clear. Jesse has certainly become a more hardened individual after what he's been through (again, not much of a stretch), and it will be interesting to see how that change of heart will affect his interactions with the other characters.
(I have to laugh at the "spoilers" people leaked for this episode, though. Saying Fiona suffers "a major loss" at Jesse's hands? Monetarily, perhaps, but it's not as if she lost an arm or anything. Wording it like that just seems a big fake-out, not to mention a way to wind up the anti-Jesse fans. Okay, off my soapbox now.)
At home after everything, Michael tells Madeline that even he doesn't know why he does what he does. Her Zen response? "Whatever. Maybe you've got some repressed crap, you know?" Oh, Maddie, how I love you. Especially because you've bought Michael another pair of awesome sunglasses.
With that, Michael's off to meet Jesse, thanking him for taking out Dennis and for saving his life from Barrett's men. The two go to check out Justin Walsh, and they find Walsh has killed Mark Sweeney and taken off with the information they need. "He has a three-day head start," Michael ruminates with a grimace. And here we go again...
As I said in my advance review, I'm impressed by how this episode matches so well with "Guilty As Charged," down to the details. Jason Tracey has written a very attentive script; I feel as if you could run those two episodes together and it would flow perfectly. He also doesn't take the easy way out and jump forward so he can ignore all the loose ends left by the midseason finale; he has the characters affected by what happened. Plus, that callback to the pilot makes me smile every time I watch it. The episode ties up what happened in "Guilty As Charged," while starting us off on a whole new adventure. I can't wait to see where the show takes us next.
It won't take us long to get there. We have just over a month left of Burn Notice: according to listings, the final two episodes of this season will air back-to-back on December 16. I do love, however, how Burn Notice airs right after Nikita. It's a perfect block of spy escapades in the middle of the week. (Shame, though, that Nikita is in reruns for the next three weeks.) Nothing better on a Thursday night than sneaking around, blowing stuff up, and saving the day. Welcome back, Burn Notice.


Great Recap, I'm a huge Burn Notice fan and like you, could not wait for it's return
ReplyDeleteThank you! I'm almost kind of bummed that we only get six more episodes this season even though we knew it's just the back portion.
ReplyDeleteNice recap, but have to disagree that Danny Pino's character was also a jerk in the last episode as well. I was hoping that his character was going to be killed off by Fionia. I never expected the bomber to kill him. The rest of the episode was pretty good, a bit slow. I love how Jesse hit the button and Fi's house blew up. Also the Sunglass of Justice at the end, pretty neat !!!!!
ReplyDeleteThis was a great recap. I love Burn Notice, but the episode was just ok. The show has had better episodes. The only part i liked about the episode was the callback to the pilot with Fiona kicking Michael's bed to wake him up. I think that the post-betrayal Jesse is interesting, but still doesn't make me like him. I have had some issues with him since he came on, but maybe this new Jesse will put my issues to rest.
ReplyDeleteI was saying he was a jerk in the last seventy-two hours (the time difference between the last episode and this one). He must have moved pretty fast to get all that together in three days!
ReplyDeleteWe'll agree to disagree on that! Like a lot of Burn Notice episodes, you have to look at the episode as not simply a standalone hour of television, but as the smaller piece of a whole. For example, a large part of what made "Blind Spot" such a great episode was how it really advanced the season's overall narrative and opened up a lot of possibilities. "Eyes Open" tied up all the stuff we worried about over the midseason hiatus, and now it's set us on a new story track with the team pursuing this Walsh character. It syncs perfectly with the episode before it. There's a lot to be said for not just what happened in the episode, but also how it continues the arc of the series.
ReplyDeletePlus he shaved his beard, big different ( I never liked him with a beard,) The second scene with him before he was killed reminded me a lot of Pino's Character on Cold Case, Scotty. Especially that last look.
ReplyDeleteIn the last episode he also got his daughter killed, which labled him as a jark for pulling the crap that he did.
Aside from that, I loved how Mike got inside Dennis's head, even tried to pretend that he was his biggest fan. The episode was very explosive, Jesse seems to be pushing for the leader position. He knows how to lead, but we'll see how that goes. Is it just me or was there less Funny Sam Axe, moments. I think this episode was lacking a lot, but it still was intense.
Although it wasn't a let down, I think there was a lot of foreshadowing of what's yet to come.
Oh, yeah. The facial hair and the fact that he was growing his hair out - I was like, "That is not a good look on you, Danny."
ReplyDeleteDid they say his daughter had been killed? I must have missed that. The only reference I heard to her was Michael telling Scott that prison visits are hard on kids. Regardless of whether or not she died, his ex-wife is going to have a lot to deal with. I can guess now why she's the ex.
There were less funny Sam moments this episode, but I forgive that because he's the one who provided most of the major intel that got the story started. He may not have been funny, but he was definitely useful!
No his daughter didn't die, she's alive. The only thing I heard was, "Go spend time with your daughter, prison visits are hard on kids."
ReplyDeleteIf you remember his ex was still his ex before their daughter was kidnapped. Has nothing to do with that, the cause of their divorce was never known. I would have preferred to see Scott being arrested or seen in jail at the end. Dennis killing him was kind of weak, the episode needed more, at least the storyline got resolved.
Okay, I got confused because you said "In the last episode he also got his daughter killed," and I wasn't sure what you were referring to.
ReplyDeleteI never said that Scott's divorce had anything to do with the kidnapping. My point was that the way he reacted to it showed a side of him that made me understand why his ex-wife may have left him. At least, it made me want to slap him.
In the last episode Scott made arraingment for his daughter to live with his ex out of the country. It does take two in a relationship, but we'll never know. I have a feeling that Scott purposely got himself killed, knowing that there wasn't a way out besides doing jail time.
ReplyDeleteHe took Mike's advice, knowing that his life was already over
I really did not think that the episode Blind Spot was a great episode, story wise. In fact it was probably the worst episode of Burn Notice I have ever watched. The only good part about the episode is the end when it is reveled that Jesse found out. So, i get what your talking about with the overall narrative and how it was advanced. But everything else in the episode was hard to watch. I have never had so much trouble watching an episode of Burn Notice before, like i did with Blind Spot.
ReplyDeleteI do agree with you about Eyes Open and how it tied up loose ends and set us on to a new story arc.
I thought that this was a very strong episode, but very different from a lot of previous episodes. First of all, with Michael being injured he was not able to be all Mr. Awesome Action Man like he typically is. He was really limited in what he could do physically, which I think sort of threw him off his game a bit. It will be interesting to see how he deals with this limitation.
ReplyDeleteAlso, there was the whole thing of Jesse not wanting to help them, yet begrudgingly doing so anyway. I think that he believed Fiona when she said that they only lied about what they did to him, and not who they were. I have a feeling that he will be around for a while longer, though he has far from completely forgiven them (Michael most of all). He no doubt has his own agenda, but I think that he's going to stick with them.
Thirdly, Sam's part as the comic relief was certainly downplayed in this episode, but it was a nice change of pace. His wisecracks and unique brand of humor are always welcome, but it's nice to see his more business-oriented side too.
I agree that there was a perfect flow in action from the mid-season finale to this one; even though in reality it's been several months, it almost seemed like no time had passed since the end of "Guilty As Charged". Also, it was great to go from one butt-kicking show (Nikita) right into another (Burn Notice). It's the perfect end to my Thursdays.
i so agree with you brittany and Blind spot was not a bad episode i liked it. just because it had more of sam but he made it funny
ReplyDeleteI like the episode and I agree that it tied in nicely with the last one. I just thought the pacing was a bit slow and I wasn't engrossed into Dennis' storyline. It came off as old hat. I do like the new Jesse and I loved Maddie at the end of this one.
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