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EPISODE REVIEW: Arrow S6 EP16 ‘The Thanatos Guild’

The League of Assassins is back, but what does this ancient order want from Thea this time around? Will Thea and Roy be allowed their “happily ever after,” or will the legacy of Malcolm Merlyn spoil the reunion?

Arrow “The Thanatos Guild”, Season 6, Episode 16
Airdate: March 29th, 2018
Director: Joel Novoa
Writer: Greg Berlanti & Marc Guggenheim
Based on the DC Comics Created by Mort Weisinger & George Papp

What You Should Know:

Much of the backstory to this week’s episode harkens all the back to season 3 when the position of leadership over the League of Assassins came equipped with a revolving door. Ra’s al Ghul is killed by Oliver, and Oliver takes over for a bit, only to eventually lose the League to Merlyn. Along the way, Thea dies and is resurrected via Lazarus Pit, but with some demons in tow. With Merlyn’s death last season, Thea (and also Talia and Nyssa al Ghul) is the heiress to the League.

Fast forwarding to the present, if you aren’t aware already, Roy is back, baby! Yeah, Rooooyyyy! Reintroduced last week, Roy and Thea are an item once again, tensions are slowly breaking down between The Outsiders and Team Arrow, Diggle is healthy again, and the evil criminal mastermind, Diaz, is still on the loose.

What You’ll Find Out:

Merlyn gave the League of Assassins a makeover before he died, spawning The Thanatos Guild (Thanatos is the ancient Greek personification of death). In Merlyn’s absence, a woman named Athena is running the Guild and searching for a map to three previously unknown Lazarus Pits. Only Thea’s blood can reveal the map, so Athena and the Guild come after Thea and Roy as they attempt to drive off into the sunset together. Luckily for them, Nyssa al Ghul returns and recruits Thea to her cause, which in turn convinces Roy to tag along as well, and the three of them set out to destroy the pits before the Guild can seize them and claim their awesome power.

Other noteworthy moments:
– Quentin is now living with Black Siren as she tries to reform. He sounds very hopeful. I’m sure everything will work out fine in the end.
– Curtis and Dinah continue to track down the corruption in the SCPD, and finally, discover that Captain Hill is corrupt. We also see the return of the Vertigo drug, as covering up Diaz’s involvement in Vertigo seems high on Captain Hill’s task list.
– Curtis gets a date with a cute police officer that Dinah knows. I’m sure everything will work out fine in the end.
– Roy inches ever closer to taking on a full-fledged Arsenal costume. He just needs to get some red clothes, some sunglasses, and turn that hat around.
– Nyssa finally annulled her marriage to Oliver by giving him a dagger that severs marital ties. It was cute.

What Just Happened?

This season of Arrow continues to struggle with an apparent identity crisis in the wake of Cayden James’ death. Perhaps we are building to a much bigger picture that we, as viewers, cannot see yet, but for now, the storytelling feels listless in the grand scheme. Diaz and the corruption of Star City lie at the center of the narrative but still don’t feel adequate given the nature of the series.

Last season, Prometheus delivered unto us fire, and the show emerged from a two-season long struggle to find it’s footing. Unfortunately, that fire burned gloriously bright and faded out, starved for fuel. Since James’ death, the show has bounced around from storyline to storyline, including, but not limited to: the saga of not-Laurel Lance, the pending trial of Oliver, Oliver’s kid and parenting trouble, the on-again/off-again blood feud between The Outsiders and Team Arrow, Diaz and city corruption, the return of Roy, and now more League of Assassins drama. That’s simply too much for any of it to emerge as well-developed, and that’s only the last three or four episodes worth of drama.

A few side notes:

Rating: 7/10
Final Thought:
I know I was a little rough on this episode, but I really did enjoy it in a vacuum. As a mostly stand-alone episode, it had good action and character development. The problem lies in it being a part of a season that feels lost. If I’m overly critical, just know that it comes from a place of love.


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