First thing being first, I did not hate Season 3 of Arrow. I know that it got a lot of hatred for a lot of things that it did, and while I think that Season 2 was definitely superior, I still liked Season 3 quite a bit. Most of the problems were coming from the logic of the world, not the emotional and character work, and I find that to be a decent trade off to make.
Regardless of that, we're here at the beginning of Season 4, after what could've easily been the series finale of Oliver and Felicity riding off, leaving everything behind. We pick up with them in some incredibly painful suburbia scenes, but that's exactly what made them wonderful. They do not fit in the suburbs, or whatever life they thought they were living there, and that was driven home by those scenes. There's also the great idea that Felicity was the one who got bored of that life and was helping the team behind Oliver's back. He's given it up completely because he can't keep himself from going completely into the darkness, but Felicity has never had that problem, and doesn't feel like she needs to cut it out of her life completely, and doesn't even want to. Even then, the most important part of these scenes is that it puts them right back to the chemistry that they had before, the reason why people wanted them together in the first place - they just have such great chemistry that they feel like a pretty natural fit together.

With Oliver and Felicity gone and Thea, Laurel, and Diggle trying to keep Star City together, I'm getting flashes of either Season 3 or 6 of Buffy, when the team was trying to keep Sunnydale under control in her absence. We see some of them working on their own, and they're obviously not doing enough, and just the bit of them working as a team that we see here is all that we really need - the story really starts to kick in once Oliver comes in, so we didn't need to spend longer with them in that situation. While I understand exactly why he's that way, it doesn't make it less frustrating to see Diggle not really working with Oliver, since it feels like the kind of manufactured drama that he would almost always go out of his way to cut through to keep the team going. Thea is threatening a storyline about anger problems or something else causing her to have problems, likely related to the Lazarus Pit bringing her back, so the team ends up with Laurel being the best adjusted and most straightforward member of the group right now.

Then we have the flashbacks. Yes, there was a nice little reference to Hal Jordan in there, but it's really just a small reference and I doubt Warner will even let them use him because they have their bizarre way of managing their TV properties. I really like the idea that Oliver tried being the prototype vigilante in Coast City and basically failed at that. There is the complete lack of clarity at what he's going to be doing back on Lian Yu, and the fact that it means he has to leave there again at some point, then come back - there are still things that they have committed to him doing while he was gone that he can't do on the island, and I'm just hoping that they don't turn the story into a pretzel trying to get him to hit all of those points.


I probably sounded down on this, but only in the sense that a lot of my problems are somewhat sloppy storytelling that could be righted once we've seen more of the season to see where they're going with it. I'd probably put this one above the premiere of The Flash, which is not what I expected to get out of this episode. It's a good start, not like I was in danger of giving up on the show, and it feels like they have a lot of good things ahead of them.
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