DVDfever.co.uk - Prison Break Season 4 review by Dan Owen DVDfever.co.uk - Charts, News and Reviews of Blu-rays, DVDs, Games, CDs, Hardware, Laserdiscs, Cinema Films & more
DVDfever.co.uk - Charts, News and Reviews of DVDs, Games, Hardware, Laserdiscs, Cinema Films & more

This Week's Highlights
Compulsion
Max Richter
Music chart analysis w/e 4.9.10
New Blu-ray
& DVD highlights
Lara Croft & The Guardian Of Light
Martin Schenk
@ DVDfever Youtube

Last updated
Sep 03 2010

Xbox Gamertag:
DVDfever co uk

Frank Sidebottom's
World Wide Shed

News & Views
Discussion Forum
News Archive
Announcements
All About Us
Email Dom
Write 4 DVDfever
Competitions
Music Charts
Chart Archive
Cinema Releases
Cinema Reviews
Press Releases
TV Issues

R2 DVD Reviews
Blu-ray Reviews
HD-DVD Reviews
R1 DVD Reviews
R3-6 DVD Reviews
DVD List
CD Reviews
PS2 Reviews
PSP Reviews
Xbox Reviews
Xbox 360 Reviews
Gamecube Revs
GBA Reviews
PC Reviews
Hardware Revs
Concert Reviews
Video Reviews
Comedy Reviews
Book Reviews
Screenplay Reviews
Movie Downloads
Interviews
TV Shows
PSX Reviews
N64 Reviews
Dreamcast Revs
Laserdisc Revs
Short Stories
DVDs In Brief

Right To Reply
Why Widescreen?
DVD Links
Music Links
WS Video List
WS PAL LD List

Me and my
Aortic Valve!


Why Donate?

Dan Owen reviews
Cover
Season 4 Episode 20: "Cowboys and Indians"

Broadcast on Sky One, Tuesday May 12th, 2009

As premiered on danowen.blogspot.com

Cover
Season 4 DVD:
Season 1-4 DVD:
Season 3 Blu-Ray:

    Director:

      Milan Cheylov

    Writer:

      Nick Santora

    Cast:

      Michael Scofield: Wentworth Miller
      Lincoln Burrows: Dominic Purcell
      Alex Mahone: William Fichtner
      Sara Tancredi: Sarah Wayne Callies
      Theodore "T-Bag" Bagwell: Robert Knepper
      Christina: Kathleen Quinlan
      General Krantz: Leon Russom
      Don Self: Michael Rapaport
      Marjorie Swift: Amy Chaffee
      Nandu Banejee: Marshall Manesh
      Ralph Becker: Raphael Sbarge
      Gretchen Morgan: Jodi Lyn O'Keefe


Beware spoilers.

That was better. I'm still bored by the Scylla silliness, but in some ways that took a backseat in "Cowboys And Indians", which distracted us with an entertaining escape from a besieged hotel, refocused the stakes slightly, and ended on the show's best cliffhanger for ages...

After the assassination of Banerjee at Miami's Progressive Energies conference, Linc (Dominic Purcell) and Michael (Wentworth Miller) are trapped inside as the hotel fills with armed police, knowing Christina (Kathleen Quinlan) has framed them for the crime and escaped with Scylla. Outside, Don (Michael Rappaport) and Mahone (William Fichtner) try to help their colleagues escape the hotel, by snooping on the cop's plans and relaying intel. Trapped on the 16th floor, trying to gain access to the roof to make their way to a laundry exit on the other side of the building, Michael must improvise a bomb to provide them with cover when they're cornered...

Elsewhere, General Krantz (Leon Russom) sends a henchman to extricate the brothers, lest they blab to the authorities after arrest, and Christina tries to sell Scylla to Banerjee's grieving father, Indian Prime Minister Nandu Banerjee (Marshall Manesh), by telling him the Chinese were responsible for his son's death, hoping he'll buy her technology to use as a weapon to reignite a border dispute between with China. I guess she's hoping the Prime Minister won't hear about the fact she's framed Linc's team for the assassination? Can you say "plot hole"?


Ignoring nitpicks, this was an entertaining episode from writer Nick Santora, who kept things moving and threw in some surprises. It's always fun to see Michael get out of tight spots with an ingenious plan (a la The A-Team), and the way in which he evades the armed cops with Linc was particularly good, as their situation really did feel hopeless. Okay, I'm not convinced by how quickly he managed to do certain things (make a bomb from toilet tolls and an aerosol, change into an assailant's body armour), but that's TV for you.

Once Michael and Linc are safe, they're captured and sent to meet with the General. There follows a scene intended to remind us of the stakes, which have certainly become very hazy. The General puts everyone's names in a lottery, selects "Don", and has an operative kill Don's disabled wife in New York (live to the room, via speakerphone.) The moment even allows for exposition that belatedly gives us reason for why Don stole Scylla himself earlier this season (to pay for his wife's treatments, whose circumstance he blames himself for.) Sure, it's retroactive patching that's come too late, but at least it's there now. Don feels a bit more sympathetic and, after jumping out of the General's window into the harbour below, he's escaped to pose a real danger. After all, he now has nothing to lose, and there's nothing the Company can threaten him with.

Less interesting was T-Bag's (Robert Knepper) desperation to "earn his stripes" in the General's eyes as a Company Man -- the script reminding us that T-Bag was once a big player in Fox River, so wasn't always the incompetent, selfish creep he appears to be. Shame seasons 2-4 wrote him that way, then. Anyway, T-Bag gets a chance to demonstrate his loyalty by finding Sara (Sarah Wayne Callies) and bring her to the General, as leverage to ensure Michael, Linc and Mahone get Scylla back from Christina. Indeed, they actually do -- by locating her at a Federal Bank, cashing her money, and staging a bank robbery to grab Scylla from here.


Unfortunately, Linc is captured by Christina's gang during their getaway, leaving Michael with a terrible choice when he receives phone calls from both the General and his mother: give Scylla to his mom and condemn his girlfriend to death at the hand of Krantz, or give Scylla to the General and allow his brother to bleed-out from a gunshot to the lung.

Overall, Prison Break's existence post-season 1 has largely relied on pace, excitement, camaraderie and regular surprises. Its strong suit has never been plot or characterization, but it can distract you with "incidents" well enough for you to merrily be swept along. Season 4 has started to struggle with this formula, sadly -- as the show's become rat's nest of confusion now the writers are forced to keep the story alive by cannibalizing their own premise (the brothers are no longer related, they don't have the same goal, and the big villain is their "dead" mother.)

"Cowboys And Indians" didn't solve any of these problems, but it alleviated them slightly (getting the brothers back on the same side, indulging us with the set-pieces) and ultimate it managed to distract you from its flaws again. For that, just be grateful, don't think too deeply about any of it (the writers clearly don't) and just hope the series finale ends things on a relative high.

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


OVERALL

Review copyright © Dan Owen, 2009.

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

E-mail Dan Owen

[Up to the top of this page]

DVDs reviewed by the editor are watched on a Panasonic TXW32R4 32" widescreen TV connected to either a Creative Dxr2 DVD-ROM player or Microsoft Xbox and played through a Sony STR-DB930 amplifier.

PC games reviewed by the editor are on:

  • Since Nov 2005: Intel Pentium D 830 3.0Ghz, 1Gb RAM, 128Mb nVidia GeForce 6700XL, Windows XP
  • Since Aug 2003: Intel Pentium 4 2.66Ghz, 512Mb RAM, 128Mb GeForce4 MX440 graphics, Windows XP
  • Since May 2003: Intel Pentium 4 2.6Ghz, 512Mb RAM, 128Mb ATI Radeon 9600TX graphics, Windows XP
  • Since Jun 2002: Intel Pentium III 600Mhz, 384Mb RAM, Windows 98 SE, 64Mb ATI Radeon 8500LE
  • Since May 2000: Intel Pentium III 600Mhz, 384Mb RAM, Windows 98 SE, Voodoo 3 3000 AGP