Showing posts with label 24. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 24. Show all posts

Poll Result: Which season of 24 was the best?


Last week I asked you to vote for your favourite season of 24, now the popular action-thriller series has come to an end. Here are the results in ascending order:

6th place: Day 6 (0%)
Inevitably, the woeful sixth season received no votes and consequently wound up at the bottom of the heap. The frustrating thing about Day 6 is that it had exciting ideas and definite potential, what with a suburb of Los Angeles being obliterated by a nuke in only the fourth episode and the rise of Jack Bauer's family as the season's villains. But it never managed to find its footing, the new characters were tedious duds (why bring back Milo?), and it very quickly became clear that even the writers were struggling to keep themselves interested in the plot they were spewing out every week. Thus was a real nadir of 24, and quite possibly a mistake the show never fully recovered from.

5th place: Day 4 & 8 (5%)
In joint-place, the everything-and-the-kitchen-sink approach of Day 4, and the concluding Day 8. Day 4 tried to shakeup 24's formula by having the year's villain (Arnold Vosloo's Marwan) perpetrate a ridiculous amount of terrorist attacks every six episodes or so. It all became rather laughable, with Marwain's gang appearing to have a contingency plan for every failure, but it undeniably gave us a rollercoaster ride of zany action. As for Day 8, I personally don't think it deserved to be ranked this low in the poll, but I can understand why people didn't vote for it: the first half was rather dull.

4th place: Day 3 & 7 (10%)
The "comeback year" of Day 7 and Day 3 tied for fourth place, surprisingly. Day 7 was certainly a very decent return to form after the execrable Day 6, helped by the fact the writers' strike meant the staff had time to plan and develop their story from start to finish. It's a shame the rigours of US TV never allowed them that freedom every year. Day 3 was the season when fans began to doubt 24 had the legs to continue for much longer, partly because the Mexican-set first half was deemed a tedious failure, but since then there have been arguably two worse years (Day 6 and 8), so its reputation has been cleaned-up a bit.

3rd place: Day 2 (15%)
For a long time I thought Day 2 was the best season of 24, simply because the formula was still fresh, the writers had learned valuable lessons from the trial-by-fire of its debut year, and the series found a style it would largely stick to from hereon in. Plus, I think the wonderful President Palmer (Dennis Haysbert) was at his commanding best in this season, and the moment the terrorist's nuke "safely" detonated in the desert was a haunting television moment I'll always remember seeing happen. It may seem quite passe these days, but at the time that was a real jaw-dropper and something I'd never seen done on the smallscreen before.

2nd place: Day 1 (25%)
The year that started it all. I can see why fans think the first year was 24's best. It definitely had the purest storyline, with Jack's family in jeopardy and an assassination plot to foil. Every season since got steadily less realistic in its attempts to keep getting Jack embroiled in the action. But for all its pioneering freshness and impact on TV, I think we can all agree that the second-half was noticeably poorer (the show was only picked up for 12 episodes by Fox, so the writers plotted for that, then struggled to make the story continue twice as long). Also, it may have been a memorably brilliant twist at the time, but Nina Meyers being "a mole" makes zero sense when you rewatch this season!

1st place: Day 5 (30%)
Everyone's favourite season, which I agree wholeheartedly with, was Day 5. How many television shows produce their best year five seasons into its run? Not many! I think the reason this season worked so brilliantly is very simple: it may not have had a storyline that felt unique (poison gas, yawn), and it definitely ended on a spluttering note, but this was perhaps the only season of 24 where the goings-on at the White House were just as exciting as Jack Bauer's adventures. If not moreso. In giving us a corrupt President and a slightly deranged First Lady, it didn't feel like there was any slack or filler when the plot left Jack's perspective. And, of course, Gregory Itzin and Jean Smart were both so great that the show picked up twelve Emmy nominations and won four ("Best Drama Series", "Best Lead Actor", "Best Directing", "Best Editing", and "Best Music") Itzin's oily character of Charles Logan was even invited back twice, such was his impact and appeal as a boo-hiss antagonist.

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Poll: Which was the best season of 24?


2010's becoming the graveyard for some of my favourite shows, with 24 now joining Lost in airing its series finale. Over 8 seasons, Jack Bauer's been saving the world precisely 24-hours after first hearing about any given crisis, but which year was his greatest day? Please vote for your favourite season here, or by clicking one of the images below:

Day 1: Assassination
It gave us: sweet Teri Bauer - imperiled Kim Bauer - sly Nina Meyers - Mandy the lesbian assassin - jobsworth George Mason - honourable David Palmer - ambitious Cheri Palmer - Mike Novick - the Drazens - eye-rolling amnesia - guest-star Dennis Hopper

Day 2: Nuclear Bomb
It gave us: hacksaw decapitation - loyal Tony Almeida - CTU bombed - sexy Kate Warner - mushroom cloud in a desert - a wedding - a cougar - Jack's heart-stopper - guest-star Tobin Bell

Day 3: Killer Virus
It gave us: a trip to Mexico - Jack's easily-beaten heroine addiction - Russian Roulette in a prison - professional Michelle Dessler - dependable Chase Edmunds - Chapelle's sacrifice - misfit Chloe O'Brian - confident Wayne Palmer

Day 4: Power Plant Meltdown
It gave us: geeky Edgar Styles - career-minded Audrey Raines -Air Force One's attack - Vice-President Charles Logan - macho Curtis Manning - EMP blackout - a Stealth Fighter - strong-willed Bill Buchanan - the nuclear football - the Chinese - B-movie guest-star Arnold Vosloo

Day 5: Poison Gas
It gave us: Evil President Logan - crazy First Lady Martha Logan - Russian President Suvarov - CTU gassed - affable Morris - a Russian submarine - L.A martial law - guest-stars Julian Sands, Sean Astin and Peter Weller as Jack's mentor

Day 6: Suitcase Nukes
It gave us: L.A nuked - Chinese gangsters - Jack's evil brother - CTU takeover - unctuous Tom Lennox - dimwit Mike Doyle - guest-stars Powers Boothe and James Cromwell as Papa Bauer

Day 7: Bio-weapon
It gave us: Bad Tony - idealistic President Taylor - capable Renee Walker - White House siege - Ethan Kanin - by-the-book Larry Moss - African warlords - grouchy Janis Gold - guest-star Jon Voight as patriot Jonas Hodges

Day 8: Presidential Assassination
It gave us: Jack fan Agent Cole Ortiz - duplicitous Dana Walsh - EMP attack - gruff Brian Hastings - anti-nuke peace treaty - austere Dalia Hassan - Jack goes rogue - guest-star Anil Kapoor as President Hassan

The poll will close on Sunday 13 June @5pm (GMT)

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'24', 8.23 & 8.24 - "2:00PM - 3:00PM" & "3:00PM - 4:00PM"

WRITERS: Shauna McGarry & Geoff Aull (8.23) & Howard Gordon (8.24)
DIRECTOR: Brad Turner
GUEST CAST: Gregory Itzin, Michael Madsen, Nick Jameson, John Boyd, Reed Diamond, Jennifer Westfeldt, Graham McTavish & Necar Zadegan
[SPOILERS] It wrapped up Day 8's story in a largely unimaginative way many predicted six episodes ago, and there was a strange creative decision to debilitate Jack (Kiefer Sutherland) for the majority of his last TV hour (which was a crime), but otherwise this double-bill finale worked incredibly well as a last hurrah for the long-running series. Considering this season began with a string of poor-to-middling hours, the mid-season turnaround has been remarkable, and I was mightily relieved 24 turned in a decent run to mark its passing.

To briefly recap: Logan (Gregory Itzin) revealed to President Taylor (Cherry Jones) that President Suvarov (Nick Jameson) was behind Hassan's assassination (Hassanation?); Dalia (Necar Zadegan) confronted Taylor over her suspicion of Russian involvement and was astonished to have her fears confirmed and threatened into keeping quiet and signing the treaty; Jack infiltrated the UN Building's perimeter to setup a sniper pointed at Logan's suite, intending to kill Suvarov when he arrived there; and Chloe (Mary Lyn Rajskub) found a way to disseminate the audio evidence of Suvarov's part in Hassan's death via CTU's servers to expose the truth to the world's media, so had to stop Jack from igniting a US/Russian war with his more bloodthirsty plan.

The first hour (written by long-time script coordinators Shauna McGarry and Geoff Aull, rewarded for their hard work with an episode to themselves) was a lots of fun, and contained great material for Cherry Jones to chew on. In fact, Jones' turn as President Taylor has been one of Day 8's better elements ever since the plot gave her character something juicy to play as a diplomatic idealist pressured into making a deal with the devilish Logan that goes against her principles. Jones was especially great in these last two episodes: her confrontation with Dalia was magnificent (particularly when she was pushed into a corner and responded by threatening Dalia's country with military retaliation), and I loved the moment Taylor couldn't go through with signing her beloved treaty and rushed to instead salvage the situation with Jack at the eleventh hour. Fantastic.

Jack's role was more interesting the first half, setting up a sniper to kill Suvarov by manipulating him into position using Logan, only for Chloe to arrive to talk him out of it. I also appreciated how the story didn't whitewash the fact Jack's spent the last batch of episodes running around New York injuring and killing people like "judge, jury and executioner", as Pillar (Reed Diamond) sagely put it. It's certainly been morally difficult to justify Jack's actions at times this season, leaving us with something of a bitter taste in the mouth. His explanations and excuses, which he recorded for posterity, were understandable in some respects, but it was still all based on grief and a misplaced sense of vigilante justice.

By the end of the final hour, Taylor had come to her senses and halted the peace treaty's signing, intending to resign and face the repercussions; this in turn prompted Logan to kill aide Pillar and shoot himself in the head (although it seems he survived and might instead be brain-damaged, perhaps for a saddening cameo in the 24 movie?); and Jack was given time to flee the country by the regretful President, by way of making amends for his treatment. The final scenes worked very well to cap the series as a whole, with Jack getting a heartfelt apology from the Commander-In-Chief, dovetailing into the touching moment when Jack thanked Chloe for the years she's spent looking out for him -- via that aerial drone, she was marked out as his heavenly "guardian angel".

It also felt fitting that Jack's final moments were captured on a CTU surveillance feed that melted into pixels, cleverly symbolizing the fact he's a TV character in a show that much benefitted from the digital era. And the signature countdown clock instead ticking down to 00:00:00? The perfect way to sign off.

It definitely felt like the end of an era watching a bloodied Jack limp off for his movie adventures. 24's kept the quality surprisingly high for a TV series with such a rigid format, kept on air three years past its prime. Except for the deplorable Day 6, the show never gave us a season of television I didn't enjoy on some level, and the early years were genuine weekly thrills that I'll always have strong memories of. Some of the events and situations 24 presented us with seem passé these days (remember when a terrorist nuke being detonated in a remote desert felt raw and shocking?), but that's a testament to how much the series changed the game and upped the ante for thrillers everywhere.

Along with the Bourne movies (which it perhaps even influenced, to a degree), 24 had a lasting effect on spy/action entertainment and managed to tap into contemporary post-9/11 fears incredibly well. It danced with controversy many times (some believing it legitimized, even "popularized" torture in the military), but at heart it was just finding shortcuts because of its real-time demands. Did it misjudge things and wander into bad taste occasionally? Certainly. Did the real-time format begin to straightjacket the show's growth? Definitely. Were the writers guilty of recycling ideas and twists every few years? Of course. But considering all the rules and storytelling grammar 24 imposed on itself, it delivered eight seasons of largely exciting and compelling TV that gave us the decade's defining action hero in Jack Bauer.

Moles, dirty bombs, torture, interrogations, CTU, chirping phones, foreign villains, killer viruses, suitcase nukes, gas attacks, car chases, David Palmer, Charles Logan, George Mason, Kim Bauer, Nina Meyers, Bill Buchanan, Tony Almeida, Renee Walker, Agent Pierce, Mike Novick, Allison Taylor, Chloe O'Brian, Jack Bauer, the cougar. I'll miss you all.

24's over, damn it.

6 JUNE 2010: SKY1/HD, 9PM

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'24', 8.22 – "1:00PM – 2:00PM"

WRITER: David Fury
DIRECTOR: Milan Cheylov
GUEST CAST: Gregory Itzin, Michael Madsen, Thomas Ryan, Nick Jameson, John Boyd, Reed Diamond, Jennifer Westfeldt, Graham McTavish, Necar Zadegan & Navid Negahban
[SPOILERS] A very exciting and engrossing hour, with events heating up as we approach the series finale. There's been no change of plan with where the show's headed recently, it's just doing a very effective job of tightening the screws every hour as Jack (Kiefer Sutherland) takes increasingly drastic measures to avenge his girlfriend's murder. While the peace treaty remains only of vague interest as the "stakes" in this game, I'm enjoying the political tangle of Presidents and former-Presidents trying to manoeuvre their way out of a tough situation with Jack as a kind of boogieman that can't be stopped...

To recap: Reporter Meredith (Jennifer Westfeldt) arranged to meet her editor Klausner (Thomas Ryan) to pass on her evidence that the Russians were behind President Hassan's assassination, unaware that President Taylor (Cherry Jones) was aware of her findings and gave the FBI an executive order to arrest her; Jack got a location for Logan (Gregory Itzin) and attacks his motorcade, kidnapping the former-President and demanding answers about who in the Russian government was behind Renee's death; Chloe (Mary Lyn Rajskub) released Cole (Freddie Prinze Jr) from custody to go after Jack's accomplice Ricker (Michael Madsen); Kayla (Nazneen Contractor) received a call from Meredith telling her about the Russian involvement with her father's death; and Logan assured the visiting President Suvarov (Nick Jameson) that Jack will never uncover his role in the day's events, unaware that Jack's planted a listening device on his collar...

There were some great sequences here, particularly Jack's masked assault on Logan's motorcade single-handed, which saw Logan blubbing like a frightened schoolgirl at the mere sight of his nemesis. The interesting thing right now is that Jack's decision to take matters into his own hands has become a bloodbath, and I'm not sure how the show's going to justify his actions in the end. He's working to expose a terrible lie, but this is by far the most extreme way to go about doing that. And how will Taylor possibly come out of this intact? As Logan says, everything has been her decision, so she'll surely have to resign in disgrace as a tragic casualty of his season from a moral standpoint.

Overall, it really does feel like we're building up to a fantastic conclusion with 24 this year, which I'm so relieved to see.

30 MAY 2010: SKY1/HD, 9PM

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24, 8.21 - "12:00PM - 1:00PM"

WRITERS: Chip Johannessen & Patrick Harbinson
DIRECTOR: Milan Cheylov
GUEST CAST: Gregory Itzin, Michael Madsen, John Boyd, Reed Diamond, Jennifer Westfeldt, Graham McTavish, Necar Zadegan, Navid Negahban, Joel Bissonnette, Thomas Ryan & Julie Claire
[SPOILERS] Another very entertaining hour all round, really. It's getting difficult to praise the second-half of Day 8 without repeating myself, but while the stakes are a little shaky (does anyone beyond the characters care about the peace treaty?), I'm enjoying how the characters are being stretched and taken to unusual places recently: President Taylor's (Cherry Jones) forced to swallow her idealism and deceive people for the alleged "greater good", Jack's (Kiefer Sutherland) pain over losing Renee's pushing him into dark, desperate places; and even Chloe (Mary Lyn Rajskub) has been given added responsibilities and a reason to actually distrust Jack.

To recap quickly: Jack now has Dana's memory chip containing video evidence of Russian involvement in Hassan's assassination, so decides to get help from Ricker (Michael Madsen) in setting a trap for CTU using journalist Meredith Reed (Jennifer Westfeldt) as bait; Chloe started to suspect Pillar's (Reed Diamond) part of the government conspiracy Jack warned her about, so enlisted the help of Arlo (John Boyd) to locate Jack themselves in secret; Logan (Gregory Itzin) pressured President Taylor about publicly praising his role in getting the peace treaty signed; and Jack managed to evade being caught in a shopping mall, capturing Russian hitman Pavel (Joel Bissonnette) and torturing him for information about who he answers to.

We've been seeing Jack treated as the "villain" by everyone recently, and the fact he's mainly interested in avenging Renee's death has given Jack a rawness that's been interesting to watch. Jack's never been the cheeriest of people, but the torture of Pavel in this episode was one of 24's more uncomfortable moments because there was a certain twinkle of delight in Jack's eyes. Unsettling. Also interesting to see the writers bring back reporter Meredith, whose character's become Day 8's bookend, and I'm still glad there's uncertainty about how this season (and the series) will end.

Asides
  • That shootout in the mall; just a typical shopping trip for Jack Bauer, right? It gives "clean up on aisle four" a whole new meaning.
  • Arlo's possibly the least developed or interesting CTU employee on the series, ever -- but somehow that works in his favour. It's almost refreshing to have a character who's just a regular guy trying to do his job well.
  • I sometimes laugh at Jack's staccato mannerisms. Kiefer Sutherland has a very distinct style of delivery both verbally and physically in this role. The way he can't seem to concentrate on something in front of him without snapping his head left and right to check for, what, possible incoming attacks? Makes me chuckle.
23 MAY 2010: SKY1/HD, 9PM

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24, 8.20 - "11:00AM - 12:00PM"

WRITERS: Evan Katz & Alex Gansa (story by Alex Gansa)
DIRECTOR: Michael Klick
GUEST CAST: Gregory Itzin, D.B Sweeney, Nazneen Contractor, Reed Diamond, Frank John Hughes, Graham McTavish, Joel Bissonnette, Navid Negahban, Ryan Alosio, James Hiroyuki Liao, Julie Claire & Sarah Hollis
[SPOILERS] There's only four hours left of Jack Bauer (Kiefer Sutherland) on television, and this episode was another very entertaining piece of sprightly action and enjoyable drama. The signs are good that 24 will manage to end its near-decade run on a relative high, which is all I'm concerned about at this late stage.

To recap briefly: Jack and Cole (Freddie Prinze Jr) arrived at the safehouse to rescue Dana (Katee Sackhoff) from her interrogators, following which she revealed that evidence of the Russian involvement in the day's events is kept in a safe-deposit box at a downtown bank; Logan (Gregory Itzin) heard about Dana's rescue and suggested Novakovich's (Graham McTavish) operatives kill Jack, using intelligence provided by his aide Jason Pillar (Reed Diamond), who was sent to CTU to coordinate the manhunt for Jack; and after Cole opened Dana's safe-deposit box he was incapacitated with a flash-bang trap, allowing Dana to escape from the bank with Jack in hot pursuit...

The focus on Dana's rescue and escape carried this episode, helped by the fact the situation felt quite fresh by 24 standards, and Sackhoff's definitely at her best in sneering villain mode. It's also been good to see Jack handle the fact he's a wanted man and evade capture by the authorities (using minimal force, like gunshots to feet), while trying to keep Cole on his side. It's also interesting that there's a feeling that Logan's "greater good" perspective is valid in some respects; meaning you're inclined to side with Jack's quest to expose the truth and avenge Renee's death, but can also totally understand President Taylor's (Cherry Jones) perspective and the steps she's taken to ensure her peace treaty is signed. Will Jack end up getting brief satisfaction for exposing the Russians, then have to live with the fact he's ended all hope for peace in a troubled region overseas?

Overall, a rollicking and entertaining episode with some standout moments (an unsettling waterboarding scene, Jack opting to kill Cole's fiancé after getting what he wants), but more importantly it actually feels like 24's got enough impetus and story left to tell in its dying days. I hope the approaching finale gives us a worthwhile send-off.

Asides
  • Mary Lyn Rajskub can't act. You may as well just put a first-year drama student on set and get her to suck a lemon before a take. The result would be the same.
  • D.B Sweeney. That must rank as one of the briefest and comically abrupt guest-star performances in 24 history, right? I wonder if he was just a fan of 24 and called in a favour to get some screentime on the show.
  • The scene with Taylor rudely hanging up on Logan, forcing him to save face in front of Jason by continuing a fake phone conversation for a few seconds was a joy. That totally summed up Logan's character as a man who values being taken seriously and valued by people with power.
16 MAY 2010: SKY1/HD, 9PM

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24, 8.19 - "10:00AM - 11:00AM"

WRITERS: Manny Coto & Brannon Braga
DIRECTOR: Michael Klick
GUEST CAST: Gregory Itzin, Michael Madsen, D.B Sweeney, Bob Gunton, Graham McTavish, Nazneen Contractor, Necar Zadegan, Navid Negahban, Lesley Fera & Justin Alston
[SPOILERS] This was another hour that, like last week, allowed breathing room for Cherry Jones, Gregory Itzin and Bob Gunton to act, while also giving us added action and some fresh concerns. It's not often 24's in the midst of a storyline that doesn't feel like a hastily-written addendum by episode 19, which is a pleasant surprise for a season that found form in its second half...

To briefly recap events: President Taylor (Jones) considered reversing her decision to continue with the peace treaty signing, but was persuaded to keep lying by Logan (Itzin) after he offered to have Dana Walsh (Katee Sackhoff) taken into private custody and tortured for the information she might use as leverage; and Jack (Kiefer Sutherland) escaped from CTU in a stolen helicopter, then landed in the city with the intention of getting to Dana with covert help from Chloe (Mary Lyn Rajskub), unaware that she's decided to follow the President's orders and lead him into a trap.

It was an interesting angle to have Jack perceived as the bad guy, mirroring a similar situation in Day 5 when President Logan sent the might of the country's intelligence forces after Jack (possibly an intentional echo given Logan's welcome return this year.) Adding a further twist was seeing how loyal Chloe wasn't prepared to believe Jack's explanation for his actions (has the responsibility of leading CTU gone to her head?), and it was fun to see a few familiar actors make appearances -- D.B Sweeney as Bledsoe, a torturer hired to extract information from Dana, and Michael Madsen as the scarred Jim Ricker, an old "friend" of Jack's who helps him re-arm for an assault on a CTU safehouse.

Overall, things are progressing rather smartly as we approach the end of Day 8 and 24 as a whole. Jones has been given material worth her time recently, which has worked well because we know how by-the-book Taylor is as a character so her determination to get the peace treaty signed (whatever the terrible cost) feels plausible and understandable in light of how much her presidency has cost her personally. It'll be interesting to see how the season will end for her, but resignation seems likely once her deception is inevitably exposed. She's too honourable to pin it all on Logan, surely.

The only puzzling thing about this episode was considering what Jack's initial plan was after he escaped from CTU: steal a chopper, land it miles away in the middle of NYC, then slowly make his way back to CTU to interrogate Dana there. How would he have hoped to achieve that? It just wouldn't have been possible. Jack was extremely fortunate that Taylor/Logan decided to have Dana moved out of CTU, as his plan was doomed until that lucky break! A simple case of the story having to be bent by the writers to make something work, really. Still, this was a strong episode and it was good to see Cole (Freddie Prinze Jr) join forces with Jack, his idol, in going rogue and getting to Dana before she's eliminated.

Asides
  • Was Chloe's act-out line "let's get to work" a slightly paraphrased Reservoir Dogs quote, in honour of Michael Madsen's presence?
  • I enjoyed the opening scenes of Jack being pursued by Apache helicopter gunships over NYC, even if the special effects weren't really that convincing. It's just appreciated when the show does something new like that.
  • Come on, Chloe; given the number of times Jack crazy theories have been proven right, once in near-identical circumstances, why are you suddenly so reticent about believing him?
9 MAY 2010: SKY1/HD, 9PM

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24, 8.18 - "9:00AM - 10:00AM"

WRITERS: Chip Johannessen & Patrick Harbinson
DIRECTOR: Milan Cheylov
GUEST CAST: Gregory Itzin, Jürgen Prochnow, Reed Diamond, Graham McTavish, John Boyd, Bob Gunton, Necar Zadegan, Brad Fleischer, Joseph Kamal & Jack Shearer
[SPOILERS] This episode ranks as one of the most dialogue-heavy hours of 24 in a long time, but it laid a lot of cards on the table and gave three actors their best material this year. 24's not really known for its acting (although it's had some excellent actors doing great work on occasions), but watching Gregory Itzin, Cherry Jones and Kiefer Sutherland reminded you that 24 can have a "quiet" hour that doesn't feel tedious.

To recap events quickly: Logan (Itzin) threatened Novakovich with exposing the Russian government's involvement in the day's attacks on President Hassan, in order to get his country back to the peace treaty agreement; Jack (Sutherland) learned from Bazhaev (Jürgen Prochnow) that Dana (Katee Sackhoff) knows who killed Renee, and heads to CTU to interrogate her; Logan heard about Jack's investigation and was forced to tell President Taylor (Jones) about what the Russians have been up to, but convinces her to keep quiet in order to let the "greater good" of the peace treaty happen as planned; Taylor arrived at CTU to relieve Jack of duty personally, fearing he'll expose the Russians and foil a chance for peace; and Jack decided to go rogue by escaping from CTU custody and stealing a chopper.

As I said before, Itzin, Jones and Sutherland were all doing good work this week, each character given something interesting to play. Logan was back his snake-like ways of dirtying the morality of situations (I love how he rationalizes bad ideas), Jones showed some chinks in her armour by agreeing with Logan's plan to let Dalia (Necar Zadegan) sign a peace treaty with the country responsible for her husband's murder, and Jack was forced to commit treason and ignore the orders of his President because he's so convinced he's right and wants justice for Renee. All very good, interesting character moments, at least in terms of 24's playground. There wasn’t much else going on this week, but I enjoyed seeing an hour that skilfully recalibrated the storyline and put the goodie-two-shoes President in a very difficult position.

Asides
  • Why isn't Logan still under lifelong house-arrest these days?
  • I forgot to mention it last week, but Logan's advisor Jason Pillar is played by actor Reed Diamond, who had a similar role on Dollhouse.
2 MAY 2010: SKY1/HD, 9PM

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24, 8.17 - "8:00AM - 9:00AM"

WRITER: David Fury
DIRECTOR: Milan Cheylov
GUEST CAST: Gregory Itzin, John Boyd, Bob Gunton, Nazneen Contractor, Reed Diamond, Mido Hamada, Frank John Hughes, Graham McTavish, Necar Zadegan, Joel Bissonnette, Navid Negahban & Sarah Hollis
[SPOILERS] We're given a sense of where 24's headed in its eight remaining episodes here, but it remains to be seen if the writers manage to make it all work. Unpredictability is a valuable commodity in 24, so it's at least nice to be engaged with a story because it doesn't feel so slotted on rails.

To briefly recap: Jack (Kiefer Sutherland) and Renee (Annie Wersching) left the scene of President Hassan's murder, disappointed that they failed to save his life; President Taylor (Cherry Jones) prepared to watch her peace treaty fail, but was given a lifeline when it's suggested that Hassan's wife Dalia (Necar Zadegan) take her husband's place in government; Novakovich (Graham McTavish) made it clear Russia won't sign the treaty without Hassan, forcing Taylor to listen to a plan from disgraced former-President Charles Logan (Gregory Itzin), who believes he can get the Russians cooperating; Hastings (Mykelti Williamson) was relieved of duty over recent failures and Chloe (Mary Lyn Rajskub) became his interim replacement; the injured Samir (Mido Hamada) died before CTU could question him, having been drugged by an undercover Russian called Pavel (Joel Bissonnette) who is tying up loose-ends for his bosses; and soon after Jack and Renee finished making love back at his apartment, Renee was shot by Pavel from a rooftop vantage point and later died from her injuries at a hospital...

This was very much another turning point of Day 8, as seasons tends to develop in waves of four, making this the fifth "act" of six. Away from chasing nuclear materials and rescuing a dignitary's life, things take a more politicized path with Taylor and the Russians, while also bringing back one of the best 24 arch-villains in Charles Logan from the Emmy-winning season 5. I'm not sure if either will totally revitalize the show as it races towards its season/series finale, but it's at least good fun to see Logan back -- who apparently survived that stabbing in season 6. Previously used as a Nixon proxy, I also found it amusing how he apologized to Taylor for his criminal past in the manner of the infamous Frost/Nixon interview. And no, I don't think his intentions are as honourable as he's making out -- do you?

It was also an interesting episode in that Jack was sidelined for reasons of a very personal nature, getting to roll around in bed with Renee. The best way to unwind after a tough day, I agree. To my recollection, this the first time we've ever seen Jack having sex -- isn't it? If so, I'm glad the producers managed to tick that box before 24 went off-air, but I couldn't help feeling frustrated they've never gave Jack some bedroom scenes before now. He suddenly felt like less of an angst-ridden "action golem" and more like a real human being. Although his character paid the price for daring to seek comfort with a woman, as who else but Jack Bauer would come under threat from a sniper after sleeping with someone?

And yes, unexpectedly given last week's major death, it was a surprise to see Renee die of her gunshot wounds after Jack delivered her to hospital, ushering in the second "silent clock" ending in a row. Considering my appreciation of Renee as a character (the only truly plausible "female Jack" 24 has given us, and far more interesting than his other girlfriends), Renee's death didn't land much impact, curiously. I was just surprised the writers decided to kill Renee in this way, too, as I think she deserved to go out fighting or sacrificing herself for someone/something. Either way, Renee's death is certainly a good way to ignite Jack's fury and get him involved in avenging her death. It feels like a very long time since Jack had a compelling and believably personal reason to be involved in a mission (arguably since the early years when his wife and daughter used to get in trouble), so in that sense killing Renee was a wise move for the final episodes. It's just unfortunate that such a strong female character had to die purely to invigorate Jack.

25 APRIL 2010: SKY1/HD, 9PM

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24, 8.16 - "7:00AM - 8:00AM"

WRITERS: Manny Coto & Brannon Braga
DIRECTOR: Brad Turner
GUEST CAST: Graham McTavish, Bob Gunton, John Boyd, Nazneen Contractor, Mido Hamada, Necar Zadegan, Rizwan Manji, Assaf Cohen, Sarah Hollis & Jamison Haase
[SPOILERS] Usually around this time in seasons past, we've entered a dull and tedious final quarter where 24's running on fumes and the writers are shoehorning in last-minute threats to keep everything trundling along. Contrarily, Day 8 has actually found its footing of late, and appears to have reversed the usual downward trajectory of the series. This episode was very good, blessed with the season's most shocking climax since season 6's nuke detonated, and I'm now more hopeful this final year in Jack Bauer's (Kiefer Sutherland) real-time life will be a worthy salute to 24's end...

To recap: Renee (Annie Wersching) arrived back at CTU to help Chloe (Mary Lyn Rajskub) search for a mole they suspect is helping the terrorists evade capture, leading to the arrest of Dana (Katee Sackhoff) after calls are traced back to her phone and she decides to run; Tarin (Mido Hamada) takes receipt of President Hassan (Anil Kapoor) and prepares to broadcast Hassan's forced admission of guilt and execute him live on the internet; Dana agrees to help CTU locate Hassan provided she can be given immunity by President Taylor (Cherry Jones), who knows the death of Hassan will mean an end to the peace accords; and after Jack storms Tarin's hideout with a tactical team, they discover that the "live" stream of Hassan's torture was a pre-recorded video and Hassan was already killed before they arrived...

Everything about this episode worked, but particularly the three standout sequences. Dana's escape from CTU finally gave Katee Sackhoff the chance to fire some guns and have fun playing the villain (she's very good at both), and Jack's infiltration of the tenement Tarin was holding Hassan also had an air of plausibility you don't always see on 24. It actually felt like a professional team were at work, stealthily moving into position, taking out rooftop snipers and cutting fences, while acting on intel fed to them via CTU. It all flowed a lot better than usual, with a weight of credibility behind how things unfolded. And, of course, the episode's final shock that Jack was too late to save Hassan worked incredibly well, and would appear to signal an unexpected shift in the storyline. I'm assuming the Russians are about to enter the story because the Russian President Mikhail Novakovich (Graham McTavish) appeared here, and it was inferred that his country were against Hassan brokering peace with the US, so I'm guessing Tarin was colluding with them.

Overall, I wouldn't have expected this after such a disappointing first half, but Day 8's suddenly turned things around with a string of dramatic and exciting episodes. It's still true that 24's plot developments can feel dubious, and it often falls back on old tropes (moles, villains asking for presidential immunity, internet executions), but for a series that arguably ran out of new ideas four years ago, it's quite remarkable that it can keep recycling so proficiently and still manage to keep you glued to your seat for an hour. I'm interested to see what they have planned for the final eight episodes, at any rate.

Asides
  • Last week I lamented the passing of the chirping CTU phones, but here we heard Hastings (Mykelti Williamson) has one with a slightly updated tone.
  • Anil Kapoor has been excellent this season, and certainly went out in fine style. His speech to Tarin about trusting him as he once did when he was a general was a particular highlight. I'm not sure the writers really took enough advantage of having Kapoor around, but he'll certainly be missed. And I always like it when 24 does the "silent clock" to salute the passing of a regular character.
18 APRIL 2010: SKY1/HD, 9PM

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24, 8.15 - "6:00AM - 7:00AM"

WRITERS: Chip Johannessen & Patrick Harbinson
DIRECTOR: Brad Turner
GUEST CAST: Bob Gunton, Michael Gaston, Chris Diamantopoulos, Nazneen Contractor, T.J Ramini, Mido Hamada & Frank John Hughes
[SPOILERS] Another solid and entertaining hour, forgiving the usual stretching of plausibility at the seams. But you don't watch 24 for tight realism -- you watch for the high stakes, drama, action and brow-sweating tension. And in those terms, the show's started to deliver more consistently since mid-season. I'm feeling a lot better about Day 8 now, although it's infuriating to think they wasted half the year with a string of dull episodes.

To briefly recap: President Hassan (Anil Kapoor) decided it would be best to hand himself over to the terrorists, so overpowered Jack (Kiefer Sutherland) and left with the injured Bishop to prevent the bomb being detonated; Tarin (T.J Ramini) deactivated the bomb once Hassan was in their custody, prompting confusion from CTU about why the bomb failed to go off; Jack briefed President Taylor (Cherry Jones) on the situation, leading her to arrest General Bruckner (Michael Gaston) and Rob Weiss (Chris Diamantopoulos) for their treachery, although Weiss is satisfied he saved lives; CTU try to ambush Tarin and Hassan in their car, unaware they're receiving help from mole Dana (Katee Sackhoff) in evading capture, so Hassan's transferred to another vehicle shortly before Tarin crashes his vehicle.

This was a much better episode for Cherry Jones, who hasn't been very central to events this year and disappeared completely for a few episodes recently. She was actually given something to do, and while Taylor's still a rather colourless character (even more so this year without her family to lean on), I do like the clear compassion she has for people. Her quiet moment with Ethan (Bob Gunton) before he was taken away in a stretcher, and her congratulating of Renee (Annie Wersching) for her heroics were both nicely played. You need a President to feel pride in, and Jones manages that despite the often ropey or thin material she's given.

In some ways it was a shame the dirty bomb didn't go off in Manhattan early in this hour -- although Day 6 proved that 24 doesn't have the budget or patience to deal with the aftermath of a nuclear strike in a city, so I understand why they didn't risk making the same mistake twice. The fact this episode formed the first part of a double-bill in the US nearly tricked me into believing they were still going to go through with that, then do a better job dramatizing the repercussions, but it wasn't to be. Still, the idea of Hassan turning himself over to the terrorists is a good development, as it means we've left the bomb storyline behind and now it's simply about getting a foreign dignitary back alive. The stakes are now a sole politician's life, although "world peace" is starting to be mentioned around Hassan's name, perhaps to combat any feeling that the stakes have actually fallen now. Anyway, making things more human like this is vastly more interesting than chasing terrorists around, and slightly less predictable.

Asides
  • I miss those chirping CTU ringtones, don't you? Can't they come back?
  • I enjoyed the pure silliness of Dana about to garrot Arlo with computer cable. It would have been fun to see her go through with it, if only because CTU will soon be full of dead bodies hidden behind wall panels!
11 APRIL 2010: SKY1/HD, 9PM

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24, 8.14 - "5:00AM - 6:00AM"

WRITER: Alex Gansa (story by Evan Katz)
DIRECTOR: Milan Cheylov
GUEST CAST: Bob Gunton, Christina Cox, Michael Gaston, Chris Diamantopoulos, Nazneen Contractor, T.J Ramini, Mido Hamada & Frank John Hughes
[SPOILERS] Have we turned a corner? I've found the last batch of episodes more agreeable to me, even if they're essentially falling back on some old gambits (crippling CTU, a mole) and it's still ultimately about chasing foreign terrorists around a city before they detonate a bomb. That's the problem with 24 these days; where once it was a compelling and exciting thriller, now it's just entertaining in its own familiarity.

To briefly recap: CTU lost track of Samir's men in traffic after Dana (Katee Sackhoff) sabotages the aerial video-feed; President Taylor (Cherry Jones) reassigns Jack (Kiefer Sutherland) to evacuate President Hassan (Anil Kapoor) from danger, with the help of Renee (Annie Wersching); Samir contacts the President to demand the government hand over Hassan to prevent the bomb being detonated; Chief of Staff Rob Weiss (Chris Diamantopoulos) and General Bruckner (Michael Gaston) disagree with the President's decision not to negotiate, so conspire to have a secret team abduct Hassan during his evac to end the nuclear threat; Secretary of State Ethan Kanin (Bob Gunton) learned of this treacherous plan, but suffered a heart attack seconds after trying to alert Jack to the danger on his phone; and once Jack managed to defeat the team sent to kidnap Hassan, Samir ordered Tarin (T.J Ramin) to go through with their threat and arm the radiological weapon.

I feel like I'm being kind to 24 just now, perhaps because I know the show's coming to an end, or maybe because recent episodes have at least been more enjoyable to watch than earlier ones from this season. This episode wasn't great, and everything it did echoed situations we've seen many times before (even the return of some government machinations, where people disagree with the President so do their own thing), but it was at least fun in a ridiculous way.

Why would President Taylor take Jack off the terrorists trail to help get Hassan to safety? Oh, because it was getting tedious seeing Jack chase Samir's men around NYC, and it was too difficult to maintain plausibility that he wouldn't have found them by now. Would someone like General Bruckner risk losing his job by bringing such a crazy plan to the Chief of Staff's attention? Do we really believe Dana's been in contact with Samir from the very start, as his contact in CTU? No. And they even trotted out the cliché of someone having a heart attack, to drizzle some lazy tension over everything.

Overall, you could rip 24 to shreds right now, but I guess residual effection for the show, an increase in action, and the fact no one subplot is an unmitigated stinker just about salvages things. It also helps that 24's still a very competent and entertaining series when it comed to choreographing action and gunfights, which this hour contained plenty of. I just hope the writers have something that feels fresh and interesting up their sleeves, because I'd hate for the final hours of 24 to end on a languid, dry, comfortable note.

Asides
  • Finally, President Taylor's back after a three-episode absense, to make cheesy speeches to her staff.

  • Nice to see Christina Cox on the show, having recently appeared on Dexter and Defying Gravity.
4 APRIL 2010: SKY1 (HD), 9PM

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24, 8.13 - "4:00AM - 5:00AM"

WRITERS: Manny Coto & Brannon Braga (story by Howard Gordon)
DIRECTOR: Milan Cheylov
GUEST CAST: Stephen Root, John Boyd, Nazneen Contractor, Mido Hamada, Julian Morris, Necar Zadegan, T.J. Ramini, Chris McGarry, Ethan Rains, John Eric Bentley & Justin Alston
[SPOILERS] Not quite as good as last week's (if I was directly comparing the two), but it just about sneaked an equal rating because I appreciate the impetus Day 8's achieved in recent weeks, and there wasn't much threatening to bore you here. I hope we're beginning to see the season take shape now, particularly as Fox announced this will be 24's final year on television, as it would be a terrible shame to end on a sour note.

To recap: CTU's servers and comms have been knocked out thanks to an EMP bomb, so the NSA send their expert, Frank Haynum (Chris McGarry), to restore the systems, but Chloe (Mary Lyn Rajskub) becomes frustrated when her proposal for a faster repair isn't listened to; Jack (Kiefer Sutherland) and Cole (Freddie Prinze Jr.) have the NSA close the bridges leading out of Manhattan, to limit the terrorist's escape routes, but end up driving into a trap along the riverfront, enabling Tarin (T.J Ramini) and Samir to escape with the nuclear rods aboard a raft; Renee (Annie Wersching) was informed of Jack's situation and decided to go look for him herself; and Dana (Katee Sackhoff) was forced to take drastic measures when it became clear Prady (Stephen Root) doesn't believe her story that video evidence of Wade's robbery was erased by the EMP...

While there wasn't much here we haven't seen before (Jack's orders being ignored, resulting in the death of agents under his command; the arrival of a corporate prick whose "help" is anything but; Chloe's ideas being ignored), it did everything quite effectively and there was definitely more tension and excitement than the majority of Day 8's episodes have served up. A decent episode of 24 can typically be judged by how many of the subplots irritate you, or how many unreasonable leaps in logic you're asked to make, and there wasn't much of that here. Even Dana's storyline, while exasperating, redeemed itself thanks to an unexpected turn, with Dana strangling Prady to death to prevent him talking to Hastings (Mykelti Williamson), hiding his body in an air vent on CTU premises, and then contacting Samir to reveal she's been a mole all along!

Yes, 24 played the mole card again. When all else fails, it's the easiest twist the writers can come up, but it just might be the adrenaline shot to the heart 24 needs mid-season. I'm not sure it makes total sense that Dana has been working for the terrorists all this time, although the fact she has a secret criminal past can perhaps be taken as foreshadowing -- although I have my doubts it was ever intentional. Even if it doesn't make sense in retrospect, I'm just pleased this reveal signaled the end of the Prady storyline (well, until someone finds his body, or Hastings wonders where he went), and gives Katee Sackhoff a chance to play the bad girl now. She has the perfect scowl for it, and she may even get to fire a gun.

Asides

-- A part of me was hoping Chloe would electrocute herself and set fire to the server room, if only to be less predictable.

-- Thank goodness Renee's role in Day 8 isn't over and she can now partner Jack out in the field. Also nice to see Hastings continue to show some solidarity with his team and support Chloe.

-- No sign of President Taylor again. Do you get the feeling the writers have no clue what to do with her character, beyond ask for status reports from CTU every once in awhile?

28 MARCH 2010: SKY1 (HD), 9PM

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24: time's up, Jack


It's been on the cards for awhile, but 24 alumnus Jon Cassar (director/producer for 7 seasons) has tweeted that the current eighth season will be its last:

"News from the 24 set,the crew has been told that 24 has come to an end. There will b no season 9. Its been a great run, thanx all 4 watching."
This brings an end to one of the '00s most popular and pioneering television dramas, after an incredible nine years on-air. 24 is expected to move into feature films, having recently hired screenwriter Billy Ray to work on a script, rumoured to be set in Europe. There has been speculation that NBC may be interested in continuing the series on TV recently, but I don't hold out much hope for that.

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24, 8.12 - "3:00AM - 4:00AM"

WRITERS: Chip Johannessen & Patrick Harbinson
DIRECTOR: Nelson McCormick
GUEST CAST: Stephen Root, Nazneen Contractor, Mido Hamada, Necar Zadegan, T.J. Ramini, David Gianopoulos, Rizwan Manji, Hrach Titizian, Charlie Bodin, John T. Woods & Jenny Levine
[SPOILERS] It's been a long time coming, but the midway point of Day 8 finally gave us an hour's entertainment that was worth tuning in for, even though its three main inciting moments (a kidnapping, a blackmailing, a bombing) weren't exactly new turf for 24. Regardless, there was a pace and level of action that's been sorely lacking this year, and it even remembered to leave us with a genuinely thrilling climax.

To recap: Tarin (T.J Ramini) realized girlfriend Kayla (Nazneen Contractor) has become aware of his allegiance to the terrorists, so took her to an abandoned bank vault hideout, where his boss Samir (Mido Hamada) threatened to suffocate her in a live web-feed to President Hassan (Anil Kapoor), unless he gives them "File 33" (classified intel on America's anti-nuclear defenses); Jack (Kiefer Sutherland) and Cole (Freddie Prinze Jr) had 15-minutes to locate Kayla while Hassan tried to stall his daughter's kidnappers; and Dana (Katee Sackhoff) met with Wade's parol officer Prady (Stephen Root), who it seems has enough information on Wade's activities to implicate her in the recent robbery she was coerced into helping him pull off.

Like I said, there was nothing new about anything happening here, but after eight seasons on-air you can't seriously be watching 24 and expecting it to be fresh as a daisy. All you can hope for is a sense of urgency, a compelling throughline, some narrative logic, good performances, plenty of stunts, and mounting excitement. Then, possibly, the occasional surprise might escape amidst the noise and land a blow when you least expect it.

And that's what we got here, when Tarin had second thoughts about letting Kayla die, so sacrificed himself during their escape bid, enabling her to flee to CTU in a stolen car. The twist being that the whole escape was just a ruse; Kayla's getaway car had been equipped with an EMP device, Tarin's death had been faked, and the episode ended with Kayla pulling up outside CTU as its electro-magnetic pulse detonated -- knocking out CTU's technology and throwing Jack and the other field agents into the dark. We've seen CTU similarly disabled before (the bomb of season 2, the lethal gas attack of season 5, the armed takeover of season 6), but it's rare enough that it still managed to cause a stir, and for the first time this season I'm actually eager to see the repercussions next week... if conditioned to expect a disappointment.

Was this the best episode of Day 8? For me, yes. There was nothing especially innovative or jawdropping about it, but it sustained its momentum very well, it was great to see Jack in the thick of things, everyone at CTU gave intelligent support to the mission at hand (excusing Dana's time-outs with Prady), and a few surprises thrown in for good measure. The start of an upward trend? I hope so.

Asides

-- Where was Renee throughout all of this? Did she leave CTU last week? Did I miss or forget something?

-- Will the NSA take the slack until CTU get back on their feet? Whatever happened to Division?

21 MARCH 2010: SKY1 (HD), 9PM

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