The government threatening to nuke Freeland was definitely an unexpected development. I also realized that despite what I had been thinking before, we had seen an earlier response from the government, the ASA's actions were the response. I had been thinking they were an independent group, but then I remembered this week that they are a government organization, so what we saw them doing is what the government was doing.
Yes--the ASA is another agency of the federal government, one Gambi talked about in season one, which links it to everything Gambi and Gravedigger have revealed about the metahuman program.
Now that Grace and Anissa are married, I'm pretty sure one of them is doomed. This is the kind of show were resolving your issues, and getting to be happy is pretty much a death sentence, or at least means that something really bad is going to happen.
That would be in line with innumerable TV new marriages over the decades. If done properly, the survivor will adopt a new world view that places her in line with characters with a "this is the way it must be" mentality such as Jennifer, Odell and on occasion--Jefferson.
I'm thinking we've reached the point where they're going to need to come up with some kind permanent solution for Painkiller. He's gotten out twice in just the short time he's been locked away, so that's pretty clearly not going to keep him contained.
Brainwashing / programming as part of the implants makes a full escape nearly impossible. I just fear that the showrunners will have Khalil so devastated by his life / actions--and the threat of permanently losing his mind to Painkiller that he might consider suicide--either by his own hand, or by the way of a villain.
I think the whole opening narrated by Gravedigger was probably some of the most in depth the Arrowverse has ever gone on a villain's history and motivation.
Agreed. It was well thought out. Aside from parallels to the Winter Soldier, the idea of black soldiers and civilians subjected to government experiments is a real part of U.S. history, which is where the Gravedigger story takes its inspiration.