Person of Interest came with a lot of expectations, at least for me. Jonathan Nolan is my favorite screenwriter and when I heard he had created a show that Bad Robot was pitching to various networks, that was all the information I need to decide that I was going to watch this show. Of course, that sort of thinking puts a lot of expectations on the show, like I said. When the Pilot episode aired, I watched it with a certain amount of cynicism because no way it could meet my unrealistic expectations, and it didn't. The episode exceeded my expectations; it did not just excel at one or two departments, it was a great pilot overall. And ever since that episode, the show has continued to blown our minds with each new episode.
That this show had not yet delivered a single bad episode put that much more pressure on the finale to be good. And it came full circle, because I watched the finale with the same sort of cynicism that I had before watching the first episode. Was it a finale worthy of the incredible first season? Yes, it was.
The number-of-the-week is Caroline Turing whose online profile Finch deems to be "carefully managed". She is a psychologist who may be targeted by one of her clients. Reese then follows their SOP: bluejacks her phone, monitors her workplace and eventually goes in as a patient. A client called Hans Friedrickson becomes the top suspect.
Reese and Turing now find themselves stuck in Grand Point Hotel with both HR and FBI on their assess. FBI want Reese and HR want Turing. With the hotel under FBI surveillance and HR getting their information from Simmons, Finch's initial plan to get them out is foiled. While Finch scrambles to find another way out, Reese is dodging two teams of armed foes within the hotel. Not something you can keep doing for a long time. Turing, who initially diagnosed him as paranoid retracts it after seeing all the craziness around them to which Reese quotes Joseph Heller from Catch-22.
"Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they aren't after you" |
Finch discovers another way to get Reese out. He asks Reese to take the freight elevator to parking sublevel four where there is an old service tunnel which leads out to an old water treatment plant at the seaport. Zoe discovers that the real Hans Friedrickson is actually away on a business trip. The one we saw was a Jimmy White who was blackmailed by some anonymous party into impersonating Hans. The mystery seems to go even deeper than the shitstorm that it looks on the surface.
Carter suspects it is Fusco who has been feeding HR intel and confronts him only to find out that Fusco, too, has been helping "the man in the suit and another guy". Carter confirms this with the description of "the other guy". Fusco tells Carter he knows everyone inside HR and promises her that they can take them down once all this is over and they head over to help out Reese.
Let's face it. We knew this was gonna happen eventually. |
As Finch waits for Turing to come out, Alicia gets into the car and demands he go with her and shut down the machine. She blames the machine for her current predicament and the death of Nathan. Finch explains to her that he machine is not bad in and of itself. But the people they gave it to shouldn't have been trusted. He in turn blames her for paying corrupt cops to target an innocent woman to get to him and just when she says she has no idea what he is talking about, a gunshot to the head kills her. If the previous scene hadn't done it, this makes it absolutely clear. Turing is not who she says he is. But it's too late.
Zoe calls Reese and tells him Turing had somehow found out how they operated and set the whole thing up so that they would find her. Turing aka Root explains to Finch that she put herself in danger but trusted them to save her. Reese reaches the seaport to find Alicia's dead body and no Finch. Fusco sends an anonymous mail to the FBI that leads to the arrest of the top brass of HR, except Simmons.
At first, I thought this is like Eagle Eye and the machine has started communicating with Reese to save Finch. It is one possibility, I won't rule it out. Although, another more realistic possibility is that Finch has been captured and since he has access to the machine, the "continuity of operations" is compromised. And the phone call he received could be completely unrelated. I am sure any number of people could be tracking Reese and are trying to contact him. But we can't know for sure what all of that meant until next September.
Jonathan Nolan and Greg Plageman's writing was great. Richard J. Lewis, who previously directed "Root Cause", the episode that introduced Root, directed this one very well. I think in the end it's a job well done both as a finale, and as a Person of Interest episode. Season 2 can't be here soon enough!
Sorry if it's not quite as polished as my other reviews. Did not have a lot of time to do this one.
ReplyDeleteIncredible finale. Can't wait for season 2.
ReplyDeleteGreat review Arun.
ReplyDeleteEven if I thought the episode was closer to "good" than to "awesome" I think it was one of the better finales I watched this year. So many were average at best or outright bad!
I wish I had not expected Turing was Root from her first or second scene. A lot of the drama in that episode played off that being a surprise and I think knowing Root's identity (as it were) ruined a big part of the episode for me.
The only part I would argue is the closure factor. I really don't think there was closure in most of the plots at all. That is not necessarily a bad thing either. The HR arc as well as this most recent FBI task force were mostly closed out I agree, as well as Carter and Fusco not realizing they both were working for Team Machine.
- I would have liked a little more from Alicia Corwin, more than the generic these people are bad etc.
- There was no vital player revealed in the episode. We did get that in previous episodes with Reese's old partner being alive though. If Root was revealed to be working for someone that would have upped the ante too.
- The episode also did not set up an obvious Season 2 arc, even if it did set up the Season 2 premiere quite well. Unless Root goes on for some time (I doubt that will happen) or Finch stays in the wind for a number of episodes and much of the season is about tracking him down and rescuing him (which I also doubt).
I think mostly the reason I was somewhat let down by the actual finale is that the previous 3 or 4 episodes had been so brilliant and each was almost a mini-finale in their own right. I guess the finale was just missing something for me.... likely the lack of drama and intensity due to knowing Turing was Root immediately. It was probably a 7.5 out of 10 for me.
i loved the cliffahnger and i agree with you on every word. this tv sow is brilliant and i can't wait for s02!
ReplyDeletei must say this was the best finale of the season. This show, which i thought would be terrible, is my second favorite show, period. my favorite line was actually from Finch, after Carter and Fusco find out, when he called "I know you have some questions, but time is running short" or something. VERY schoolteacher....lol
ReplyDeleteas for the ending, my belief is that the computer is self-aware, self-sustaining, and self operating. I believe it decided to help John. However, i do not believe the machine itself called him like some. i think it has a human 'partner' so to speak. it can make all the decisions it wants, but without someone to relay them or put them in motion, it's useless. so i think the computer has a PERSON who makes all the phone calls for it. as for me, i think it's Nathans son Will.
oh this will be hardest four months EVER!!!!
I like your idea about the computer's partner, but i don't believe this is the case. I am thinking that instead of actually calling Reese himself, the computer instead will take advantage of the fact that it can access phones throughout the world and will actually activate someone's phone to call Reese without them knowing - someone who can help him in this particularly situation. So the machine can put people in touch and make connections and help in that manner.
ReplyDeleteSo i am wondering if Reese picks up the phone in season two and finds an equally confused person on the other end, both of them not sure how they can help each other.
I both love and am scared by that theory! XD
ReplyDeleteI like the idea of Reese having to connect to random people but in a new manner, actually needing their help. Sounds fun and would be a tweak on the previous season.
I do think that the randomness could get contrived though. Touch pushes that inter-connectivity of random people and I loathed that show and its concept. I do trust the writers of Person of Interest far more than Touch's so I think they have a better chance of pulling it off if they go down that road.
Yeah i reckon it'll just be one of many ways the Machine can assist... i mean, it has access to security cameras meaning it can shut them off, security doors so it can shut them off, it could close off computer-operated sealed areas cutting off air, it could control computer-operated weapons and guidance systems, etc... Basically this thing is all-powerful because *everything* in our society is computer controlled! I love the concept, and potential!
ReplyDeleteSo yes if they used the random calls i don't think it'd be used a lot, just as one part of the Machine findings ways to help and guide Reese.
I'm just so completely in love with the idea of this Machine as a developing entity, making decisions and deciding what it needs and wants. It's going to be so awesome seeing that develop!
Loved this outstanding show, the Finale was perfect, actors were awesome particularly Jim Caviezel, Kudos to Nolan and his team, enjoyed watching every episode of this really worth watching excellent show, Can't wait for season 2.
ReplyDeleteGreat review Arun, Thanks.
ReplyDeletewhen does s2 start?...
ReplyDeleteAs with most shows, you'd assume mid-September. Probably 9/20/12.
ReplyDeleteProbably 3rd week of September, but the actual date will be announced soon.
ReplyDeleteDarque, what do you think are PoI's chances at Emmys this year? I can never predict those things.
ReplyDeleteI would be surprised if it got many nominations I guess. It really is not a show that allows the actors to show off their heavy drama skills. Never can be sure of course....
ReplyDeleteWhen I saw the new Google logo for the day commemorating Alan Turing's Birthday, I thought it sounded familiar to one of my favorite shows. Soon as I realized it was Person of Interest-related, I had to come here to share. I forgot which one of you guys first suggested the Turing connection in relation to POI's Turing, but I have to hand it to you, great job! After catching onto to POI late, I was surprised by how good it is. I'm really looking forward to POI's 2nd season.
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