Man on Fire (The Vampire Diaries)

This article is about an episode of TV series The Vampire Diaries. For other uses, see Man on Fire.
"Man on Fire"
The Vampire Diaries episode
Episode no. Season 5
Episode 19
Directed by Michael Allowitz
Written by Melinda Hsu Taylor
Matthew D'Ambrosio
Production code 2J7519
Original air date April 24, 2014
Guest actors

"Man on Fire" is the 19th episode of the fifth season of the American series The Vampire Diaries and the series' 108th episode overall. "Man on Fire" was originally aired on April 24, 2014, on The CW. The episode was written by Melinda Hsu Taylor and Matthew D'Ambrosio and directed by Michael Allowitz.

Plot

Stefan (Paul Wesley), after Damon (Ian Somerhalder) told Elena (Nina Dobrev) that he does not want to see her again, tries to keep Elena busy by helping her study so she will not think of him. Bonnie (Kat Graham) joins them at the library and Stefan and Elena notice that despite the fact that she might die soon since the Other Side is falling apart, Bonnie is acting like nothing is happening. Their discussion gets interrupted by Enzo (Michael Malarkey) who comes wanting revenge on Stefan for killing his true love, Maggie (Heather Hemmens). Stefan denies that he was the one who did it despite Enzo showing him a picture of Maggie as a proof that she was killed by "the ripper". Stefan denies it since during that period, he was not "the ripper" but Enzo does not believe him.

Damon looks for the traveler's knife and goes to Matt's (Zach Roerig) place to ask for it. Matt and Jeremy (Steven R. McQueen) though are also looking for it all over the house and cannot find it. They tell Damon that Tyler (Michael Trevino) told them it was in the house but they did not hear from him since then. Damon puts the pieces together and realizes that Tyler must have been possessed by the travelers. He calls Enzo for help but Enzo tells him that he is with Stefan and Elena and he is about to kill Stefan because he was the one who murdered Maggie. Damon tries to tell him that this is not possible because Stefan was not "the ripper" during the '60s but Enzo does not want to hear him.

Enzo uses the help of Liv (Penelope Mitchell) to cause pain to Elena and Stefan to make him admit his action. Bonnie asks her to stop but she cannot because if she does not do whatever Enzo wants, he will kill her brother Luke (Chris Brochu) who Enzo keeps hostage. Stefan keeps denying that he had anything to do with Maggie's death so Enzo threatens to kill Bonnie. To save Bonnie's life, Stefan admits that he did kill Maggie. Through flashbacks we see that Stefan and Maggie met and Maggie recognized him as one of the Salvatore brothers and asked him to tell her where Damon is so she can kill him. Maggie believed that Damon was responsible for Enzo's death in the fire (she did not know that Wes saved him) and she wanted to revenge for his death.

In the meantime, Damon asks Liz's (Marguerite MacIntyre) help to find out more about Maggie and her death. Liz, having the date of the murder, finds the file and brings it to Damon and when Damon sees it he remembers that he was the one who killed Maggie. Through another flashback, we see that Maggie did find Damon and attempted to kill him but Damon stopped her and kill her and made it look like it was Stefan. Damon did not know that the woman was Enzo's true love since she did not give him her name.

Enzo tortures Stefan and Damon gets there in time before he kills him. Damon confesses to Enzo that he was the one who killed Maggie but he did not know who she was and that at the time he had his emotions turned off so he did many bad things. Enzo does not want to hate Damon because he is the only thing he has left and he prefers to turn off his emotions so he will not care about anything, something that he does despite Damon trying to stop him.

Enzo attacks Liv and Damon and Stefan try to stop him but he runs away getting Elena with him. Damon asks Stefan to help Liv while he goes after Enzo believing that he can help him. Stefan gives Liv some of his blood to save her life and then runs after Enzo as well. Enzo wants to kill Elena because he knows that Damon loves and cares about her but Elena fights back, so he snaps her neck. Stefan gets there in time to stop him before he stakes her and the two of them start to fight.

Damon finds Elena unconscious and he takes her home so she will be safe. He leaves her on the couch and leaves. Enzo and Stefan keep fighting and Enzo wants to burn Stefan because he knows that if he does, it will hurt Damon to lose his only brother. Stefan puts his hand into Enzo's chest reaching his heart and tells him that he will kill him because he knows that he will not stop until he kills Damon but he is hesitate to do the final move. Enzo changes his mind about killing Stefan and believes that turning the two brothers against each other will be a better way to revenge Damon so he pulls himself back leaving Stefan holding his heart and the one responsible for his death; Damon's best friend's death.

Stefan decides that it is better not to tell Damon about Enzo's death so he texts him from Enzo's phone that he is leaving town and he goes to find Elena. Elena wakes up and she does not know how she got home. Stefan tells her about Enzo and what happened and that he does not want Damon to know. He also calls Bonnie to tell her the same and Bonnie agrees. Enzo appears to her to pass to the Other Side and Bonnie hides from Jeremy the fact that the dead man is Enzo.

In the meantime, the travelers' leader Marcos (Raffi Barsoumian) uses Sloan (Caitlin McHugh) who volunteered for their experiment; they want to see if they can remove magic with the doppelganger's blood. Marcos uses Tyler's blood to turn Sloan into a vampire and then Sloan drinks the doppelganger blood they have from Stefan and Elena while the rest of the travelers chant a spell. After a while, they check if the spell worked and if Sloan is no longer a vampire and she is not. Right after though, she dies since the spell brings the person to their last state of being human and that was dead. Marcos announces that they now know that the doppelganger blood can reverse the spell of someone being a vampire and they can finally defeat the vampires and make the town their home.

The episode ends with Stefan and Damon talking about Enzo. Damon explains to Stefan that while he was captured by the Augustine it was Enzo that kept him from hating him when he believed that he did not care about him and that is why he did not come to save him. While the two brothers talk, we see Enzo being in the room as a ghost and listening to them and seem pleased for the vendetta that is about to start between the two brothers.

Feature music

In the "Man on Fire" episode we can hear the songs:[1]

Reception

Ratings

In its original American broadcast, "Man on Fire" was watched by 1.81 million; up by 0.15 from the previous episode.[2]

Reviews

"Man on Fire" received mixed reviews.

Carrie Raisler of The A.V. Club gave the episode an A- rating focusing the review on Enzo. "The main reason this episode works so well is that it focuses on Enzo, who is one of the better additions to the Mystic Falls universe in quite some time. [...] it helps that Enzo himself has an interesting backstory. Michael Malarkey plays him with a fire in his belly, infusing him with personality and verve. Enzo has been lurking around in the shadows of most of this season’s stories, but he finally got his very own showcase here, and it was a doozy."[3]

Stephanie Flasher of TV After Dark gave the episode a B rating saying that the episode was very "Denzo-centric". "In summary, [Man on Fire] was an acceptable episode of the hit supernatural show. The writers did a great job showcasing Michael Malarkey’s talents as an actor in this episode. The direction was great too, allowing the audience see the varying sides of Enzo’s character. Ian did a great job alongside Enzo. The writers have done a good job showing Damon’s character development from week to week."[4]

Ashley Dominique of Geeked Out Nation gave the episode a B- rating. "Centered around a situation that should have been filled with tension, everyone in "Man Of Fire" [sic] just seemed to be going through the motions."[5]

Jim Halterman from TV Fanatic rated the episode with 3.5/5 saying: "While tonight’s episode wasn’t perfect by any means - and there was obviously plenty for me to be snarky about - I did enjoy it more than past outings mostly because I feel as though we’re finally heading somewhere and it could be really fun."[6]

Stephanie Hall of K Site TV gave a good review to the episode saying that it served as a setup for the remaining ones. "There were bits and pieces of the season’s overall mythology scattered throughout that prevents this from being a true filler episode, but much of the drama in "Man on Fire" felt drawn out. That’s not to say it wasn’t enjoyable, because it was, just on a more gratuitous level than the convoluted mythology-heavy episodes of the recent past."[7]

Caroline Preece from Den of Geek gave a good review to the episode saying that the strength of Vampire Diaries is in its male relationships and focused on the revenge story between Enzo, Damon and Stefan. "As do Enzo’s actions in 2014 (or whatever year we’re actually in), essentially framing Stefan for his murder and royally screwing up the brothers’ temporary truce. To have them fighting about a lost friendship rather than lost love is more refreshing than it maybe should be for a show essentially about supernatural romance [...] That’s exciting, and should inject future episodes with a bit of drama."[8]

Josie Kafka of Doux Reviews rated the episode with 2.5/4. "TVD has been hit or miss all season, and I wonder if that is just, as they say, the new normal. With some shows, we know to expect mythology episodes interspersed with standalones. With others, we know to expect comedy every now and again, usually right before the big sad. Maybe, with TVD, we can expect a constant 2:1 ratio of good:awkward. Those awkward episodes shift all the pieces on the board, and set us up for the fun and games of the stronger episodes."[9]

Jen of TV Over Mind gave a mixed review to the episode saying that overall it was a frustrating episode. "The Vampire Diaries is known for its complex storylines, but something about this season just feels tired to me. Yes, we learned of the Travelers’ true agenda but even that is still a bit confusing. Flashbacks to the past fill in more of Enzo’s story (which was long overdue) but it all led up to a pointless secret by the end."[10]

References

  1. "The Vampire Diaries Season 5 Episode 19: "Man on Fire" Music". TV Fanatic. Retrieved April 28, 2014.
  2. Kondolojy, Amanda (April 25, 2014). "Thursday Final Ratings: 'The Big Bang Theory' & 'The Vampire Diaries' Adjusted Up; 'The Millers' Adjusted Down". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  3. Raisler, Carrie (April 24, 2014). "The Vampire Diaries: "Man On Fire"". The A.V. Club. Retrieved April 28, 2014.
  4. Flasher, Stephanie (April 30, 2014). "The Vampire Diaries 5×19 – "Man on Fire" Review". TV After Dark. Retrieved May 10, 2014.
  5. Dominique, Ashley (April 25, 2014). "The Vampire Diaries: "Man on Fire" Review". Geeked Out Nation. Retrieved April 28, 2014.
  6. Halterman, Jim (April 24, 2014). "The Vampire Diaries Review: New Stakes". TV Fanatic. Retrieved April 28, 2014.
  7. Hall, Stephanie (April 28, 2014). "The Vampire Diaries #5.19 "Man on Fire" Recap & Review". K Site TV. Retrieved April 28, 2014.
  8. Preece, Caroline (April 28, 2014). "The Vampire Diaries season 5 episode 19 review: Man On Fire". Den of Geek. Retrieved April 28, 2014.
  9. Kafka, Josie. "Vampire Diaries: Man on Fire". Doux Reviews. Retrieved April 28, 2014.
  10. Jen (April 25, 2014). "The Vampire Diaries 5.19 Review: "Man on Fire"". TV Over Mind. Retrieved April 28, 2014.

External links