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Dan Owen reviews
Cover
Season 4 Episode 7: "Five the Hard Way"

Broadcast on Sky One, Tuesday October 7th, 2008

As premiered on danowen.blogspot.com

Cover Season 1-3 Boxset:
Season 3 Blu-Ray:

    Director:

      Garry A. Brown

    Writer:

      Christian Trokey

    Cast:

      Michael Scofield: Wentworth Miller
      Lincoln Burrows: Dominic Purcell
      Alex Mahone: William Fichtner
      Sara Tancredi: Sarah Wayne Callies
      Brad Bellick: Wade Williams
      Fernando Sucre: Amaury Nolasco
      Theodore "T-Bag" Bagwell: Robert Knepper
      Gretchen Morgan: Jodi Lyn O'Keefe
      Don Self: Michael Rapaport
      Trishanne: Shannon Lucio
      Wyatt: Cress Williams
      Roland Glenn: James Hiroyuki Liao
      General Krans: Leon Russom
      Howard Scuderi: Jude Ciccolella
      Casino Detective: Charles Emmett
      Alexa: Amanda Tosch
      Bartender: Hector Atreyu Ruiz


Beware spoilers.

Last week's episode had a vague Ocean's Eleven vibe to its opening. This week, the similarities to those movies are unavoidable, as half of "Scofield's Six" head to Las Vegas to electronically swipe another Scylla data-card. Back in L.A, T-Bag (Robert Kne pper) allies himself with nasty Gretchen (Jodi Lyn O'Keefe) to help her capture Michael (Wentworth Miller) and force him to decipher Whistler's bird book…

Christian Trokey (who worked as a script editor, until his season 3 breakthrough "Bang & Burn") crafts a fun episode that isn't clean and efficient enough to have you marvelling, but gets the job done. Typically for Prison Break, there are moments that st rain credibility and pull you out of whatever semblance of reality the show has. For example: I just don't believe that GATE secretary Trishanne (Shannon Lucio) would become T-Bag's accomplice and co-kidnapper so easily, and having Mahone (William Fichtne r) escape T-Bag's trap, by jumping over a wall and generally running in a straight line as T-Bag fired off terrible gunshots, was laughable.


The Vegas storyline wasn't particularly strong given the exciting opportunities the city affords, either. Linc (Dominic Purcell) is so underused he may as well not be there, Sara (Sarah Wayne Callies) is again only used for eye-candy distraction purposes (nice bikini, though), Roland (James Hiroyuki Liao) is already the most irritating and stupid new character on TV, and Sucre (Amaury Nolasco) gets a supposedly hilarious mission to flirt with gay Company mark Howard Scuderi (24's Jude Ciccolella) long eno ugh to copy his Scylla card.

Fortunately, T-Bag's storyline was more eventful and relevant to the deeper mysteries of the show. Michael is forced at gunpoint to make sense of Whistler's bird book, as T-Bag threatens Trishanne's life and Gretchen lurks out of sight in another room as the insidious puppeteer. Michael soon starts assembling pages of Whistler's book, revealing a blueprint of the GATE offices where the Company's Scylla-reader is located. Amusingly, T-Bag has no idea Scylla is The Company's "little black book"; just that i t's likely to fetch a handsome sum of money. It's a greedy motivation he incorrectly thinks Michael shares.


I also enjoyed Don Self's (Michael Rapaport) story this week, as the dopey-looking government agent grew some balls on the advice of Mahone and took his fight to sinister General Krans (Leon Russom) personally. Yes, I'm going to stop calling him Pad Man, as his inexplicable season 2 fondness for silence and scribbled dialogue has long since vanished. Don's actually growing on me, too; his reactions to everything are more realistic than the macho posturing of the other emboldened characters. His means of e nsuring his safety from the likes of Company assassin Wyatt (Cress Williams) also made some sense -- and that's a rarity on this show.

Overall, a reliably entertaining episode that doesn't quite deliver the goods, but significantly pushes the GATE storyline forward. It was also good to get some clarity with Michael's nosebleeds -- he's inherited his mother's fatal brain aneurysm. I'm sur e Michael's health will fuel a major cliffhanger in the future. But I'm still very disappointed by the treatment of Linc (who is now almost irrelevant) and particularly Bellick (Wade Williams) this season; the latter of whom spends the episode sat on a fl oor shouting at T-Bag. Prison Break could do with trimming the fat, and losing Bellick would be a step in the right direction.

Join in the discussion about this episode at Dan's Media Digest


OVERALL

Review copyright © Dan Owen, 2008.

The following is a list of all the Prison Break content reviewed to date :

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DVDfever.co.uk - Est. February 25th 2000

As of April 2009, Blu-rays and DVDs reviewed by the editor are watched on a Panasonic TH-37PX80B 37" Plasma TV with a Sony BDP-1500 Blu-ray player and played through a Yamaha DSP-AX820 amplifier.

PC games reviewed by the editor are on:

  • Since Jan 2011: Intel Quad Core Dell XPS 8100, i7 CPU 860 @ 2.80Ghz, 8Gb RAM, nVidia GeForce GTS 240, Windows 7
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  • Since May 2000: Intel Pentium III 600Mhz, 384Mb RAM, Windows 98 SE, Voodoo 3 3000 AGP