![]() ![]() Once again bringing back the League of Shadows comparisons. So if there's one huge takeaway here, it's that James' organization pretty much can't do anything "good" without collateral damage. The dramatic irony here is that collateral damage was to follow Michael no matter where he went because when he asked Sonya to help rescue Carlos at the end, the resulting attack on the cartel compound in Colombia killed seven people. Michael, ever hesitant and bleary, was forced to shoot Steele with a sniper rifle in order to prevent Sonya from bombing Steele's entire compound resulting in mass amounts of collateral damage. ![]() It was the first time neither team could make any headway with the villains they were confronted with. So both sides of the action mission fence were stumped here. In fact, because he wasn't able to use his usual Michael Westen magic and con his way out of the situation, his side mission ended early, allowing him to then get involved in Fi's story with Carlos - where she too couldn't figure out the right play. Things, however, turned very dark, very quickly after Michael couldn't figure out a way around killing his old espionage contact/friend Roger Steele (Supernstural's Sebastian Roché). "Things Unseen" was another example of a decent episode-turned-great starting out with a rudimentary nagging scene where Fiona bitched to Michael about his overall commitment to, ahem, saving them all from a life in prison and then heading into two seemingly humdrum side missions. ![]()
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