An escape plan goes haywire and old foes face off. Val learns a secret about Owen.An escape plan goes haywire and old foes face off. Val learns a secret about Owen.An escape plan goes haywire and old foes face off. Val learns a secret about Owen.
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Ryan Michelle Bathe
- Val Turner
- (as Ryan Michelle Bathé)
Mark D. Espinoza
- Rogelio Réal
- (as Mark Damon Espinoza)
Kamal Angelo Bolden
- Owen Turner
- (as Kamal Bolden)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFinal episode of series. Cancelled with unresolved cliffhanger.
Featured review
The need to set up season two ruined all of season one, and the series has now become unwatchable.
The producers "Game-of-Thronesed" this series within one season. This last episode was so bad, it ruined every episode before it.
Here we had a series about a criminal mastermind, Elena Federova, who orchestrates an intricate plan, whereby every nuance and variable was covered in sophisticated detail, ensuring that the corrupt individuals who destroyed her family where brought to light, exposed and punished. All that is, except Natalia the main instigator of the actions that destroyed her familiar and her main co-conspirator, the president (despite 3 full episodes being spent on this aspect of Elena's plan, when every other co-conspirator was brought down in just one.)
And even then, after all this flawless, meticulous planning, every contingency covered, the female villain was able to get the upper hand. I was actually waiting for Elena to reveal that this was all part of her plan to get Natalia showing herself and get her close, to finish her off once and for all.
This wasn't to be. And why was this so? Why did Elena's elaborate complex plan have this one and only blind spot? Why did Elena have such a great big unforgivable lapse in her indicate plan?
Answer: So she could call Val Turner in the last scenes and say, "I need your help," thereby setting up season two.
It was more important for the producers to rather than give us an organized, organic, satisfying conclusion to the season, giving us instead an unsatisfying, unreasonable, unfathomable ending of a cliff-hanger.
And the only thing that this served is that I, and other viewers like me who hate been taken for a ride by producers, will not be watching season two.
Here we had a series about a criminal mastermind, Elena Federova, who orchestrates an intricate plan, whereby every nuance and variable was covered in sophisticated detail, ensuring that the corrupt individuals who destroyed her family where brought to light, exposed and punished. All that is, except Natalia the main instigator of the actions that destroyed her familiar and her main co-conspirator, the president (despite 3 full episodes being spent on this aspect of Elena's plan, when every other co-conspirator was brought down in just one.)
And even then, after all this flawless, meticulous planning, every contingency covered, the female villain was able to get the upper hand. I was actually waiting for Elena to reveal that this was all part of her plan to get Natalia showing herself and get her close, to finish her off once and for all.
This wasn't to be. And why was this so? Why did Elena's elaborate complex plan have this one and only blind spot? Why did Elena have such a great big unforgivable lapse in her indicate plan?
Answer: So she could call Val Turner in the last scenes and say, "I need your help," thereby setting up season two.
It was more important for the producers to rather than give us an organized, organic, satisfying conclusion to the season, giving us instead an unsatisfying, unreasonable, unfathomable ending of a cliff-hanger.
And the only thing that this served is that I, and other viewers like me who hate been taken for a ride by producers, will not be watching season two.
helpful•54
- bearcatjb
- May 8, 2022
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