Rise of the Villains: Tonight's the Night

"Rise of the Villains: Tonight's the Night"
Gotham episode
Episode no. Season 2
Episode 8
Directed by Jeffrey Hunt
Written by Jim Barnes
Production code 4X6208
Original air date November 9, 2015
Guest actors

"Rise of the Villains: Tonight's the Night" is the eighth episode of the second season and 30th episode overall from the FOX series Gotham. The episode was written by Jim Barnes and directed by Jeffrey Hunt. It was first broadcast in November 9, 2015 in FOX.

Plot

The episode starts with Barbara (Erin Richards) having a dream about his wedding rehearsal with Gordon (Benjamin McKenzie). The priest turns out to be Cobblepot (Robin Lord Taylor), Galavan (James Frain) playing the piano, and the attendees become Arkham Asylum's escapees. Everyone, even Gordon, begins laughing at her. She then gets tied to a pew while she watches Gordon and Leslie (Morena Baccarin) in her wedding dress and everyone aiming their guns at her. She wakes up from the nightmare, where she receive a gift from Galavan. Galavan then tells Barbara that it's time to develop his plan for Bruce (David Mazouz) and gives her permission to kill Gordon.

Gordon tries to prove to Captain Barnes (Michael Chiklis) that the escape from Arkham Asylum, the massacre at GCPD, and the gala shooting were organized by Galavan. Barnes is skeptical and demands any proof. Barbara then appears at the GCPD and turns herself in. During interrogation, Barbara breaks in tears and Gordon persuades her by kissing her while Leslie watches from the two-way mirror. Barbara leads Gordon and Bullock (Donal Logue) to a location but their car is hit by a truck and they take Gordon hostage.

Meanwhile, Nygma (Cory Michael Smith) buries Kringle's body in the woods. Unfortunately, a hunter crosses with him and accidentally finds Kringle's corpse, forcing Nygma to kill him and bury him too. Galavan meets with Bruce in his penthouse and makes a deal with him: in exchange for Bruce leaving Wayne Enterprises to Galavan, Galavan will give him the information of the man who killed his parents. Gordon wakes up in Gotham Cathedral, tied and with a tuxedo, a priest and many hostages. Barbara appears, in her wedding dress and gun at a hand. While Barbara confronts Gordon, Tabitha (Jessica Lucas) brings Leslie, tied to a wheelchair. During one of Gordon's tricks, Barbara reveals the location of Mayor James in a dock.

Bullock, upon examining Barbara's words, realizes the location of Gordon and Leslie and tells Barnes. Barbara tries to torn them apart by telling Leslie about the assassination of Odgen Barker he committed for a favor from Cobblepot, but Leslie already knew as Gordon told her later. Gordon frees himself and gets Barbara's sawn shotgun. Tabitha and her crew arrive, but Gordon kills her crew and injures her in the shoulder. The police arrives and Barbara escapes to the upper floor where Gordon follows her. They briefly fight when they crash into the altar's window with Barbara hanging from Gordon's hand. Barbara apologizes, lets go her hand and falls from the window, to Gordon's horror.

Barbara survives the fall and is taken to the hospital. Gordon and the strike force go to the docks where they discover Mayor James and reveals Galavan's involvement. Bruce and Alfred (Sean Pertwee) reunite with Galavan in his penthouse to close the deal. At the last minute, Bruce declines the offer. Just then, Gordon and the strike force arrive and arrest Galavan for his involvement in Mayor James's abduction, not before Galavan throws into the fire the information about the Waynes' killer, to Bruce's disbelief. Back in the woods, Nygma discovers Cobblepot in a camper, wounded, asking Nygma for help.

Reception

Ratings

The episode was watched by 4.11 million viewers.[1] This was a decrease in viewership from the previous episode, which was watched by 4.27 million viewers.[2] This made Gotham the most watched program of the day in FOX.

Critical Reviews

"Rise of the Villains: Tonight's the Night" received positive reviews from critics. The episode received a rating of 71% with an average score of 6.6 out of 10 on the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, with the site's consensus stating: "'Tonight's the Night' reaps some delightfully demented narrative seeds sown earlier in the season, albeit slightly at the expense of sound narrative structure and character development."[3]

Matt Fowler of IGN gave the episode a "good" 7.7 out of 10 and wrote in his verdict, "'Tonight's the Night' had a really cool Barbara story, marred by the weird non-death ending. If they wanted to keep her alive, there were certainly other ways to do it other than the one way that made her death almost necessary by design. Also, and this is more of an observation than a negative, the Se7en homages were pretty out of control during the first 15, 20 minutes. Barbara turning herself in. Offering to lead Jim and Harvey away on an escort mission (followed by armored cops). It's just that instead of the box, it was a church. And a dress. And also a kidnapped Leslie. Other than that, the best stuff this week belonged to Bruce and Alfred."[4]

The A.V. Club's Kyle Fowle gave the episode a "B" grade and wrote, "'Tonight’s The Night' is an episode that deals with various stages of crumbling loyalty and ambition. It sees Gordon, Barbara, and Bruce all contemplate and reckon with past choices and seemingly inevitable, sad futures. 'Tonight’s The Night' is nuanced doom and gloom that also never stops being fun, and really, that's what Gotham should be.[5]

References

  1. Porter, Rick (November 10, 2015). "Monday final ratings: 'NCIS: LA' adjusts up, everything else holds". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved December 19, 2015.
  2. Porter, Rick (November 4, 2015). "Monday final ratings: ‘The Voice’ and ‘NCIS: LA’ adjust up, ‘Supergirl’ holds". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved December 19, 2015.
  3. "Rise of the Villains: Tonight's the Night". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 18, 2015.
  4. Fowler, Matt (November 9, 2015). "Gotham: "Tonight's the Night" Review". IGN. Retrieved December 18, 2015.
  5. Fowle, Kyle. "A tense cat-and-mouse game livens up this week's Gotham". The A.V. Club. Retrieved December 18, 2015.
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