Grade 'Blacklist'

How would you grade Blacklist?

  • A+

    Votes: 12 17.4%
  • A

    Votes: 7 10.1%
  • A-

    Votes: 9 13.0%
  • B+

    Votes: 9 13.0%
  • B

    Votes: 10 14.5%
  • B-

    Votes: 7 10.1%
  • C+

    Votes: 7 10.1%
  • C

    Votes: 3 4.3%
  • C-

    Votes: 2 2.9%
  • D+

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • D

    Votes: 2 2.9%
  • D-

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • F

    Votes: 1 1.4%

  • Total voters
    69
I gave it an A-. Good, but not the best. I was a tad confused about the whole thing with Mac's Dad, too, but someone explained that perhaps his request for Mac to help end the situation came after what we saw. Or, perhaps, before, but after that moment of desperation, he came to terms with his coming death? That's beside the point.

I kinda liked how - in a passing comment only, and not a 10 minute monologue - Lindsay mentioned that she was late because the sitter was stuck in traffic. Passing comment. Nice! No dramatic self-pity.

Needed more Adam and Danny. Perhaps a little more Flack? We just need to see the guys! LOL!

Can't wait for what else is coming up this season. I still make it to 11:00 to see the show, even in my old age! LOL!
 
^ I agree. One would think that a doctor would carry something like an epi-pen if he had allergies. Yeah okay, his specialty was cancer, but really. A regular person would be smart enough to carry one, so why doesn't a doctor?

As a viewer, I'm accustomed to allowing a few things slide for the sake of entertainment. But seriously, does TPTB really expect us to believe inconsistencies like this?
 
Giving it A-.

Not a really good episode but up there with some of the others. I enjoy watching they showing a personal side of Mac. He is always the serious and the control one. It is good to see some personal side of him.
 
2 things: Why WAS it called hangman?
That made no sense to me either. Why change the name from "Featuring Grave Digger" to "Featuring Hangman" when the character was still called Grave Digger? The 'hangman' thing doesn't make sense in the episode at all, unless I missed something... :confused:

Re: The EpiPen thing - logically, someone with that severe of a peanut allergy would have one just in case something went wrong. My only guess is that they skipped such logic in favor of increased drama. :p
 
As much as I also LOVE Mac and Mac-centered episodes are good, but lately we have been getting too many 'Mac-Vs-the-World' episodes which I'm sorry are sort of boring after a while.

^this. 2nded.

^ yeah, you're right, i'd noticed how varied their reactions have been too. that moment when adam accidentally did his hi-five too high for danny was an awkward one - i wonder how danny felt about that. it was weird because i was expecting adam to realise his mistake, and get all nervy and apologetic, which i think the "old" adam would've done, but this time he reacted in a way which i thought was almost too far in the opposite direction, it was like he didn't care almost (which i'm sure wasn't true).

I totally picked up on that, too! He just kind of let his hand hang there, but didn't lower it. Maybe he thought he would have pissed Danny off if he did... but it did come off as a kind of "oh well" thing. I agree that speaks to the change in Adam, but it did come off as a bit insensitive.

I loved that moment, it was so low key, ending on a cut and having the sound dropped on it. I made sure to check out Danny while Adam was holding his hand way out of reach and it tickled me to see him win a laugh from Danno. Adam always squeezes a grin out of him, even when he's being his typically touchy self about things.
 
Last edited:
I thought the killer sounded like The Joker, did anyone else think this? :wtf:

Overall, I thought this was a good episode, only because it freaked me out. I don't know why, it seems that under-the-wire killers combined with medical stuff freaks me out more then blood and guts. :lol:

Loved Flack to pieces, I missed the snark so ***ing much, I felt it was waning last season.

I don't really know what else to say, but so far I feel this season is looking to be an improvement from last, which I abhorred. I'm not going to cash in just yet though, just being slightly optimistic. :eek:

Overall, I give it a B+.
 
I loved the Lindsay/Hawkes and Stella/Lindsay scenes. The Danny/Adam scene didn't seen awkward to me. Flack still seems very off. I was very distracted by Gail O'Grady and Gary Sinise being so close in age in reality so it took me out of the scene for a moment.

I like how the season is going for the main characters, but I still haven't gotten invested in the cases presented so far, I hope that changes with 6.3.
 
(I don't think everybody can evade the reality or speak softly and wait for the 'bad' time to pass - if nothing else, I think it's good that Adam is acknowledging that the wheelchair is currently part of Danny and not trying to pretend it doesn't exist, especially if they're currently working closely together in the lab on a daily basis. Maybe that's just me, though - I can't speak from any experience in the matter.)

*shrug* I dunno. If it was insensitive, I think it was a case of Adam doing something he thought was funny (a la pimping Danny's ride last week) that wasn't.

having watched again, they are definitely both smiling so i think this may be right - i actually remember being torn at the time as to whether it was (a) insensitive or (b) adam trying to... not make light of the situation, but just try to make it as normal as possible by joking around with danny as they've always done. it's quite strange in a way because adam's often been ubernervous around the others if something bad has happened to them but in this case it's almost like he's the only one that's not walking on danny shaped eggshells!

I gave it an A-. Good, but not the best. I was a tad confused about the whole thing with Mac's Dad, too, but someone explained that perhaps his request for Mac to help end the situation came after what we saw. Or, perhaps, before, but after that moment of desperation, he came to terms with his coming death? That's beside the point.

agreed, i suspect that the moment mac told hawkes about was just that - a moment where desperation set in, and i'm sure it occurs to just about everyone in that situation. having that moment, and even articulating it, doesn't stop someone being dignified in that case, i don't think.
 
I enjoyed this episode, but I didn't think it was A+ material.

I graded it B+.

Great story, even if technologically I found it a bit cringe-able. If it's that easy to just take oevr cars, telephones, cameras etc.. then everyone would be doing it... Wouldn't (insert name of villian boss from big Media corporation) be doing this too??

Meh..

Good acting from all concerned. I especially liked the crook who stole the GPS. "Ack-con-im" classic!

So yeah, an okay episode. Looking forward to more!

Z
 
The CSI shows always tend to take something that is technically possible in some capacity - and blow it way out of proportion. :p

BTW, CBS finally posted the full episode on CBS.com - they call it "Blacklist (Featuring Gravedigger)". Maybe the person writing the press releases should have gotten the memo about the episode name, methinks.
 
^ yep, that is something they're very good at doing! i don't mind it though, if everything in a tv show was hyper realistic, it'd get a bit dull/be a documentary...
 
I have to admit: my fangirlishness got the better of me while watching. Especially for a fan of Flack and that swanky start with him and his sunnies. :shifty:

But after that, I did get a bit bored and figured it all out in the beginning. It was obviously about a cyber creep who terrorized their victims due to their sheer skill set of using the Webz.

I did like the young Mac sequence especially by the end of the episode. For me, it was really moving how they showed Mac's relationship with his father and his drive to become part of the NYPD.
 
You just *had* to inject a heaping dollop of Mactimony into what was promising to be one of your better episodes, didn't you, CSI:NY? Until Mac's closing speech, which I'm sure was designed to reinforce--for the billionth time his blinding awesomeness and utter moral rectitude--I thoroughly enjoyed the episode.. It was tight, well-plotted, and interesting. Then, Mac, as the mouthpiece of the writers, took the complex issue of U.S. healthcare and reduced it to a smug, glib, privileged, pithy soundbyte.

No, Victor Benton didn't have the right to kill his victims because the system for which they worked denied him care, and yes, he should be held fully accountable, but if the issue were easily solved by "writing your Congressman" as Mac so snidely suggested, it would no longer be an issue, because folks have been protesting the inadequacies and gross inequalities inherent in the insurance-driven system for a long time. Further, even if Benton had written his congressman, the wheels of legislative change grind more slowly than those of justice, and Benton would be dead before anything changed. So, Benton took drastic action. I can't say he did it for a noble reason because he was far gone by then and admitted it was done for revenge and publicity, but I certainly understand his anger and desire for retribution. As someone dependent on the largesse of Uncle Sam for my quality of life and access to crucial medical equipment, I understand the helplessness of having your life in someone else's hands.

I would also like to point out that the oh-so-touching conversation between Mac and his father and his declaration that his father met death with dignity flies directly in the face of what Mac told Hawkes in "And Here's to You, Mrs. Azrael", when he admitted that his father had asked Mac to help him die. Now, either that conversation happened later, even though the scene strongly implied it to be their final conversation, or the writers conveniently retconned that fact when it no longer suited their angsty purposes. Does no one track their own established canon?

I was pleased to see the continuity with Flack, who is clearly Not Okay despite his assurances to the contrary. Bless him, but the crash is going to be horrendous.

Dear Danny,

Thank you for putting on a clean shirt. Now wash and comb your hair.

La Guera

A solid episode weighed down by unnecessary Mactimony. B-
 
Back
Top