REVIEW

TV Review: Prison Break Confidential

Written by Brad Laidman
Published September 21, 2007
page 1 | 2 | 3

Mahone, who is jonesing from withdrawal from whatever pills he used to hide in his fountain pen, decides quickly that Michael is his only chance at escaping this hell hole. Unfortunately for Mahone, Michael still isn’t too happy about Mahone offing his father.

Lincoln, who is free and clear, talks sense into the local authorities and arranges for Michael to be transferred after another day in Sona, which any fool can tell will be extremely treacherous. Michael tells Lincoln to find Sara, and that he can’t go on without her. This reminds us that Sarah Wayne Callies has left the show, we all sigh and wonder how this mess can ever be rectified.

Of course, Michael’s one day in Sona is an eventful one as he is set up by Luchero, who doesn’t like his star status and plants another prisoner’s drugs on him, which means Michael has to fight some 'roided up monster to the death. Told you that day wouldn’t be easy, especially since we know that Michael doesn’t have it in him to kill anybody. This plot contrivance is solved when Michael’s opponent grabs a knife (a violation of the Sona constitution, which they take very seriously) giving Mahone a reason to pop into the circle and snap the poor monster’s neck.

Meanwhile, there is a strange dude living down in the sewage tunnels of Sona named Whistler. The Company, which can apparently manipulate the entire U.S. government, need this guy out of Sona and can’t do it themselves, and that’s where Michael comes in. Hasn’t the poor guy suffered enough? To give the brothers some incentive, the Company has kidnapped Lincoln’s son L.J. and the absent Sara Tancredi. Michael must stay in Sona, escape ASAP, or the loved ones die.

And there you have it, season three becomes Prison Break II.

  • Can Michael escape from a prison with the wrong plans tattooed to his body?
  • Can Mahone survive withdrawal?
  • How many times will Brad Bellick be prison raped before he’s given any food?
  • What goofy mess will the one handed T-Bag get himself into.
  • Will Sara be recast or just killed off?
  • Where is Sucre?
  • Has Maricruz suffocated?
Stay tuned for next week's thrillingly absurd episode of Prison Break.

page 1 | 2 | 3
Brad Laidman writes on pop, politics, and other less than vital issues. He blogs at Brad Laidman.com and is way too angry given his laziness.
Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
TV Review: Prison Break Confidential
Published: September 21, 2007
Type: Review
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Action, Video: Drama, Video: Television
Part of a feature: Prison Break Confidential
Writer: Brad Laidman
Brad Laidman's BC Writer page
Brad Laidman's personal site
Spread the Word
Like this article?
Email this
Submit to del.icio.us Save to del.icio.us
RSS Feeds
All RSS Feeds (240+)
Comments on this article
Articles in this series
BC articles by Brad Laidman
Video: Action
Video: Drama
Video: Television
All Video Articles
All Review articles
All BC articles
All BC Comments

Comments

#1 — September 22, 2007 @ 02:27AM — WHOLETRUTHY

I too am addicted to this silly show( at least no smoke monsters have made an appearance) alas this will be the last season unless Michael becomes an agent for a secret agency(some he was designed for!) Good lord I've just talked myself into watching season four.

#2 — September 22, 2007 @ 19:29PM — Josh Lasser [URL]

Congratulations! This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States.

#3 — September 22, 2007 @ 22:29PM — Alec [URL]

I commend you for a great review! In retrospect, it is clear that "Prison Break" should have been crafted as a limited run series, lasting perhaps a maximum of 3 to 3.5 seasons, encompassing the breakout from the prison, the battle against the mysterious Company, and perhaps a few other issues. it would still be imminently watchable and also have an afterlife on DVD, etc.

On the other hand, like "24," one of the biggest challenges that the show faces is that it creates memorable regular characters who logically get killed off, making it harder for the writers to come up with new characters who we root for (or hiss at) as heartily as we do the old ones. I have some women friends who are seriously invested in the relationship between Michael and Sara, so if her character is killed off, they may abandon the show if they cannot reconcile their need to see Michael and Sara together with any new plot lines.

Despite these potential handicaps, the writers might be able to pull off something interesting since fans of the show care about Michael, his brother, and his brother's son, and even Sucre and T-Bag (in a very weird way). Anytime an audience feels empathy with a show's characters and are intensely curious to see what happens next, you have a little room to breathe if you can come up with compelling stories. On the other hand, if you fall back on the standard network pap -- stock situations and marketing-research department nonsense meant to mechanically appeal to a "demographic," then you are done for.

So it will be interesting to see whether the show's creators can pull off their rather sudden shifts of theme and locale.

By the way, it is interesting to see that Fox has made the season premiere of "Prison Break," along with some of its other shows, available as a free download on iTunes. I don't have any great love for either Apple or Fox, but I am a big champion of entertainment companies who come up with creative ways to entice new viewers to sample their TV shows, while also rewarding fans and regular viewers. And offering a free download early in the season is a cool thing to do.

#4 — September 23, 2007 @ 23:14PM — lilylis

Interesting review. I agree that on paper or when trying to explain Prison Break to someone else, it does sound a bit far-fetched. However, to a viewer who has the ability to suspend belief, its an hour of intrigue, suspense and entertainment; far more enjoyable than the typical choices offered up as television these days. If given a choice between game shows, competition shows, reality shows, cop/lawyer/forensic/medical shows - give me more Prison Break.

In reading your review, I found it difficul to believe you are actually a fan who watches the Prison Break series regularly, when your review contains several obvious errors concerning events in previous seasons. If anything, a reporter/reviewer/critic needs to provide accurate info about a show to his audience.

A few examples of errors found:

-- Nick Savrin was NOT killed by the Company, but by Abruzzi's mafia goons because he failed to bring Veronica to the airstrip

-- Mahone did NOT kill Abruzzi, he never fired his gun. He was responsible for the setup of Abruzzi's capture. When Abruzzi refused to put down the gun, he was fired upon by FBI agents but not Mahone.

-- Charles Patoshik was NOT shot, but committed suicide when he jumped from the grain silo.

-- There was a resolution to the corrupt Reynold's presidency when she resigned in Season 2 before Lincoln was exonerated; wrapping up the story surrounding Lincoln's framing and ending the influence of the Company over the White House. So you see, fans were not really left hanging as to what happened to Reynolds.

-- Maricruz was not left in a box?! Although she was put somewhere not yet revealed...and left with 3 weeks of food and water...not one day.

-- Mahone was 'blackmailed' by the Company which is what I think you intended to say rather than 'blackballed'.

-- And, you fail to mention that the rumors of Sarah Wayne Callies leaving the show permanently after the birth of her baby have yet to be confirmed by either FOX or Callies herself, which is an important piece of info that was left out of your synopsis.

I know, it seems petty to point these things out, but your review lacks credibility and makes me wonder if you really watch this show? And, if not how can you be giving a fair review?

Silly show? Perhaps. What conspiracy show today isn't silly? Entertaining? Most definitely. Should the show have been limited to only 2 seasons? I just discovered the show mid-season last year and am not ready to part with it yet. I'm looking forward to more Prisneyland...even if its more brutal that season 1. The relationship dynamics between the SONA 4 will make season 3 worth while even if the rumors about Callies turn out to be true. Sign me up for more Prison Break!

-- lily

#5 — September 23, 2007 @ 23:36PM — Brad Laidman [URL]

I'm going to actually write a column in response. Actually you're totally correct.

#6 — October 8, 2007 @ 03:32AM — Mike

Well done, Lily!
I'm with you

#7 — January 14, 2008 @ 18:10PM — kelly [URL]

Haywire doesn't get shot.
He commits suicide but Mahone let him.

Want comments emailed to you? No spam, promise! Address:

Add your comment, speak your mind

(Or ping: http://blogcritics.org/mt/tb/68923)

Personal attacks are not allowed. Please read our comment policy.





Remember Name/URL?

Please preview your comment!

Fresh
Articles
Fresh
Comments