Jack and the major characters of 24's second season |
24's second run deals with the peril that the show was obviously made for: Islamic terrorism. 18 months after the events in the first season, a nuclear bomb gone missing forces the now elected President Palmer home from a fishing holiday, and Jack out of his slacker lifestyle to reinstatement with the Counter Terrorist Unit.
The following plot account contains SPOILERS:
CTU gets blown up, and chief Mason subsequently falls in the line of duty, - masterfully acted by Xander Berkeley (Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)). Paul Schulze (Nurse Jackie (2009-15)) is then introduced as a new office superior, and it is very evident why the creators increased his part in the following season; a very well acted part again. Slightly cheesy romantic intrigues surface at the broken down office. A subplot about an upscale LA wedding with a possible alien terrorist involvement unfolds surprisingly. Sarah Wynther (Jerks (2000)) and Laura Harris (Final Safe (2011)) are good as the yin-yang Warner sisters in this plot strand.
The merciless bad-woman of season 1, Nina Meyers' re-unification with the CTU office is played up as of almost mythic importance. First lady Sherry Palmer again writhes behind her husband's back, and yet she remains a joy to watch due to Penny Johnson Jerald's (Automatic (1995)) talent. The president is derailed by an internal cabinet coup-de-grace, and Jack actually dies, (for a short while), when things are at their worst.
The ultimate thugs of season 2, however, turn out to be Westerners: Great German actor Thomas Kretschmann (King Kong (2005)) and Saw-famed Tobin Bell (In the Line of Fire (1993)). They do well in the episodes leading up to the big, final struggle in the LA Coliseum.
The biggest issue for the show is, once again, the increasingly unlikely storyline of Jack's daughter, Kim Bauer (Elisha Cuthbert (My Sassy Girl (2008))). In season 2, she leads a bloody escape with a girl she babysits from the girl's violent father through LA, gets into a car accident, is chased by a puma, takes refuge with a hermit who locks her up in his scary safe-room; she escapes, but gets into a store hostage situation that turns extremely bloody again; but she gets out intact, and then has a final run-in with the mad father, whom she shoots. Her reactions to the conflicts around her are obviously supposed to be recognizably human, but are in fact totally incomprehensible. She is a ridiculous element and once again a faulty character that should have been written out of the series long ago.
But 24 is still a highly suspenseful series without equal, and the cliffhanger in the last episode creates chaos in a most thrilling way.
Best episode:
15 - written by Joel Surnow (The Equalizer (1985-86)), Robert Cochran (The Commish (1991-95)); directed by Ian Toynton (Bones (2007-15))
The bomb goes off
Related posts:
24 season 1 (2001) - TV action milestone
24 - season 3 (2003) - Viral suspense peak of great show
In lieu of a trailer for the season, no longer on Youtube, here is a part of Sean Callery's Emmy-winning score for the show to get you in the mood
Cost: Unknown
Box office: None - TV-series
= Unknown
[24 season was first shown 29 October 2002 - 20 May 2003 and spans 23 43-minute episodes, with the first episode 51 minutes long, totaling approximately 1,040 minutes. The season began the show's use of the Air Force One set initially created for Air Force One (1997). Lead Kiefer Sutherland (Taking Lives (2004)) was upgraded to producer as well for the season. The viewer ratings in North America were up more than 3 mil. from the first season to an excellent 11.73 mil. average for the season, which also received a rating of 83/100 on Metacritic, based on 23 reviews. The season was nominated for 9 Emmys, winning two, for Sean Callery's (Jessica Jones (2015), TV-series) score and one for singe-camera editing, and for 3 Golden Globes, which it didn't win any of. 143,625 IMDb-users have given 24 an average rating of 8.4/10.]
What series is TV's best replacement for 24 today?
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