

Why even bother having a plan and agreeing to it if they have no intention of sticking to it? In fact, I really don't understand why Daryl and Tara think it's okay to just go rogue on this one. Rosita is completely against this idea, reminding everyone that there's a plan and they should stick to it. We pick back up where they left off last week, and learn that Daryl and Tara plan to drive the truck through the Sanctuary wall. The second story focused on Daryl, Tara, Rosita and Michonne. They're not his friends, just his erstwhile "traveling companions." Negan reminds him what he'll do to Rick when they get out, but Eugene doesn't care. Then he goes to Negan to help devise a plan to save everyone. He races to Gabriel's sick bed and angrily tells him he won't help him. When Eugene sees them killing his new people he gets angry. This is when Daryl rams the truck into the Sanctuary wall, letting the dead enter. Dwight doesn't shoot him, but he does shoot the plane. Dwight stops him, but Eugene calls his bluff and sends the plane out anyways.

Eugene has strapped an iPod to the top of a remote control plane and is going to use it to lure away the Walkers. The second stage takes place on the roof tops. Though he also tells him he won't reveal what he knows to Negan if Dwight will "cease and desist" in his efforts to take down the Saviors. Crisis be damned.First, when he confronts Dwight about being the mole and Dwight tries to convince him to help Rick's cause. I refuse to accept the possibility of Arrow ending without one more Ollie/Slade encounter. If Ollie is nothing more than a memory after Crisis, we still this episode closing the door on his superhero journey and delivering the final word on his relationships with Diggle and his children. But one of those epilogues looks to be more a backdoor pilot for Green Arrow and the Canaries than anything else, and there’s no guarantee Ollie will actually be alive in “Fadeout.” With all that uncertainty surrounding the final three episodes, it’s good to see “Purgatory providing so much closure here and now.
FRIENDS SEASON 8 EPISODE 7 PLUS
Sure, there’s still Crisis itself, plus a couple epilogue episodes in January.
FRIENDS SEASON 8 EPISODE 7 SERIES
With the past diverging more and more from what it was, will they even have a home in which to return? The highest credit I can give to “Purgatory” is that this episode feels like a proper series finale. Plus, this twist further calls into question what will happen when Team Arrow 2.0 try to return to the future. In that sense, “Purgatory” actually has an advantage over “Lian Yu.” Roy’s near-fatal injury and subsequent amputation proved that there are lasting consequences for some heroes who find themselves trapped on the island. Season 6 then proceeded to do absolutely nothing with that cliffhanger. One of the hallmarks of the Season 5 finale was its cliffhanger ending, as fans were left to speculate which Team Arrow members perished in the blast. The final battle between Team Arrow and Fyers’ army is staged well and makes strong use of that extended tracking shot Bamford does so well. Not that we should expect anything less when James Bamford is behind the camera. Balancing out all the character drama, “Purgatory” also boasts several strong action sequences. Not to mention that this entire, contrived premise is worth it just to see Ollie interacting with Byron Mann’s Yao Fei one last time. He brings a much-needed weight and authenticity to these emotional character interactions, whether it’s his father/child chats with Mia and William or one last bro-off session with Diggle.

As he has all season, Stephen Amell is great about capturing that mixture of militant obsession with the mission and sad longing at the thought of having to say goodbye to his family forever. These questions fuel a great many powerful character moments. Ollie may have finally accepted his fate, but can he convince his children to do the same? Can Diggle make peace with the fact that his wife has been colluding with an ancient space god behind his back? Can Ollie finally make peace with this hellish plot of land that’s so often tormented him these past 12 years? There’s plenty of meaty character drama on tap in this episode. Instead, the goal was clearly to tie up the various emotional loose ends leading into Crisis, and it’s there where “Purgatory” sinks its hooks.
