Smallville - Season 6
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Wither is an episode about relationship transitions. We see Jimmy Olsen and Chloe Sullivan take their friendship to a new level. We see Oliver Queen and Lois Lane develop their relationship and spend some time together. We also see Lex Luthor and Lana Lang's relationship flourish and become more intimate. But for Clark Kent, there is no relationship to develop. He does meet up with a hot Park Ranger in short shorts and the perma-grin on his face as he talks to her is pretty funny. But alas, it wasn't meant to be for Clark and by the end of the episode, he is all alone in his barn loft.The main plot is kind of weak and hearkens back to the tone of the first couple of seasons of Smallville. Where there is a murder mystery and Clark, Chloe and Jimmy Olsen (instead of Pete) set out to solve it. Instead of meteor rocks, there is an actual alien, a Phantom that escaped from the Phantom Zone, causing the murders. So, it's not an entirely original plot but the relationships and character development is well done and advances the overall story of the season and series.
This episode was great to see Clark bond with another Kryptonian, Raya, and how Clark was able to learn more about his heritage and culture. It's too bad that Raya was killed off so quickly. I would've like to have seen Raya at least finish out the season. I felt bad that she was killed so soon, and I think that having her last a few more episodes so that we could have gotten to know her better would have been better for not only the show as a whole, but for the character of Clark Kent in Smallville.We get to see more of the story arc of Lex and Lana expanded upon in this episode. I am torn between being intrigued and disappointed. I am intrigued as I watch Lex and Lana move from being in love with each other to starting to lie and outmaneuver each other. But at the same time, I am disappointed in Lana as she stoops to the level of the Luthors. In the past, while Lana did annoy me sometimes, she was always a pure character. A friend who was nice and sweet and while misguided sometimes, always tried to do the right thing. Now, it seems like Lana is being sullied by the Luthors and I am disappointed in Lana and her choices. I'm hoping that she will come to her senses at some point and get away from Lex.
Smallville was an American television series, created by Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, based on the largest hero of all-time, Superman. The series addressed the transition of young Clark Kent from his adolescence to adulthood, showing all the problems faced by an ordinary teenager, as well as developing superpowers and finding discoveries about his true origins. Starring Tom Welling, Smallville lasted for ten seasons.
For anyone who isn't familiar with the now eight-year old WB series, Smallville earned a respectable audience by slapping together a cast of doe-eyed Dawson's Creek clones, blessing their characters' teenage frames with superpowers, and turning them loose in a fictionalized Midwestern town that's host to more meteorites and interplanetary visitors than our smoldering adolescents know what to do with. The story focuses on Clark Kent (Tom Welling), a mild-mannered boyscout who, of course, we all know is destined to become one of the most iconic superheroes in comicbook lore: Superman. $(window).on('load', function() { var img = $('#load70671041305824').css({'opacity': '0'}); img.on('load', function() { img.css({'opacity': '1', 'transition': 'opacity 0.30s ease-in'}) } ); img.attr('src', ' -bluray.com/reviews/1519_1.jpg'); } );Over the course of its first five seasons, Smallville traced Clark's reluctant acceptance of his destiny, his steady development of powers, and his deteriorating relationship with boyhood friend Lex Luthor (Michael Rosenbaum). For its sixth outing, the show tones down the sappy teen drama that plagued its earlier seasons and begins eliminating the villain-of-the-week schtick that made the series feel so repetitive. In their place, the writers finally give fans what they want: the long-awaited and inevitable clash of classic titans from the DC Comics universe.
As the season opens, Clark escapes his interdimensional imprisonment in the Phantom Zone and sets about finding the galactic criminals that escaped while he was there. But first, he has to squeeze in time to stop Lex (now possessed by a tyrannical alien entity named Zod) from mounting an army of deadly super-soldiers. Complicating matters is Lex and Lana's marriage, which doesn't leave Clark feeling very super about the current state of affairs in Smallville. Before long, we're also introduced to a wealth of characters that reinvigorate the series and give it new purpose -- Oliver Queen aka The Green Arrow (Justin Hardley), John Jones aka The Martian Manhunter (Phil Morris), and Jimmy Olson (Aaron Ashmore). The carefully plotted emergence of the JLA slowly starts to take shape as Clark learns to work with other superheroes to combat impossibly powerful foes.
I've been an on-again off-again fan of Smallville since the beginning, but I soon began to feel the show was becoming stuck in a rut. Clark moped around Smallville, developed a new power, and fought off anyone who couldn't handle exposure to whatever alien elements the writers decided to rain down on the Midwest that week. Lather, rinse, repeat. While its characters were relatively well crafted and its dialogue was suitably convincing, it suffered from a been-there-done-that familiarity that nearly caused me to abandon the series for better shows in the same time slot. Thankfully, season six brings it all back on track. Leaner, darker, and more intense, it was strong enough to refresh my interest when it first aired and stoke my excitement for a seventh season. The episodes were particularly inspiring, returning to the clever tie-ins and comicbook nods that attracted me to the show in the first place.
Granted, Smallville's sixth season still suffers from several issues those who follow the series have so graciously decided to overlook -- yawn-inducing stretches of exposition, notoriously dense subplots, and more than a few convenient plot developments -- but the writers keep their heads above water and manage to deliver the goods from episode to episode. The sheer volume of characters and plotlines will prevent newcomers from easily jumping on board, but longtime fans will find a lot to love in season six and plenty to look forward to with season seven.Smallville: The Complete Sixth Season Blu-ray, Video Quality $(window).on('load', function() { var img = $('#load95881325694725').css({'opacity': '0'}); img.on('load', function() { img.css({'opacity': '1', 'transition': 'opacity 0.30s ease-in'}) } ); img.attr('src', ' -bluray.com/reviews/1519_2.jpg'); } );Smallville: The Complete Sixth Season features a decent 1080p/VC-1 transfer that made a solid splash in 2007, but has since lost some of its luster in light of more recent, technically proficient BD television releases. Luckily, the picture isn't a complete bust. A consistent parade of vibrant colors populate a primary-splashed palette, immediately recalling the bold reds and blues of the series' comicbook roots. Contrast is comfortable, stable, and bright, resulting in inky blacks and believable image depth. Saturation is spot on as well with skintones that are far more natural than they appear on the DVD edition. Detail is also fairly impressive -- fine textures are often crisp and realistic, object edges are generally well defined, and on-screen text is sharp and legible. Several hazy shots and soft close-ups manage to muck up the proceedings, but most of the clarity issues seem to be the product of the series' source rather than a faulty technical transfer. 59ce067264
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