Saturday, May 31, 2014

Season 9, Live Another Day: 3pm-4pm: Where’s Jack?



So, where’s Jack? Was it good or bad that it took me a day or two to realize how little Jack did this episode? Good, I guess, because it means that I was plenty entertained by the rest of the story. We saw Jack at the start as Kate (character formerly known as DQ) has him in custody only to lose him to the Marines who don’t think the CIA has any jurisdiction in the embassy. And here’s where Jack does almost the only real thing he does all episode—Marine questions him and he stonefaces (that’s not the real thing, but wait because I gotta set the stage), 
 
(he’s pretty good at that, but  is he the best?), then everybody wants to know where the crooshall missing cirkit is—get ready for Jack’s one real thing—they start asking around, and Kate (who has it!) offers that it musta gotten lost when the Marines blasted their way in, and that’s clever, too, as she infuses the comment with a disparaging tone that starts to deflect attention from their questions. And here’s the brilliance of Jack (and the writers)—Jack goes just wild enough to fully distract from the question, Kate figures she can slip out unnoticed and does so. And the Marines and the viewers don’t even realize the brilliance!
Other than that? Jack gets delivered to Pres. Heller and on the way Audrey spots him. Jack tells PH just enough but not enough, saying he’s got a lead, but anybody else would screw it up, so if you don’t let me play, I’m taking my ball and going home. I hope you can save the day without me, but you can’t. Jack even promises to give himself up after he saves the day, let the Russians have me, just let me go into the field again, please? OK, he didn’t say, “please,” so maybe that’s why he stays stuck in that windowless room. (PH and the writers disappoint me here, not having any angle Jack didn’t think of to use for bargaining.)
Audrey then finds him and spends some quality time alone, up close, and personal with him. He’s almost as good at stonefacing her as the Marines. I still have the memory of her having been memory-wiped into a zombie and not knowing Jack some seasons ago, but though married (“Mark treats me well,” Jack is kind enough to inquire after), she still wants something from Jack. Luckily, she walks out before any of that something happens, and that’s about it for Jack this episode. What else happens that’s so interesting?
Pres. Heller and everybody else learn Jack was right, as the Air Force loses control of and touch with drones of death. Good thing they’re the latest stealth technology with no IR signal, no radar presence. When will we learn to beware of the ultimate weapon? OK, yeah, no great surprise there. But how ‘bout this: Audrey heads out to setup a meet between the Brit PM and PH (1st indication that Audrey has any kind of official status here), Mark heads out, too. And the 24 world comes crashing down (is there any other way?) as he apologizes. He says he was wrong, the one who let his emotions cloud his judgment when he argued to take Jack down. Where’s the drama in that? Where’s the dramatic tension as he plots to get his way? What happens to the forged presidential signature on the rendition order for Jack? The good guys are gonna start acting like a team? I never saw that coming in a 24 season.
And then there’s the terrorists. MEH snuck traceability into Mummy’s message of ultimatum to the world (give me Heller or I blow up Britain). CIA finally figures it out, and CIA station chief Steve leads the charge of field ops to the location. MEH asks to take a break from flying the DoD so he can see wifey, and Mummy says Sonny learned enough from watching MEH that MEH can go—but be back in 15 min so you can blow something up. MEH sees wifey, tells her (will he ever learn?) his new plan—the traceability, plus hiding evidence that proves wifey’s innocent; she looks all doe-eyed, lovey-dovey, thank you my one true love! He heads back to the dirty job of piloting the DoD.
But he looks at his watch! Mummy, all coy, asks what’s he nervous about (I’m wondering why look at the watch? It’s not as if the traceable message included a timer, but this is the clock-watching 24 we’re watching here). Mummy says they found his handiwork and converted it into sending the CIA into a trap. Sonny takes over again, goon hits MEH, and everybody heads downstairs. Mummy holds a gun to MEH’s head, MEH pleads for wifey, who still loves him, to save him, and wifey, apparently no dummy, or at least a good agenda-driven terrorist gives us the blank eyed stare. Mummy pulls the trigger, ending one more possibility for drama in this series, although no one really thought it’d ever amount to very much, did you? New-widow doesn’t shed a tear.
CSCS and field ops now are headed into a trap without knowing about Sonny’s itchy but green trigger finger. Kate, remember her?, thinks something’s fishy—how could Mummy have been sloppy enough to leave a trace? Kate (even though CSCS again took her off duty, so OK, there is some drama left in her and in this show) calls her new BFF Chloe, who finds something screwy in Mummy’s transmission, tells Kate, who once again upon the word of someone she knows only as a wanted criminal immediately convinces everybody at CIA that they don’t know what they’re doing. CSCS and team hightail it outta the empty estate just as Sonny drops the laser-guided missiles from DoD#1. Live feed from the team goes down, and no one—not CIA, not Pres. Heller, not Brit PM watching with Heller—knows what happened to the team.
But they now know the one lead they had, the one lead they were counting on, the one lead that meant they didn’t need Jack, wasn’t all that good. Think Jack will hold a grudge and not play ball when they come crawling back, now that they know he was right all along?
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