impressions

IGN TV – 24: “Day 8: 8:00 AM-9:00 AM” Review:

My big issue is that I don’t get what the point is, storywise, in killing Renee. It didn’t feel earned. Was it to make it personal for Jack? To give him a truly intense motivation going forward? That easily could have been accomplished with Hassan’s death, which Jack obviously felt extreme grief and guilt over. Learning there were other elements behind that death still out there would have been enough – or hell, have Renee wounded too, so Jack is extra pissed. But why kill Renee at this point? Just so we can be reminded, again, that Jack Bauer’s life sucks? We’ve already been through Jack losing someone he loves, and there wasn’t enough unique about this scenario to make it feel worth it to go this route again.

CNN.com TV Recap: Five reasons we loved this week’s episode of ’24′:

There are many moments in television that are simply unforgettable, and the moment Jack was told that Renee has been killed ranks among the most gripping I’ve ever seen. There seemed to be so many emotions bottled up in his eyes. For all the things he’s seen, all the predicaments he’s lived through, and all the bullets that have whizzed past him, THIS moment seems beyond his comprehension. It was a finely tuned, well-oiled moment of epic drama.

TV Review: 24 – SEASON EIGHT – ’8 am to 9 am’ – iFMagazine.com:

That means, CTU Chief Brian Hastings (Mykelti Williamson) is out as the head of CTU for all the screw-ups in the last 17 or so hours. In his place, temporarily, is Chloe, who takes charge like no one’s business. No more of this “you’re wrong Chloe, if we do this, it will do this, this and this.” Now it’s Chloe saying “do this, because I know that I’m right” and of course, she is.

I’m lovin’ it. After six seasons of being told she doesn’t know what she’s doing, she’s finally given the confidence that she does know what she’s doing, and she’s going to be one of those kick ass and take names later kind of chiefs.

Finally a competent head of CTU!

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Den of Geek – 24 Season 8 episode 14 review:

All in all, this was a great episode that did one very important thing: it moved the story forward constantly, and didn’t get too bogged down in details and stalling tactics.

In one episode we’ve seen the rods arrive in Manhattan, get assembled and moved into place and be armed; we’ve seen President Taylor’s staff turn on her and we’ve seen Jack kick some much overdue ass.

EW ’24′ recap: Ethan’s heart just wasn’t in it!:

Before I address tonight’s exhilarating episode, attention must be paid to Friday’s news about the show’s series finale on May 24. The announcement wasn’t necessarily a surprise, but it was bittersweet nonetheless; it’s always sad when an old friend leaves our living room for good, and it could be a long time before we see another terrific anti-hero like Jack (or The Shield’s Vic Mackey!) on our small screen.

CNN.com TV Recap: First day of the last day on ’24′:

Meanwhile, I thought the pace of the episode’s action was remarkable and never let go with a few unforgettable moments of heart-pounding, tense drama.

As Jack and Renee attempted to move President Hassan and his family out of the U.N., that tunnel scene was well-orchestrated and fantastic to watch. Amidst the clips being reloaded and smoke grenades being tossed, the situation seemed to escalate with every passing moment. Also, the stern words delivered by President Taylor and Brian Hastings were fitting sermons that made all of this FEEL like an authentic crisis. Hastings has flat-out been on a “blog-love” streak for about a month now, and I hope he keeps it up.

Summing it up, this was a stellar episode that hit us from all angles. Its always a good sign when the clock beeps for the last time, and we all take the patented gasp knowing we have reached the end.

IGN TV: 24: “Day 8: 5:00 AM-6:00 AM” Review:

Kudos to Cherry Jones, for giving lending such gravitas and commitment to Taylor’s speech about why she would not consider handing Hassan over to Samir. It takes an actress of Jones’ caliber to invest a speech like that with total commitment and damn if she didn’t seem as much like a President as one could hope for in that moment.

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CNN.com: ’24′ Recap: Hell yeah, Chloe!

As great as I believed last week was, this week’s show delivered yet another adrenaline-soaked, action-packed sixty minutes. Just when I thought I had things figured out, the plot twisted, turned, and finally spun around completely.

EW.com: ’24′ Recap: Wall-to-wall action, eh Dana?

Given last week’s terrific episode, I half-expected the action to slow down tonight – kind of like a re-setting of the proverbial pins so the producers could begin the final march into the (series? season?) finale. Wrong there, sister! Not only were we treated to an overdue heaping of Chloe, but we got the kind of bitchin’ shoot-out I haven’t seen since that Colombian ambush scene in Clear and Present Danger. Plus, more Renee! And Bill Prady! And another CTU infiltrator! Isn’t this the 57th mole in the show’s eight-year history?

24: “Day 8: 4:00 AM-5:00 AM” Review – TV Review at IGN

…and hello, Renee! I don’t know about you, but I was psyched to have Renee back. She was easily one of the best parts of the early portion of the season, so it was disappointing having her off screen for the past few episodes. Having her show up in the nick of time to save Jack, effortlessly taking out a couple of bad guys in the process, was great.

TVGuide.com: 24 Episode Recap: 4:00 A.M.-5:00 A.M.

In another action-packed hour, 24 saves the best for last: CTU Agent Dana Walsh is, in fact, working with the terrorists, and she’s a cold-blooded murderer to boot.

Proving that you can’t please everyone, TV Fanatic calls this the worst hour ever. TV Fanatic 24 Review: 4:00 AM – 5:00 AM, a.k.a. The Worst Hour Ever

the 5 a.m. shocker – that Jenny is actually a mole working for Samir – was enough to make us wish the show’s title were “7” and that its awfulness had ended several weeks ago.

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TV.com: Monday’s Episode of 24 Was the Best So Far This Season

There’s no point in holding back. Monday’s episode of 24 was the best one so far this season.

It had a bit of everything: Jack doing Jack things. Romantic betrayal, redemption, then more betrayal—by a ripped terrorist who looks like he’s been hitting the monkey bars pretty hard at the Al Qaeda training camp. The clock ticking on a webcast execution. Compromised nuclear security. Another direct attack on CTU. And maybe even a tiny bit of redemption for the Dana Walsh storyline, thanks to Stephen Root.

CNN.com: Nine minutes in, five guys down on ’24′

Well, in this latest episode, I got a HUGE plate piled high, buffet-style. The more action I wanted, the more the show gave me, serving after serving. By the time the bill came, (read: credits rolled) I was both stuffed and exhausted. The verdict? Satisfied.

I thought this was easily the best episode of the season. As the plot twisted, bobbed and weaved its way through the hour, I was on the edge of my comfy “24 watching” seat the entire time. Even with the obvious deficiency of the “ghost of the dumb subplot past” (aka the Kevin/Dana saga), it was still a strong show.

EW.com: ’24′ recap: You really blew it this time, Kayla

Last night’s episode was the season’s best by far; I didn’t see Tarin’s double-cross of Kayla coming for a mile, nor did I predict the plot point to take out CTU.

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Jack Bauer
Wallstreet Journal’s Dorothy Rabinowitz has reviewed the opening four hours of 24 and seems to have come away quite impressed stating that the new season is “meticulously plotted, irresistibly suspenseful” and Chloe O’Brian is “back in top form”. That’s what I like to hear!

If anyone had any doubts of “24″‘s resurrection, complete with its old capacity to induce a rabid appetite for the next episode, the first four hours of its new season on Fox (Sunday, Jan. 17, 9-11 p.m. EST, and Monday, Jan. 18, 8-10 p.m. EST) should dispel them. Last year brought the first proofs of new life for the series, fallen into decline after a run of extravagantly inept plots concocted, it would appear, when its producers flinched at criticism that the series celebrated brutal interrogations and focused extensively on the theme of Muslim terrorists. Fans fled elaborately incomprehensible story lines about Chinese and Russian conspirators, not to mention the one about a smoothie of a U.S. president who was, in reality, a psychotic killer.

Last season’s smartly spiffed up “24″ brought a turning point with its fine-honed scripts and characters. It introduced a contemplative Jack Bauer given to confessions of his spiritual burdens, the dark and secret things he and his colleagues had done in their counterterrorist work. But a Bauer, nonetheless, ready as ever to bear any burden, crush any windpipe necessary to squeeze information from an enemy conspirator. This new season, the eighth, introduces a Jack evidently recovered from his spiritual crises. Its opening episode finds him in New York, lolling contentedly on a sofa with his young granddaughter, pleased to have severed forever, so it seems, any connection with antiterror work. He now enjoys going to the zoo, watching cartoons with the grandchild, and dreaming of his move back to Los Angeles, to live near his daughter. It will come as no surprise that these happy plans for a new family life are, in short order, dispatched. Duty calls.

Imminent disaster threatens in New York, “24′s” new setting—a place of screeching cars, blocks of undistinguished real estate, ratty warehouses. Except for the looming presence of the United Nations building, which figures in the threat, and a glimpse of skyscrapers, there’s not a lot that’s distinctively New York-like in these backgrounds, but no matter. Except for a rare, fabulous car chase, most of the high drama, of which there’s plenty, takes place behind closed doors—in the elegantly appointed offices of the American president, the corridors of the U.N., or a house in a beaten-down area of Queens.

The crisis Jack addresses concerns the plot against a Middle Eastern head of state, in Washington to discuss his country’s nuclear capacities—and inspections thereof. Indeed, the president, Allison Taylor (Cherry Jones), identifies him as the president of the Islamic Republic. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is the figure clearly meant to pop into viewers’ minds, until it becomes obvious, quite soon, that this tall, handsome, swinging devotee of peace and humanity and even, as the president breathlessly explains, the two-state solution—is someone else. President Taylor is soon awash in devotion to this leader, Omar Hassan (played by Anil Kapoor). The writers of “24″ are partial to the creation of dream-world paragons of idealism, like the noble president of the Islamic Republic ready to forget his country’s nuclear aims—ready, moreover, to give up everything in the interests of humanity and peace, his life included.

It’s left to Jack Bauer—abetted by Chloe (Mary Lynn Rajskub), back in top form—whose mission it will be to thwart the assassins out to destroy this hero. It’s an old story rolled out with all the power of the new—meticulously plotted, irresistibly suspenseful.

Source: WSJ.com

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Brief premiere impressions from EW’s Ken Tucker

December 31, 2009

24 (premieres Jan. 17, Fox) Jack is in Manhattan. Guess what else is there? You are correct: a terrorist threat. So is Freddie Prinze, Jr. No, that’s not a threat — he’s actually good, at least in the first four hours I’ve seen. And Katee Sackhoff, in the sort of high heels Battlestar Galactica geeks [...]

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Premiere impressions by Matt Mitovitch

December 29, 2009

Any early thoughts on the new season of ‘24‘? – David As I raved on Facebook, there’s nary a clinker in the first four hours as Season 8 gets off to a solid start. That said, Mykelti Williamson’s Brian Hastings has got to be one of the most dense CTU directors in ‘24′ history; I [...]

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Matt Mitovich teases season 8 premiere

December 15, 2009

Fancast’s Matt Webb Mitovich has seen the 24 premiere and gives out some intriguing teases. Sounds like an action-packed intense first episode. When is the ‘24‘ premiere going to be on? – frednow via Twitter Jack Bauer’s next very bad day kicks off with a two-night, four-hour premiere on Sunday, January 17 (a rare occasion [...]

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