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3.18 Third Party Ripoff
Nikita: "You've created a situation where everyone loses, Madeline."
This episode was like a companion piece to "All Good Things." Last week, Michael was in charge, and master of all he surveyed. This week, he was practically cleaning the toilets.
Hard wedge. Type one directive. Michael and Nikita can't have a romantic relationship, because Madeline thinks it has a 1.5% negative effect on Michael's performance. Come on. Is Michael going to stop favoring Nikita, just because he can't sleep with her? He's been protecting her since the very first episode of the series, long before he kissed her for the first time. When it comes right down to it, Madeline doesn't care about Michael and Nikita doing it. She just wants them to stop caring about each other. It makes a Section kind of sense. If her operatives aren't dehumanized and suffering, how is Madeline going to get her jollies?
Michael is a control freak. It's his defining characteristic. He said it didn't bother him to lose his authority, and he may have even believed it when he said it, but it was soooo not true. He had to insert himself into Davenport's mission instead of allowing it to fail. And it also applied to his relationship with Nikita. He was reluctant to risk it, slow to commit; it took him years to get to this point. Now that he's decided that he wants to be with her, nothing Madeline says or does is going to change his mind. I didn't even need to see that final scene, where he told Nikita that very thing. This isn't over, because Michael doesn't want it to be over.
Just like in the previous episode, Nikita backed Michael and let him make the decisions. She stopped ragging him about what he did while he was in command. She slept with him again, even though she had been instructed not to. She was lying awake worrying about him at 3:30 a.m., while he was sleeping. And when he needed to acknowledge it was hopeless, that was just what she forced him to do. The one thing that stayed with me, though, was when he told her it wasn't over. After he left, she smiled just a little. It was clearly what she wanted to hear.
The humiliation and seriousness of Michael losing his status was contrasted by the totally silly Walter Birkoff Valerie-the-profiler love triangle B plot. Gee. I guess that's allowed because it doesn't affect their work by 1.5%, huh? The entire plotline was only partially redeemed by Birkoff's touching and extremely mature decision to drop Valerie in order to keep Walter's friendship, while Walter came out of it looking somewhat childish.
Bits and pieces:
-- Davenport endeared himself to me by treating Michael with compassion and respect, and by graciously ceding command of that final mission to him as well. How many Section operatives would have the guts to do something like that? Not many.
-- During the Operations/Madeline working breakfast, she spoke offhand about eliminating an entire team because they might be infected with something. What a sweetheart.
-- Michael and Nikita. Bubble bath. Need I say more?
-- It couldn't have been easy to cast a woman that worked as a love interest for both Walter and Birkoff, but they did it. Walter appears to do very well with younger women for a man his age.
-- This week's Most Obvious Symbolism was Michael's nerdy raincoat and hornrims. When Davenport turned the mission over to Michael, Michael immediately discarded his "disguise" as well as his semblance of submission.
-- There was more "looking through glass" look-but-don't-touch stuff, too. Plus, we saw an opague, distorted Madeline through that plastic thing in her office. This directive crap was all Madeline, after all. Operations was ready to let it go.
-- European license plates this time.
-- There were more dehumanizing images at the nightclub: naked people dancing in plastic bags, and waitresses and bouncers wearing executioner hoods.
-- While undercover, Nikita wore a fake-looking wig, a slinky dress, and an alias: Lisa.
Quotes:
Operations: "These two have been dancing around this thing from day one."
Davenport: "Michael could have killed you. But he didn't. I'm not as patient as he is."
Madeline: "Michael's self-esteem is tied into Nikita's perception of him. I'm sure it's very painful for him."
Michael: "I just came by to tell you something. It's not over. We will be together."
I want to give this episode four stars, even though I didn't like the B plot. Maybe it's the bubble bath talking,
Billie
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