Aug 22 2008 04:27 PM ET

'Burn Notice'recap: Gunpowder, treason, and plot...

Filed under: Mini TV Watch and tagged: ,

Burnnotice_lSeason 2’s guest stars just keep improving. You can’t top the hilarity of Larry Miller or the sheer freak factor of Robin Givens, but Michael Shanks (not to mention Method Man) certainly upped the ante last week. So I wasn’t too shocked when yesterday’s ep featured The Unit’s Max Martini as drug thief Gerard and Prison Break’s Silas Weir Mitchell as arms dealer Seymour. Martini was hit or miss — a bit too soulful to play a common criminal, methinks. Weir Mitchell, on the other hand, was perfectly quirky and menacing without being annoying or campy. He was exactly the kind of guy you’d think would be Fiona’s pal.  (She seems to have a lot of those lately, by the way — the veterinarian’s assistant, the paramedic — they’re coming out of the woodwork, considering she spends most of her time helping out Michael and the rest of her hours, I’m assuming, working out.)

Fi hooked up Mike and Seymour, hoping that the latter could use his connections to score info on the über gun Mike helped Victor steal for Carla and company. The stats: It’s a Russian sniper rifle called a Dragunov. Seymour’s intel: It’s just been tricked out with specially calibrated muzzle breaks, night sight, and a fiber-optic camera. Oh, and the poor gun specialist who souped up the piece was murdered and his shop burned to the ground (i.e., whomever Carla works for doesn’t want to leave a trail, and she’ll probably try to knock off Mike, Sam, Fiona, and Madeline soon too). They also want to use the gun to shoot someone pretty important and to make sure he or she definitely bites the dust. There is only one reason for putting a fiber-optic camera on a sniper rifle: In Michael’s words, “proof of death.”

addCredit(“Jeffrey Donovan on ‘Burn Notice’; Glenn Watson”)

With the shopkeeper out of the picture, and Seymour spooked out ofhis wits, Mike only got one real clue about his burn notice: that thename of the guy who picked up the gun attachments was Bill Johnson.Helpful, but there are probably quite a few Bill Johnsons in Miami —and I’m betting that’s not even his real name. Luckily, this week’sjob — stealing back a million dollars worth of pediatric antiviralsfrom a modern day pirate — was more successful. It also marked thereturn of Sam’s Navy SEAL bud Virgil (Chris Ellis), who last seasonromanced Madeline and nearly got Michael et al. killed in a showdownbetween the Jamaican mafia and some rogue police. Virgil had beenhiding out in the Bahamas, but his old partner’s daughter runs themedical relief agency from which the drugs were stolen, and she neededhim, Mike, Sam, and Fiona to return the meds. Which they do.

After tracking down the thief — the aforementioned ginger psychoGerard — Sam posed as a mysterious dealer and lured him into stealinga fake shipment of “new generation” steroids made from human tissue. Hethen got Michael on his crew as the inside man (hoping this would trickGerard into showing them where he stashed his wares). I had threeproblems with this plotline. First, it seemed a lot like the episodefrom a few weeks ago in which Michael infiltrated Timo’s heist as areplacement safecracker. Second, Sam convinced Gerard to take on Mikeas a specialist who knew how to store the drugs and keep them at theright temperature and humidity. Yet, if Gerard was comfortable withstealing antivirals, wouldn’t he already be familiar with storing suchsensitive cargo? Third, while Michael’s cover I.D. as a dorky lab ratwas semi-convincing (the hunched shoulders, the asthma inhaler andall), no one so adverse to physical activity and exertion has a bodylike that — which is something I think Gerard, however much like a“three year old” he was, would have noticed.

But Virgil’s return did have some benefits. We learned a ton ofMacGyver stuff last night. My favorite: how to counterfeitpharmaceuticals using the fluorescent green Mountain Dew spinoff AMP,cryogenic containers, and compressed gas. But more importantly, wefinally got a storyline about Mike’s personal life that was subtle,touching, and well-executed. Let’s face it, Virgil and Maddie have someheat and it scared Michael to see Mom falling in love (as Sam says,“You know Mike, if you had to have a stepdad, you could do worse).But not as much as it frightened him to lose Fiona (was it me, or didhe check out her nipples in the first scene last night?), who’s nowdating other blokes.  Do I believe this mysterious paramedic actuallyexisted? Maybe not, but he certainly had Mike’s back up.

So guys, what did you think? And take heed — Burn Notice doesn’t return until three weeks from now when they air the final two episodes.  See you then!

Comments (31 total) Add your comment
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  • Mells

    Michael was TOTALLY checking out Fi in the beginning of the ep – and I noticed the ‘Nip Shot’too. You make a good point about his lab-rat character should’ve worn something better suited to hiding his level of physical fitness but it’s Miami, even the dorks work out! I can’t believe I have to wait 3 weeks!

  • Mells

    P.S.
    To all the fans who don’t like that Michael allows the criminals to kill each other as a resolution – last night’s arrest of Gerard the Pirate should make you guys happy.

  • Elizabeth

    I loved Mike’s lab rat imitation – the inhaler was a bit of a crutch at times, but it was still pretty funny.

  • Steph

    I think the point was that Gerard and his crew were more apt at running pills and other pharmaceuticals that didn’t necessarily have to be safeguarded and stored at precise temperatures. Therefore, the whole point of Michael’s ingenious cover was that “Jackson” was the lab rat who cooked up the “steroids on steroids” and was the only person who knew how to package and store them. (And I thought Jeffrey Donovan was absolutely hilarious in the role)

  • Aseem

    Did anyone else notice the “Usual Suspects” ripoff? “If the devil had a name, it would be Chuck Finley (Keyser Soze)!” And Michale was playing a great Verbal imitation, from to the hunched shoulders to the constant worrying. Plus, everyone he works with ends up dead, supposedly. Pretty cool stuff!

  • Mel

    I think nerds can have good bodies. This last season of Beauty and the Geek this geek was so ripped but he couldn’t win the one physical challenge. So I think Michaels nerd character was believeable

  • Agatha

    Antivirals need to be safeguarded and stored at precise temperatures too.

  • Chip Ramsey

    I don’t know if the producers are baseball fans, but Chuck Finley was a pitcher for the Angels and Indians in the 90′s. He was beat up by his (now) ex-wife. Perhaps this was an inside joke. If so, I smiled, especially since the Chuck Finley in the show was such a hard ass and the baseball player got beat up by his wife!

  • Jill

    Three weeks? I’m so bummed. I loved Michael playing the geek. The way he was running like a girl was so funny. His interaction with his Mom was nice to see. And he was totally checking out Fi’s nip. Don’t we always want what we can’t have? I wonder what Fiona’s gun collection looks like….

  • julieintx

    Was I the only one who thought that Mikes rant about Finely mirrored Kevin Spacey rant about Keyser Soze in The Usual Suspects? Maybe I have seen the Usual Suspects too much it was almost like watching the movie last night! Also the running like a girl was hilarious, but the asthma was overkill.

  • ECUfan

    Yes it was a “Usual Suspects” rip-off and it made me howl with laughter.
    More Nate is needed, however.

  • Jimmy Holiday

    Folks -
    These are supposed to be world class operatives. It’s should be unlikely
    that Michael, Fiona, or Sam would have any problem just shooting everybody in the head and taking the
    drugs as their last option.
    And why wouldn’t Sam and Fiona have friends and contacts from many walks
    of life. Realistically, Michael should have some friends and contacts that really had no idea what business he was in, he was just the well dressed guy who “comes in to the store” or “gets his haircut every two
    weeks”. These people would have no idea that there is a burn notice, but the friend who runs the local Radio Shack would be helpful at times.
    All of the plots worked very well this week. They have found a way to let Madeline be a cause of concern for Michael without resorting to nagging interference. Good job.
    And Michael’s acting this week was refreshing, a change from the slick,
    tough, in-charge character that he
    usually poses as.
    Best show this season. A+

  • Herb

    One of the very best this season. Virgil is once again – great. I really enjoyed this one.

  • Jen in WI

    Aubry D’Arminio–are you happy now? You finally got your friggin’cops that you keep harping about. You need to bone up on what spies do–they’re not a branch of law enforcement like the FBI. Their raison d’etre is to operate under the radar. Watch Alias, read LeCarre, some of Clancy’s books (although his spy stuff mostly deals with defectors–their agony and guilt mostly, but how they transfer the info.) These examples of espionage cover different aspects, from the real (LeCarre) to the hyperbole (Alias)–not a single one of them defers to local or national police departments. EVER. It’s verboten and considered a fat failure. (Except using them as a tool, like in this episode.)
    So Aubry….enough of the cops cops cops—spies’jobs are not to uphold the law as constituted by governing bodies. They don’t follow the same rules, they don’t have to ‘prove’anything in a court of law.
    The situations are beyond what the law is capable of dealing with.
    Study up, you’ll enjoy the show more.

  • Sina

    Like this show but it’s still hard to look at Fi. She needs a better tan and a veggie burger with fries, STAT. Also I wish she talked in her naive tongue because this accent is annoying.

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