Wednesday, February 27, 2019

'Gotham' Recap: "Ace Chemicals" (5x07)


Welcome back to another episode of Gotham, or, as I like to call it: "The show where the Joker is just several Cameron Monaghans stacked on top of each other wearing a trench coat" (a bit wordy to be the official title, I know).

This week's episode, "Ace Chemicals," features a few different plots: Jeremiah's re-enactment of the Wayne murders, Gordon and Lee reconnecting while also trying to solve a mystery, and Penguin and Selina's search for a way out of Gotham. However, as these plots are extremely interwoven and overlap with each other, I've decided not to split them up this week. Instead, I'll just be telling the whole story in order.

So, without further ado, here we go.

Plots A-C: Dinner and a Show

The episode opens with several men in lab coats (who have the letter "Z" carved into their chest) running from a garage. Someone in a silver hazmat suit follows them out while carrying a bunch of green and purple fireworks. This person lights the fireworks which rain down green gas and smoke. As the gas disperses, the men begin to foam at the mouth and collapse.

Over at the GCPD, Gordon talks on the radio with a man called General Wade. Gordon is frustrated to learn that Walker hasn't been captured by the military and asks if they know what her motives are yet. Walker replies that they don't.

Gordon then says that since Eduardo and Walker are out of the way (or so he thinks) and asks Wade what stands in the way of reunifying Gotham and connecting it with the mainland. Wade replies that there's nothing in the way anymore and adds that he's going to recommend that the military move forward with the process . . . unless something happens to destabilize Gotham.

Gordon tells Bullock the news but adds that he won't believe Wade until the process actually starts. He then asks Bullock if the search parties have found Alfred, who went missing five days ago. Bullock replies that they haven't. Gordon asks how Bruce is doing. Bullock replies that the kid is running himself ragged to find Alfred and barely resting at all.

Gordon walks over to Bruce, who's examining a map. Bruce shows Gordon where he wants to search next, and Gordon agrees to send out a squad but tells Bruce he needs to stay behind. Bruce initially resists, but Gordon says that he needs Bruce to be sharp. He adds that Bruce will be a liability if he doesn't get some rest.

(Side note: It's interesting to hear Gordon talk to Bruce in that way, as if he's another officer at the GCPD. It really shows how far Bruce has come and how Gordon almost thinks of him as an equal. Back in season 1 or even in season 4, this conversation would've gone very differently.)


(The above clip is from episode 4x04, "The Demon's Head.")

Bruce agrees to stay at the GCPD but says he's worried that they have no leads on Alfred and no way of knowing what happened. Gordon replies that no matter what's going on, Alfred's not someone to go down easily. He tells Bruce that he'll let him know if the search party finds anything.

Bullock then tells Gordon that Harper's squad found something weird as they were searching the city.

Gordon and Bullock meet Harper at the scene of the crime. She shows him four dead men who breathed in an airborne chemical agent and notes that the Z's on their chest were carved before the time of death. Gordon also notices a fake mustache on one of the bodies.

Harper shows them the building that the men were running from. It's a film set, oddly enough. Bullock wonders if the "Z" stands for Zsasz, but Gordon points out that chemicals aren't usually his M.O. Gordon adds that, whatever's going on here, they need to stop it before it interferes with reunification.

Gordon then bends down to examine a tattoo on one of the corpses. It's a chess piece, which is the sign of a gang called "the Chessmen" from the Narrows. He wonders what they're doing in this part of town. Bullock replies that there's one person who might know.

Elsewhere, Bruce walks through the streets alone. He comes across a newspaper on the ground and is surprised to see that the front page story is about his parents' deaths. He then finds a wall covered in the same old papers. He hears a woman's laugh and sees a couple that, from the back, looks like his parents.

He follows them down the street and into a subway but loses sight of them as it gets darker. He then finds a dimly lit tunnel at the bottom of the subway and notices a single pearl at the entrance. He decides to enter the tunnel, though it's clearly a set-up.


Back in the green zone, Barbara enters the clinic where Lee is now working as a doctor. Lee tells her to go away, but Barbara says she needs medical assistance for her child. Lee points out that Barbara tried to kill her twice and reminds her that there are other doctors. Barbara retorts that she wants the best care for her innocent child and that means getting Lee's help.

Lee asks if Gordon knows that Barbara came to the clinic. She replies that it's none of his business.

As if on cue, Gordon enters the room. Barbara says he's interrupting a doctor-patient conversation and tells him to leave. Gordon asks if Lee's actually her doctor and Lee replies that she's not sure yet. She asks why he's at the clinic, and he says the GCPD found dead men with a connection to the Narrows.

Lee says that before she addresses that, Barbara and Gordon need to talk. Barbara doesn't want to speak to him, but Lee insists that if she's going to be Barbara's doctor, then Barbara needs to talk to the child's father. She adds that Barbara's first appointment is in a week and a nurse will give her vitamins on her way out. She then leaves Gordon and Barbara so they can talk alone.

Gordon asks if Lee's really the only doctor Barbara could find. She replies that Lee is the best doctor in Gotham and says that she didn't pick her to spite Gordon. She then adds that she only told him about the baby because he had a right to know. Now that he knows, his involvement in the situation is over. When he seems skeptical, she asks if he doesn't think she's fit to be a mother.

"What do you think?" Gordon asks. Barbara leaves, furious.


Meanwhile, Bruce follows the tunnel to where it lets out: his father's study in Wayne Manor. He sees a couple that looks just like his parents. They're laughing and smiling like nothing's wrong. He stares and asks who they are. "Martha Wayne" replies that they're his parents.

Alfred arrives, also cheery and off-putting, and says that Bruce needs to get "spruced up" because they have a guest. He points to a corner, where Jeremiah raises a glass and smiles.


Bruce is shocked to see that he's still alive. Jeremiah replies that he just had to fake his death to throw Bruce off the scent while he finished his "project." Bruce lunges to attack Jeremiah, but Alfred holds him back, saying he shouldn't be rude to their guest.

Jeremiah agrees and lifts a tarp to reveal a large bomb.


He tells Bruce that he's placed about a dozen bombs all over the house. If Bruce tries to attack Jeremiah, he'll blow up the entire manor.

Bruce asks what Jeremiah did to Alfred and who his fake parents are. Jeremiah replies that they're an "innocent couple I kidnapped based on bone structure and build" and says that plastic surgery turned them into Thomas and Martha Wayne. He adds that he captured Alfred in the Green Zone.

Bruce surmises that both Alfred and the couple are hypnotized. Jeremiah confirms this suspicion, saying that he can't afford for them to improvise, since it's an important day for everyone.

"Just look at how they're dressed," he says. Bruce looks them over and realizes that the couple are wearing the same clothes his parents were when they were murdered.

Jeremiah says he's giving Bruce "the chance to experience it all over again." When Bruce asks why Jeremiah's doing this, he replies that it was the most important day of Bruce's life—and Jeremiah didn't get to be a part of it. He says they need to fix that and tells Alfred that it's time for dinner.

Elsewhere, on a Gotham pier, Penguin watches a ship get blown up on the river. Selina says it's the third one to go down, and he notes that the government was thorough about placing explosive mines in the river. Selina is frustrated that Penguin doesn't have a plan and points out that the government will also shoot down anything that tries to fly out of the city.

She then remembers the underground tunnels that Jeremiah and his followers were digging the night she (seemingly) killed him.


Penguin's skeptical but agrees to give it a try, as the tunnels are their only option. Selina tells him that the tunnels are in the Dark Zone and adds that they should wait until it gets dark to use them.

Over in the Narrows, Gordon and Lee look for the Chessmen. She sadly remarks that it looks like all of her efforts to improve the neighborhood were in vain, as it seems to be as bad as ever. Gordon tries to talk to Lee about what happened with Barbara, but the conversation is drawn short when Lee spots graffiti directions left for members of the Chessmen that lead to their secret base.

Back at Wayne Manor, Alfred serves dinner. Jeremiah notes that Alfred told him all about Bruce's childhood, right down to his favorite food. Bruce isn't interested in chatting and says that since he's playing Jeremiah's game, Alfred and the couple should be allowed to go free. Jeremiah replies that it's important that every detail, including his parents, is in place—and with that, "Thomas" puts the pearl necklace on "Martha."

Jeremiah asks what it was like when Bruce's parents died. Jeremiah says that he lost his family as well and still hurts over it. Bruce, however, tells Jeremiah that this whole scenario is fake and that even though he's trying to manipulate Bruce into reliving that night, it won't work. Jeremiah replies that while his re-enactment might not be identical to the actual night, all he needs is for Bruce to be thinking about those memories, even if he's not reliving them.

He then says that he just wants to be connected to Bruce, and adds that if Bruce isn't going to be his best friend, there are other ways that they can be connected.


He says that Bruce will understand in time. Jeremiah then says that it's time for him and Bruce's parents to leave because they "have an important date with destiny," and advises Bruce that he'd better find Alfred and get out. He starts the countdown on the bomb and exits, leaving Bruce to find the butler.

In the Narrows, Gordon and Lee follow the directions to the Chessmen's hideout and find an Ace Chemicals factory with smoke coming out of it. As they enter the factory, they see several men working with glowing green liquid stored inside vats and bottles. Gordon grabs one of the men and tries to question him, but the man simply replies that "the chemical stock will soon give Gotham an aftershock" and all of the henchmen around him echo the rhyme.

Lee and Gordon quickly realize that the rhymes and the dazed expression in the men's eyes can only mean one thing: they've been hypnotized by Jervis Tetch, the Mad Hatter. And, as if on cue, Hatter shows up and orders his hypnotized henchmen to attack Gordon and Lee. The couple does a decent job of fending them off until Ecco shows up on roller skates, knocks Gordon down with a crowbar, and begins to beat him.


Meanwhile, Selina goes to the Sirens' Club and fills Barbara in on Penguin's plan. She says that she's only been pretending to help Penguin; in actuality, she wants revenge on him for Tabitha's death and will be happy to either kill him or steal all of his loot. She adds that once she finds a way out of the city, she and Barbara can kill Penguin and escape.

Barbara agrees, happy to get revenge on Penguin and get away from Gordon. She then remarks, "Well, aren't we just two ladies and a baby about to kill our sworn enemy?" This causes Selina to give her a weird look.


In Wayne Manor, Bruce tricks the hypnotized Alfred into leaving by claiming that there's a gas leak in the kitchen and saying that the whole place is about to blow. The two of them run into the tunnel just in time to escape the flames as all of Wayne Manor goes up in smoke.

It's a sad moment, to see Bruce's home utterly destroyed, though I'm sure it'll be rebuilt in the long run. It reminds me of the ending of Batman Begins. In that film, after the manor is burned down, Alfred remarks, "I thought this might be a good opportunity for improving the foundations" (which is his way of implying that he and Bruce can expand the Bat-Cave while also pointing to Bruce's growth as a character).

But I digress. As they run through the tunnel, Alfred gets knocked down by a piece of debris and hits his head. When Bruce picks him up, Alfred is back to his lucid self and promises to beat the Mad Hatter the next time he sees him. Bruce notices that Alfred's leg is hurt, but the butler says it's not broken. Bruce then hugs him, saying that he was worried he'd lost Alfred for good this time.

Alfred then tells Bruce that he'd better get going, since he knows where Jeremiah is headed next, and the two go their separate ways.

Back at Ace Chemicals, Gordon and Lee are now handcuffed to a pole. Gordon surmises that since Ecco's around, Jeremiah's probably still alive. Ecco notes that Gordon must've come here because he found the corpses of test subjects. He asks her what's going on and she simply replies that it's a "real killer surprise."

Tetch asks Ecco if he should hypnotize Gordon and Lee and command them to kill each other. Ecco replies that she'd better check with Jeremiah and leaves to send him a call on the radio.

As this is happening, Gordon apologizes for getting Lee into danger again. He says there's something he needs to tell her, but she says to save it for later. Gordon then decides to see if he can find out more about Jeremiah's plan by goading Hatter. He calls him an "errand boy" and Lee adds that he's a "second-rater with a really silly hat."


(It's true, and she should say it.)

Ecco then walks up to Hatter and whispers something in his ear. Whatever it is that she's said, he seems delighted by the idea and takes out his pocket watch and begins to hypnotize Gordon and Lee.

Elsewhere in the Dark Zone, Selina leads Penguin to one of the tunnel entrances. She then stops, hearing footsteps. These belong to Alfred, who emerges from the mouth of the tunnel.

Penguin asks where the tunnel let out, and Alfred replies that the exit is where Wayne Manor used to be until Jeremiah blew it up. Selina is shocked and says that she saw him die, but Alfred replies that she was mistaken and adds that he's trying to reenact the Wayne murders and that Bruce is chasing after him.

Selina's about to leave when Penguin orders her to stay. She then draws a knife and presses it against his throat, saying that even though she didn't manage to kill Jeremiah, she's still ready and willing to kill Penguin to avenge Tabitha. Alfred, however, tells her to put the knife down and says that Bruce needs her. Selina obliges and leaves to go after him.

Penguin then thanks Alfred for his help and leaves Alfred to find his way back to the Green Zone alone.


Meanwhile, Bruce arrives at the theatre (where he went with his parents the night of their murder) and yells for Jeremiah to show himself. A movie projector turns on, illuminating his "parents" as they stare blankly at the screen.

The movie title card says "Mark of Zorro" by Douglas Fairbanks (which, in several Batman comic books including The Dark Knight Returns, is the movie Bruce saw with his parents). However, instead of showing the actual movie, the projector plays a recorded black-and-white message from Jeremiah, who's dressed up as Zorro.

Jeremiah notes that they're back where Bruce's parents took him to see "The Mark of Zorro" and adds that he heard (presumably, from a hypnotized Alfred) that Bruce was obsessed with Zorro as a child. (Another nod to Batman mythology, as the persona of Batman is inspired by Zorro in and out of universe.)

(The above comic is from Darwyn Cooke's story, Batman: Ego, where a hallucinated version of Batman reminds Bruce Wayne of how they came to be one and the same. He says that Batman and Bruce Wayne first "met" when Bruce received a Zorro action figure for Christmas.)

On-screen, Jeremiah wonders if Bruce was obsessed with Zorro because the hero struck fear into his enemies. Jeremiah then "fences" with two men who are tied down and can't fight back. He begins to slice at their chests and remarks that this is the part of the movie where Bruce asked his parents to leave because he was scared. Jeremiah taunts Bruce, saying that if he hadn't been afraid that night, maybe his parents wouldn't have died.

Suddenly, the "Waynes" get out and leave the theatre. Bruce runs after them and into the alleyway, where Jeremiah, who's dressed in a snazzy indigo suit and holding a gun, tells him not to come any closer. (At this point, Bruce is at a distance from his "parents" and can only see the dim outline of their backs, as the alley is barely lit.) 

Bruce tells Jeremiah that he doesn't have to kill them. Jeremiah replies, his voice breaking, that he does have to do it. He tells Bruce that he realized something: no matter how Jeremiah tried to bond himself with Bruce, his parents' murderer would be the man he was most tied to.


He tells Bruce that if they can't be bonded as brothers, they'll just have to be bonded as enemies by hatred. Bruce says that killing two people who merely look like his parents won't be enough to do that. Jeremiah replies that he figured that out—which is why he already shot the lookalikes. He then tells "Thomas" and "Martha" to turn around. As they do, the lights switch on, revealing none other than Jim Gordon and Lee Thompkins.

Jeremiah laughs and explains that "fate" brought Gordon and Lee to him, and when Ecco told him that they'd been captured, he thought "Why not?" 

"Why not kill the man that you think of as a second father figure?" he asks. "And your dear, dear, dear friend Lee Thompkins?" Jeremiah says that once he kills them, he'll be bonded to Bruce as planned.

Ecco then drives up in a green truck with more of the chemical fireworks in tow. Jeremiah explains that if and when the fireworks go off and spread toxic chemicals all over the city, the government will cut Gotham off for good and end all plans of reunification. 

As he's saying this, Selina creeps onto the fire escape, unseen to all. 

Jeremiah then tells Bruce about the finishing touch to his plan: Hatter has hypnotized Gordon and Lee so that they'll wake up once the pearls on Lee's neck shatter and hit the ground, right as the couple dies. As he says this, he loops the pearls around his gun. (Which is an homage to the Wayne murders in The Dark Knight Returns, a scene also referenced in Batman v. Superman.)




He tells Bruce that he's doing all of this for him and prepares to pull the trigger. Suddenly, Selina whips the gun out of his hand. Bruce tells her about the pearls and she pulls them off Lee to wake up the couple. Jeremiah then stabs Bruce and runs off. Ecco starts a timer on the fireworks and flees as well.

Bruce says that they need to stop the fireworks. Gordon replies that he'll handle it and tells Bruce to go after Jeremiah. He also says that since there's no way to defuse all the fireworks, Lee will need to tell Harvey about the danger so that everyone in the Green Zone can take cover.

Gordon then drives the truck full speed at the pier (with nineteen seconds left on the fireworks' timer) and bails at the last minute before it plunges into the water.

Bruce runs after Jeremiah and follows him into the Ace Chemicals factory. They begin to fight on the railing that overlooks the vats of green chemicals. As Bruce gets the upper hand and begins to punch Jeremiah over and over, Jeremiah gleefully replies that Bruce has to feel the connection between the two of them now. 

"You mean nothing to me," Bruce replies. (Which, in keeping with our homage tracker, is a reference to The Lego Batman Movie.)


Jeremiah responds by headbutting Bruce and getting back up. As they fight, Jeremiah grabs Bruce and presses him against the rail.

"You need me," he insists. "I'm the answer to your life's question. Without me, you're just a joke without a punchline!" 

Jeremiah then tries to punch Bruce, but Bruce ducks out of the way. As Jeremiah tumbles forward, the rail breaks and he plunges over the side and into the vat of green chemicals. (Which is an homage to The Killing Joke and several other Batman stories, TV series and movies that use the same Joker backstory.) 


As Bruce looks down at the green liquid, the scene switches to a similar shot of green chemicals filling the river as Gordon looks down from the pier. 

Elsewhere in Gotham, Penguin meets with the Riddler. The Riddler asks why he should help Penguin after he let Hugo Strange put a chip in his brain, tried to sell him out to Gordon, and named a dog after him.


Penguin points out that he had Strange save the Riddler's life and claims that he had a plan to save Riddler from Gordon after turning him over. Riddler laughs derisively, noting that Penguin always has "an answer for everything."

"We have been through all of this before," Penguin replies. "Where I've tried to kill you, you've tried to kill me. But here we are in this room together. It means fate has different plans for us."

(Which, as some fans have pointed out online, is a nice callback to when the Riddler asked Penguin in season 2 if he believed in fate after the two men ran into each other in the woods.)


Riddler asks what "plans" Penguin is talking about. Penguin replies that Gotham has become more of a prison than a city and says that it's time to escape. 

Meanwhile, Gordon returns to the GCPD. Lee says that she heard that reunification isn't happening. Gordon replies that word of the chemical spill reached the mainland and now it'll take at least a few months for the government to consider starting the process. 

Lee says that things could've gone worse, but Gordon says that every time he thinks he's turned things around, "it's back to square one." Lee then asks Gordon what he was going to say to her when they were captured by Hatter. Gordon says he's not exactly sure, but it probably would've been the same thing he said the last time they saw each other, before the bridges blew, which is that he wishes he could change what happened between the two of them.

He says that nothing's changed since they were together, but Lee replies that it has. Gordon says that what happened with Barbara was a mistake, but Lee says that he needs to think about how she (Lee feels). Lee says that the more Gordon talks about wanting to do things differently, the more she wonders what would've happened if they hadn't lost their child to a miscarriage (in season 2). 

She says that she wants to be understanding, given everything that Gordon's dealing with, but he's let her down. He says he's sorry and asks what this means for them. She says they can't change the past and have to live with it. She turns to leave, and he grabs her wrist. She responds by slapping him . . . and then they kiss.


(Yeesh, Gordon. Try to exercise a little impulse control, would ya? I don't care if you love Lee, she's also your baby's mother's doctor.)

Over at the clinic, Selina and Bruce stare down at a badly burned and bandaged body lying in a hospital bed. Selina says she can't believe that after everything that happened, Jeremiah's still alive. Bruce replies that the doctor's scans show no brain activity from his body, which means he's no longer a threat. 


Bruce then thanks Selina for coming to his rescue. She says that she should've done something the night his parents were murdered, but he sincerely replies that she's done enough. 

The last scene takes place at Penguin's fortress in city hall. He and Riddler enter, only to see Barbara sitting behind his desk and holding a gun. She says she's seen the treasures he's been storing up and explains that while Selina had planned for them to kill Penguin together, she'll just have to do it herself. 

Suddenly and hilariously, the Riddler exclaims that she's pregnant and says it's obvious because she's "glowing."


Barbara then prepares to kill Penguin, but he stops her by saying that she could come with them when they leave Gotham. He adds that while she clearly wants revenge, she wouldn't want to raise a child in a "toxic war zone." 

Barbara asks if they've really found a way out of Gotham. Penguin replies that the Riddler thought of one: if they use a submarine with sonar radar, they can track the mines and avoid them. The only problem? They have to build the actual sub. 

Frustrated at this setback, Barbara almost decides to shoot Penguin but can't bring herself to do it. She says that she won't kill him, for the sake of her child, but won't forgive him. She then tells him to call her when the sub is finished. 

As she leaves, Penguin cheerily asks who the baby's father is, and she yells at him to shut up.


The Verdict

I really enjoyed this episode. It's definitely my favorite one from season 5 and ranks in my favorite Joker-centric Gotham episodes. 

One of the things I loved is that while I knew most of Jeremiah's plot to recreate the night of the Wayne murders (thanks to the episode's extended trailer), there were still twists that I didn't expect. Like the part where he reveals that he's swapped the lookalikes with Gordon and Lee? That was fantastic, and I didn't see it coming until a split second before they turned around. 

I also like that while Gotham went for a realistic approach to someone falling in a vat of toxic chemicals (in that it would burn a person horribly and leave them with little-to-no brain function), the show also left room for Jeremiah to reappear, as he's still technically alive.


In a show where dead people are constantly resurrected, it's definitely feasible that someone (probably Ecco) could find a way to revive Jeremiah in the long run. But for now, it's nice to see that Bruce and Selina have a break from worrying about him.

That's another great thing about this episode: Selina's decision to help Bruce (and their subsequent reconciliation) didn't feel rushed or forced; it felt earned. It felt like a natural build-up of her lingering guilt over not doing anything to stop his parents' murders (as voiced in episode 5x05). Also, given how significant her role as a witness to the murders was in season 1, it wouldn't have felt right for her to be absent from the reenactment in this episode. 

Furthermore, her rescue of Bruce served as a slap in the face to Jeremiah: despite his best efforts to keep Selina out of Bruce's life, she not only recovered from being shot but also got a second chance to help Bruce when he most needed it (a second chance that Jeremiah inadvertently provided by setting up the recreation). In spite of Jeremiah's best efforts to bond himself with Bruce, Bruce's bond with Selina (a bond that was formed because she witnessed his parents' death) is stronger than ever.

As for Gordon and Lee, I don't have much to say on that front. I've never been too interested in all of the love triangles Gordon gets mixed up in, so his scenes with Lee were probably the low point of the episode for me. While I liked the couple in season 1 and season 2 back when they were both kinder and happier people, I haven't enjoyed the angst that has plagued their relationship since then.

As far as Barbara goes, it's interesting to see how she's reacted to finding out about her pregnancy. She's still as violent and sassy as ever, but she's also beginning to think a lot more about her child's needs than her own, which is nice. (I have to agree with Selina, though: it's a little weird to see a female criminal kingpin casually talk about both revenge and pregnancy over the course of a conversation.)

I also was happy to see Riddler and Penguin working together again and burying the hatchet (hopefully for good). It'll be interesting to see how they try to find the parts for that submarine, as I imagine they'll be hard to find in a city as wrecked as Gotham. I doubt they'll make it out (and doubt that Barbara will keep her promise about not trying to kill Penguin), but I'm still curious to see how their attempt goes. I think the most compelling way to end this story is if they get everything they need and are all ready to go but make the decision to stay in Gotham for some reason. 

Overall, I'd give the episode a 9 out of 10. It was a thrill to watch and, as always, I'm excited to see what happens next. I am a little apprehensive about Jeremiah's defeat, as it likely means that Eduardo and Walker will be the big villains for most of the season, but I'm trying to keep an open mind while I wait for their plan to unfold.

Come back next Wednesday for a recap of episode 5x08, "Nothing's Shocking." Until then, have a good week, and remember: Batman doesn't do ships.

Wednesday, February 20, 2019

'Gotham' Recap: "13 Stitches" (5x06)


It's Wednesday, and you know what that means: it's time to reevaluate how much time you wasted on Monday and Tuesday before cramming as much work as possible into Thursday and Friday so you can enjoy the weekend.

Oh, and it's time for another Gotham recap, naturally.

This week's episode, "13 Stitches," focuses on two plotlines: the efforts of Gordon and his allies to fight Eduardo's takeover of the GCPD, and Penguin's unlikely team-up with Selina Kyle to stop a jewel thief.

Plot A: Expecting the Unexpected

The episode opens with shaky cam footage of Gordon running through the city while being chased by the (chip-controlled) Riddler. The Riddler shoots at Gordon, who ducks behind a car. A spray of glass from the window pierces Gordon's skin, but he keeps running, leaving a blood trail behind him.

The Riddler follows Gordon into an RV, where they fight. Riddler almost gets the best of Gordon with a chokehold, but Gordon manages to grab a nearby defibrillator and shock the Riddler, knocking him unconscious.

When the Riddler wakes up, he asks Gordon what happened this time. Gordon replies that he tried to kill him.


Gordon asks what Walker's planning next, but Riddler explains that he doesn't remember anything from his blackouts. He tells Gordon to let him go, but Gordon says the chip in his head is evidence against Walker and Eduardo, so unless he wants Gordon to rip it out by force, they need to stick together.

Over at the GCPD, Alfred asks Bruce how things went with Selina. Bruce says nothing, but his face is enough to tell Alfred that it didn't go well. Alfred says that it might be for the best. Bruce then changes the subject, saying that he called Alfred to the GCPD because of Eduardo's soldiers (who are practically swarming the place).

Alfred says that Gordon might've finally gotten the help the city needs, but Bruce points out that the people need food and medicine, not just more guns.


As he glances over the soldiers, Alfred spots a tattoo on one of them and tells Bruce that the motto of this unit is "Born of Blood." They have a reputation for carrying out military coups and assassinations, not humanitarian relief.

Bruce goes up to one of the soldiers and asks when a supply shipment is coming. When he presses him, the soldier tells Bruce that supplies are on the way (but he doesn't sound that convincing). Bruce asks where Gordon is. The soldier says they lost sight of him, so Eduardo's searching for him right now. The soldier asks if Bruce knows where Gordon is.

"Logically, he'd come here," Bruce says. "Unless there's a reason he can't."

The soldier decides to have him and Alfred taken to a "quiet place in the back" where they can wait for Gordon. Other soldiers take Bruce and Alfred away, but the second they go down the hallway, the dynamic duo beat up the soldiers and run off to find Gordon.

Meanwhile at the Sirens' Bar, Gordon catches Barbara up on everything that happened with Eduardo. Barbara replies that Bruce called her over the radio with a message that things are getting worse at the GCPD. Gordon says he'll reach out to Bruce to see if there's anywhere safe they can meet and make a plan. He asks if she can spare any people to help out. Barbara replies that they're all guarding her turf, but she'll go with Gordon.

The Riddler says he also wants to help, but Gordon says he doesn't trust him, even without the chip.


Riddler points out that he wants revenge for being used as a pawn and adds that Gordon shorted out the chip when he shocked him.

Barbara then notices the wounds on Gordon's neck from the glass and says he needs stitches. She says she can fix it up with her first aid kit, but Gordon says he needs to keep moving and that she should just name her price. Barbara says she just wants to help, but Gordon says that he's already been betrayed by Eduardo and doesn't want to give anyone else an opportunity to stab him in the back.

Babs points out that she led him to the arms dealer and let him hide out at her place.

"If I wanted to betray you, I'd have done it earlier," she concludes.

Noticing the tension between Gordon and Barbara, Riddler leaves to find the first aid kit. Barbara asks what it's going to take for Gordon to trust her. He replies that he doesn't know.

The conversation is interrupted by Eduardo showing up and saying that Gordon should listen to her, as "trust is in short supply." He says that when someone's in trouble, they always go to a familiar place (like their ex-fiance's club).


Eduardo tells Gordon that they could've been on the same side, "making the world a better place." Gordon points out that Eduardo had the Riddler kill innocent people, but Eduardo retorts that Gotham is a city full of criminals, and "sometimes you just have to clean house." Gordon says he won't let that happen, but Eduardo says he doesn't have a say in the matter.

The Riddler then enters, holding a large knife and robotically saying that he's been ordered to kill Gordon. He swipes at Gordon with the knife but winks to show that he's just putting on a show. Gordon plays along and stalls Eduardo by claiming that he has evidence that he and Walker were behind Haven, and if he (Gordon) dies, they'll never find it, and it'll get leaked out to the press.

Eduardo doesn't believe Gordon and orders Riddler to kill him. The Riddler lowers his blade and then spins around, throwing it into the head of a soldier. Riddler and Gordon then dive behind the bar and escape with Barbara after a brief shootout.

Eduardo then returns to the GCPD and says that they need every soldier searching for Gordon. One of his men, however, says that the holding cells are full and they might need men to stay and control the overflow. Eduardo replies that they're moving to "phase two." His men respond by taking prisoners out of the cells.

Bullock asks what's going on. Eduardo says that he's not "here to play nice or hold anyone's hand," but is instead in Gotham on a mission. He then shoots down the prisoners.


Eduardo asks if anyone has any questions about his mission. Bullock is shocked and says that he can't just go around killing people whenever he wants. Eduardo responds by having soldiers take Bullock away and saying that anyone who doesn't agree with his mission will be locked up.

Eduardo then gets a radio call from Walker. He fills her in on what's going on with Gordon, and she says that they can't have Riddler run free, given that the evidence is literally inside his head. She then tells Eduardo that she knows how to catch both Gordon and the Riddler.

Elsewhere, in what seems to be some sort of apartment or safe house, Gordon thanks Bruce for bringing everyone together and bringing supplies from Wayne Enterprises' research and development division. Bruce asks if Gordon's sure they should be working with Barbara and the Riddler. Gordon replies that "war makes for strange bedfellows" and says that it's good to have Bruce nearby, at least.

In the same room, Lucius manages to get the chip out of Riddler's head and Riddler thanks him. Lucius then plugs the chip into a computer and asks what he should be looking for. Gordon says they need to find anything that can tie Walker and Eduardo to the destruction of Haven. Lucius discovers that the chip has an audio log of every command sent to the Riddler and that he can trace the signal back to the computer it originated from.

The conversation is interrupted by a radio call from Eduardo. He tells Gordon that there's someone at the GCPD who wants to say hello. Eduardo then pushes a woman towards the radio—and the woman is none other than Leslie Thompkins, who seems terrified and asks Gordon what's going on.


(Look, Lee might not be my favorite character, but I cannot believe it took LITERALLY HALF OF THIS SEASON for her to show up.)

Eduardo says he found her in a "run-down hidey-hole on the north side." Gordon says that he needs to leave Lee out of this, but Eduardo points out that she's a criminal now, and all criminals are under a death sentence. Eduardo then offers to trade Lee for the Riddler. Gordon agrees and insists that they meet at Haven, so Eduardo can see the destruction he caused. Eduardo agrees, and the conversation ends.

Barbara points out that Eduardo won't let Gordon walk away alive, and Riddler yells at Gordon for agreeing to trade him. Gordon replies that he's going to give them what they really want: the chip, not the Riddler. Gordon then asks Lucius what it would take to broadcast the information from the chip to Bruce's contacts from the mainland newspapers. Lucius says that he already has a transmitter, but they'd also need a large antenna, which he doesn't have. Gordon says he knows where to find one: on the roof of the GCPD.

Meanwhile at the GCPD, Bullock is sitting in a holding cell and spots Lee. He asks where she's been for the past three months. She says she can't remember anything and doesn't know what happened to her.


Bullock promises that they'll figure it out, but before he can comfort Lee further, Eduardo takes her away.

A little bit later, Gordon approaches Haven and radios the rest of his team that Eduardo brought backup with him. Bruce tells the others that it's time to move out, and they leave the hideout.

Lee asks Gordon who the soldiers are. Gordon doesn't respond, but says he'll get her out of danger. Eduardo points out that Gordon didn't bring the Riddler as promised, but Gordon shows him the chip and says that the evidence is what Eduardo really wanted. Gordon then snaps the chip in half, but Eduardo surmises that it was probably a decoy anyway.

Gordon then taunts Eduardo, saying that three soldiers against one unarmed man is excessive and asks if Eduardo brought enough backup. Eduardo replies that he doesn't need backup, but Gordon points out that Eduardo used the Riddler as backup "to pick up your slack, like I used to."

He tells Eduardo that his recklessness got people killed and begins to name soldiers who died following his lead. Eduardo says their deaths aren't on him and points his gun at Gordon. Gordon asks if he's going to shut him up with a bullet. Eduardo replies that he won't do it with a bullet and tosses the gun aside to face Gordon hand-to-hand.

Meanwhile, Bullock and Alvarez try to figure out how to get out of the GCPD holding cells. The Riddler then enters the GCPD dressed in a padded suit with a helmet and carrying a suitcase. He announces that the kevlar on his suit can not only withstand bullets but also blasts that could level a building. The soldiers ask what's in his suitcase. He loudly announces that it's a bomb and says it's time to play a game.

The Riddler tells them that if anyone tries to leave, he'll set off the bomb. Bullock curses at him, but Riddler ignores the cop and tells the soldiers that the only way to deactivate the bomb is with a four-digit code. He then gives them a complex math problem to solve that involves calculating how many pallid beach mice will be left at the end of one year based off certain facts, including their reproductive cycle. He says that the answer to his math riddle is the shutdown code for the bomb, and they have two minutes to figure it out. He "activates" the bomb and the case starts beeping.

As this is going on, Bruce uses a grappling hook to get on top of the GCPD roof.


Lucius gives him instructions on how to transmit the signal. As Bruce works, a soldier comes up behind him and attacks him.

Barbara, who's waiting in a room with Lucius and Alfred, points out that the Riddler's ploy won't work for long, but Lucius says they just need to wait until the exhaust fans come to a stop and then they'll use the knockout gas.

Over in Haven, Eduardo and Gordon fight. Eduardo taunts Gordon, saying that he's really the one responsible for the destruction of Haven. He tells Gordon that Walker spent months trying to convince her superiors that Gotham was overrun by criminals and had nearly succeeded. But when Gordon set up Haven practically overnight, the powers-that-be decided that the criminal element of Gotham must not be that dangerous. Eduardo tells Gordon that Walker's superiors were almost ready to send in relief, which is why Haven had to be destroyed.

Gordon asks what Walker wants and yells that innocent people are dead because of her. Eduardo calls it an "acceptable loss for the mission." Gordon asks what the mission is and begins to beat Eduardo, but one of the soldiers steps in and begins to kick and beat Gordon. Eduardo then tells both soldiers to take Lee away and shoot her. He says that it's a merciful gift for Gordon, since he won't have to watch her die.

Still on the ground, Gordon grabs the gun that Eduardo tossed aside and shoots one of the soldiers. The other runs off with Lee. Eduardo grabs a metal stick from the rubble and knocks Gordon down with it.

Elsewhere, Lucius and the others are still waiting for the exhaust fans to slow down. He says that if they throw the canisters now, the gas will blow outside instead of inside. Lucius then asks Bruce for his status.

Bruce, who's in the middle of fighting the soldier and wrecking him hard, tells Lucius to give him a moment.


Once the soldier is down for the count, Bruce goes back to the electrical box, completes Lucius's instructions, and finishes broadcasting the signal.

Inside the GCPD, there's a minute left on the Riddler's "bomb." Bullock says he knows the answer. The Riddler tries to get him to stop talking, but Bullock insists that he remembers learning about pallid beach mice in a high school zoology class when he got in trouble and had to write an essay about the species—which has been extinct for several years, which means the answer to the riddle is zero.

A soldier types in the number and the case stops beeping. The soldiers then try to shoot down the Riddler. His suit stands up to the bullets, but the impact knocks him down. Luckily, that's when the gas comes through the vents. Riddler holds his breath long enough to grab a gas mask from the suitcase and slip it over his head while the gas knocks out the soldiers.

Over in Haven, Eduardo tells Gordon that the reason the soldiers he mentioned earlier (Ramirez, Johnson and Bolton) didn't make it out is because they were sent behind enemy lines and ended up in a hellish prison called Peña Duro. Gordon says he didn't know that, and Eduardo replies that no one did, because the government left them to die. He says that he was the only one who survived, and that prison is where Walker found Eduardo, rescued him, and gave him new purpose.

Gordon replies that all she did was make him her killer. Eduardo replies that Walker is the real killer and stabs Gordon in the chest with the metal stick. Gordon, however, keeps fighting and throw Eduardo back onto the rubble, where he's impaled by another sharp metal stick. Gordon then hears a gunshot and runs toward the sound. He sees Lee, standing over the soldier with a gun in her hand.

Some time later, Gordon returns to the GCPD and tells Alvarez to take Lee to his office. Bruce tells Gordon that he transmitted the audio logs, but until he hears back from his contacts, he won't know if they received the transmission. Gordon says that if the press get the messages, they'll certainly have questions. (Uh, yeah. Like how someone even invented a mind control chip to begin with.)


Bruce tells Gordon that he and Alfred will stick around for the night to help out. He then sends Alfred back to their apartment to grab what he can.

Elsewhere in the precinct, Barbara wonders where Lee's been for the past three months. The Riddler replies that he doesn't know and he's not sticking around to watch her "tearful reunion" with Gordon.

Said reunion takes place in Gordon's office. Lee asks what's going on and Gordon says he doesn't know. He says that he assumed she'd left Gotham. Lee replies that the last thing she remembers is Jeremiah destroying the bridges and she doesn't know why she didn't leave.

Gordon fills her in on the general state of Gotham, saying that they're cut off from the outside world without aid. He adds that while he's been trying to put on a brave face, he still feels lost and out of his depth. Lee says that it'll be okay and says that now that they're together, they can "put the pieces back together" and help each other.

She then tries to remember what happened the night the bridges blew. She begins to remember fighting with the Riddler and how they stabbed each other. She then remembers being taken somewhere that might've been a hospital.


(Not exactly a hospital, but close enough.)

Back in Haven, a homeless guy comes across Eduardo but is shot down by a woman who carries a gun and a briefcase. She comments that Eduardo had "so much potential" but wasn't up to the task she'd given him. Eduardo addresses her as Walker and asks what she's doing in Gotham. She replies that the press have recordings of her orders to the Riddler, so she had to come to Gotham to continue her work.

She then says that it's not yet time for Eduardo to die and she'll have Strange fix him in no time. She attaches some sort of glowing breathing mask to his face. Eduardo says "Jim Gordon" in a very distorted voice, and Walker replies that he's being taken care of.

"Nygma was never alone," she says. "There was a second operative." She then takes out another control device.

Back in the GCPD, Lee freezes up. Gordon asks if she's cold and turns around to find her a coat. When his back is turned, Lee's eyes roll back into her head in a very creepy way and then return to normal.


She then grabs a knife off of his desk and attacks Gordon, but he grabs a taser and shocks Lee, knocking her out.

Elsewhere in Gotham, Alfred steps out of the apartment and down the steps. He looks around, feeling as if something's off. He grabs his gun, but not in time to stop Jeremiah, who sneaks up behind Alfred and stabs him with a sedative-filled syringe.

Meanwhile, Gordon tells Bullock about Lee's chip and how she must've been Walker's back up plan. He adds that anyone who would play this kind of long game probably has other tricks up her sleeve. Lee asks what's wrong with her and Gordon says he can explain.

Before he can, however, Barbara enters the office and says she needs to talk to Gordon. He says it's not a good time. She responds by reminding him of the "good time" they had in this very room a few nights ago.

Gordon tells her to leave. Barbara responds with two words: "I'm pregnant." She then leaves.


The final scene is in a place that appears to be Wayne Manor. Jeremiah pulls a bag off of Alfred's head. Alfred says that he's supposed to be dead.

"Sorry to disappoint," Jeremiah replies.

Alfred says that if Jeremiah hurts Bruce, Alfred will "bite his face off." Jeremiah replies that Bruce will "be along shortly." He then wipes some dust off of a nearby table and says that the house is in "desperate need of some good, old-fashioned butlering." Alfred asks how he escaped, and Jeremiah replies that he dug a tunnel under the river.

Jeremiah then smiles and says that "Today is the big day."

Plot B: To Catch a Thief . . .

Over in city hall, Penguin notices that someone has opened the hatch to his underground bunker/vault. When he enters, he finds an oddly-dressed young woman searching through his jewels and valuables and talking to herself about what she'll take. Penguin cocks his gun at her. She responds by gracefully flipping over his head.


Penguin asks how she found out about his vault. She replies that she was on a different job when another thief hit the mark before her, so she followed the thief back to Penguin's turf, where she found the vault.

Penguin spots a rather large, blue-ish diamond in her hand (one that belongs to him). He then asks what's in her other hand. She reveals another, identical diamond and throws it at him. It burns his hand and he drops it. The decoy diamond then goes up in an explosion of smoke, giving the woman time to get away.

Some time later, Penguin enters a dark building. On his way down the hall, two terrified figures run past him. He steps into a room where Selina Kyle is eating cereal. He notices two bloody, severed fingers on the table beside her.

Selina asks what Penguin wants. He warily asks what the other guys wanted before they lost a couple of fingers. Selina replies that they were trying to kill her and that they're not the only ones. Ever since she killed Jeremiah Valeska, every killer on the street has been trying to kill her to make a name for themselves, so she needs to find a new place to hide out.

Side note: in an interesting way, this scenario is a reverse of one episode of Batman: The Animated Series called "The Man Who Killed Batman." In the episode, a small-time criminal named Sid seemingly kills Batman (completely by accident, in fact) and has to deal with the fallout of his actions. At first, every criminal in Gotham treats him like a king, until they start to realize that if they kill the man who killed Batman, they'll be seen as the toughest guy in Gotham. The Joker is also particularly angry that he wasn't the one to kill his arch-nemesis and tries to kill Sid in retaliation.


All that to say, killing either Batman or the Joker usually leads to more trouble than it's worth.

But I digress; back to the episode. Penguin tells Selina that if she can help him find someone he's looking for, he can let her stay in his fortress at City Hall. He explains that a thief tried to replace one of his jewels with an exact replica that was a bomb and asks if it rings any bells. Selina asks if the woman had white hair, a feathered collar, and resembled a "goth chicken."

She explains that the thief's name is Magpie and then asks why she should help Penguin find her after he murdered Tabitha. Penguin replies that Selina believes in "an eye for an eye" and points out that Tabitha "made her bed" when she killed his mother. Selina considers this, and then agrees to help him, on one condition: she gets the diamond.

Penguin laughs and refuses her request, but Selina says that without her help, he'll never find Magpie, and then everyone in Gotham will think it's okay to steal from Penguin. Penguin sighs and agrees to the deal.


Selina leads Penguin to Magpie's hideout, a room covered in messy piles of shiny trinkets. Magpie sees the two of them and then tries to run away, but Selina catches her leg with her whip. Magpie notes that she's heard of Selina and how she's famous for killing Jeremiah. Magpie then mutters that it's not a big deal and that she could be famous too, if she wanted.

Penguin says she won't have the opportunity and points his gun at her. Magpie says he should be careful, since this workshop is where she makes her bombs, meaning that anything in the room could be an explosive replica. Penguin says she's bluffing. Magpie responds by throwing a ticking watch at him. When it hits the ground, nothing happens; it's just a regular watch that she stole. Magpie then runs out of the room and locks them in.

As they stand in the room, trapped, Selina says that Penguin was stupid to seek out revenge on Magpie, especially since diamonds are worthless in Gotham. She then realizes that Penguin's not trying to sell his jewels in Gotham; instead, he's stockpiling them because he's planning to go to the mainland. She asks why he's leaving. Penguin replies that there's nothing left for him to conquer in Gotham.

"I've done all I can here," he says. "Some things, twice. There's nothing left for me here anymore."

Selina says she wants to go with him so that she can get away from the people who want to kill her. She says that she doesn't want to be the killer of Jeremiah Valeska; she just wants to be herself, and she "can't do that in Gotham anymore." Penguin, however, doesn't want to take her with him.


Selina asks if he'd let her come with him if she could get them out of Magpie's workshop. Penguin agrees, and she asks for half of the money when he fences his jewels. He tells her that she's only getting 10% and a promise that he won't kill her when they get to the mainland. She says it's a deal.

Selina then goes running at the door and kicks it open. She tells Penguin that Magpie said anything in the room could be a bomb, but not the room itself. The two of them then leave to track down Magpie.

They find her back in Penguin's vault, lying on the ground after triggering one of Penguin's boobytraps, which shot her in the gut. She tries to beg for mercy, but Penguin kills her with two shots from his gun. Selina says the "buckshot in her gut" should've been enough for him, but Penguin says that he just wanted to remind Selina what happens when people try to steal from him.

The Verdict

Plot A: While the action in Plot A was good and the plot developments will likely return in future episodes (since Eduardo is clearly the show's version of Bane and Jeremiah is clearly up to no good), neither of those topics are the main thing I want to discuss about this part of the episode.

No, I'm interested in one thing only: Barbara's pregnancy.

Personally, I love this twist. It's a way to hint at the birth of Batgirl (or James Gordon Jr., depending on the child's gender), and while it was a bit of a shock, it felt earned. Barbara's concern for Gordon and her loyalty to him throughout the episode completely pay off at the end, when we learn that she's carrying his child.

While I can't say whether the baby will bring the couple back together (especially now that Lee's back in the mix), it'll be interesting to see how they handle this development and how Barbara might change as a character if she decides to raise the kid. Hopefully she'll at least lay off the drinks and try to stay safe for the time being.

As for the stuff with Eduardo, it was fine. I don't really care too much about him and Walker at the moment, but I might change my mind when I find out what their big mission is all about. For now, they're just another pair of big bads trying to take control of the city away from Gordon.

One last note: the scenes with Jeremiah were so short that I decided to include them with Plot A rather than make them a separate section. There's not a lot to discuss on that front, but I've included the trailer for next week's episode if you're excited to see what he's up to.



Plot B: While this plot was mostly more filler comic relief than Plot A, I still really enjoyed it. Selina and Penguin have interacted a couple of times over the seasons, but I think this is the first episode where they've gotten to play off of each other one-on-one, and it was a blast (pun completely intended). It's funny to watch Selina's casual, cocky demeanor get under Penguin's skin as the two work together. I wouldn't mind if we saw more of this duo in the future.

That being said, I doubt they'll make it to the mainland. Even if they do, the flash-forward from "Year Zero" makes it clear that Penguin will end up in Gotham again, sooner or later. Still, I wonder if the characters will try to say their goodbyes to their former friends, allies, and enemies before they leave town. It'd make for a few good scenes, even though I suspect something or someone (Walker and Eduardo, perhaps) will keep them from leaving the city.

Overall, I enjoyed the episode. It was one where I kept screaming and laughing and yelling at the characters every other minute, which is exactly what I want out of a good comic book show. This season's been a rollercoaster so far and I'm loving it. I know I've said it before, but I'll say it again: I can't wait to see what happens next.

Next week's episode is called "Ace Chemicals." Until the next recap goes up, stay away from acid pits in chemical factories. And remember, kids: handrails are there for a reason.