Since the beginning of the season, I have been waiting for the
day that Mia Maestro would be returning to Alias to reprise her
role of Nadia Santos. The actress brought so much grace to the
role and made season four one of the most enjoyable seasons to
watch. Her scenes with Greg Grunberg were brilliantly done, and
in all honesty I found myself favouring their relationship over
the Syd-Vaughn one. When the announcement
was made that Jennifer Garner would be doing less action-based
acting due to her pregnancy, I had hoped
Maestro would be able to take hold of the torch and keep the
Alias flame alight for a while. God knows she’s more than
capable of it. Her wonderful smiles, the elegance and style she
brought to the series, all of it was a joy to behold and in my
mind she will be the greatest achievement of the Alias casting
crew.
So as you can imagine, after Sloane finally got his hands on
the cure for her Rambaldi coma last week, I was thrilled and
could not wait until the actress once again entered the APO ranks.
It was to be an episode to remember.
And that’s how it started. As Nadia held little baby Isabelle
in the hospital gardens with Sydney, it was one of the few joyful
scenes the series would ever produce and was enough to melt even
the coldest hearts. Even with the tension between Nadia and her
father. Her mission with Jack as the played eye-spy showed promise
that the character would become more than just Syd’s nanny.
She was an action-gal and always will be. I even had hopes that
the writers would do something with the hints dropped at the
tail end of last season. You know, Irina’s little hints
that perhaps Sloane was not really the father of the second Derevko
child? Even Jack’s response was a little curious and made
me wonder if it was at all possible Nadia was more Bristow than
Sloane.
But then the bastards
cast her aside! They killed her, and robbed us all of Mia Maestro’s brilliance! In her final moments,
the performance between Maestro and Ron Rifkin was absolutely
marvellous. The level of writing from Alison Schapker and Monica
Breen was great, and Frederick E.O. Toye gave his usual 110%
with the directing. It was perhaps the most intensive scene the
series has put out for a while and I loved every second of it…that
is, until Sloane got to her! Why would the writers go to all
the trouble to bring her back from beyond just to take her away
again?!
And with the added
development that Anna Espinosa (Gina Torres) has used the Helix
protocol to take on the form of Sydney Bristow,
it looked as if Nadia would have another chance to play a key
role in the series. Remember the prophecy from last season? The
Passenger and The Chosen One will fight and only one will survive.
We all thought that applied to the Zombie-fest on the Sovogda
rooftop last May, but could it be that Nadia was destined to
do battle with Espinosa rather than Syd? It would have been a
brilliant match to see, but I guess it just wasn’t meant
to be.
The only good thing
to come from the whole development is sending Sloane to the
dark side and into the hands of Prophet Five. I’m
sure once he is reunited with Irina we’ll be seeing something
similar to that of the second season.
And if that wasn’t a big enough kick in the nuts, they
had to go ahead and do the same to Renee Rienne. Just when I
was beginning to like her. I must admit, I wasn’t much
of a fan of Elodie Bouchez at the beginning of the season. To
me, she was underused and was never really given anything real
to do in the series. I’m sure Bouchez could have dazzled
the entire fanbase if given half a chance, but the scripting
just didn’t cut it. But by “Horizon”, what
we did get of her was decent writing and she seemed to be fitting
in well with each member of the cast.
Then the bastards
killed her too! At the end as Sydney gazed down on her little
lifeless body, and as Jack stood over my poor
little Nadia, I felt a pang of regret that we won’t be
seeing more of these characters. I know what you are thinking:
this is Alias, people come back from the grave on a regular basis.
But both of these exits had a sense of finality to them. Some
people might think another resurrection would destroy every thread
of credibility the series has left, but if somehow Nadia does
come back, if Sloane wakes up and finds her in the shower alive
and well, I’ll be a happy man. I suppose after revealing
that Vaughn isn’t quite as dead as we thought the suits
thought it best to make sure that Alias was still capable of
rattling a few cages.
They’ve definitely
rattled mine!
Although the whole
Page 47 story and the Da Vinci Code moments were pretty much
kept on the back burner, the sheer scope of
this episode is unquestionable, once again throwing that old
wrench into the machinery when you least expect it. Had it not
been for the fact that it was Maestro’s last episode, I
would say it was my favourite. But with rumours hinting that
more characters are set to go before Alias’ final curtain,
there might be more shocks in store. And I’m almost afraid
to watch.
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