The Blacklist Season 9 Episode 22
The hardest loss of The Blacklist season 9 finale was not Marvin Gerard’s death, but the graveside announcements of Agents Aram Mojtabai and Alina Park that their characters’ journeys are leading them away from the Task Force. Aram plans to bike around Brooklyn, take a needed break and see some Broadway shows while Alina manages her ongoing migraines, grows a new life and builds a family. These bombshell departures are tough to process! The characters, and certainly the actors who brought them to life, Amir Arison and Laura Sohn, will be deeply missed. Fans can anticipate guest appearances in Season 10, which all reports suggest are a real possibility. Aram’s interest in the theater is our first “full circle” of this episode. Of course, it is Amir Arison who will be playing the lead in The Kite Runner, which opens this summer on Broadway. As sad as Aram’s goodbye felt, the silver lining is that the beloved and talented-beyond-measure, Amir Arison, will be fulfilling a life dream in taking that stage. Without doubt, many fans will be in that audience to bear witness to his success! Our next full circle also belongs to Aram (he deserves a few, I think we can all agree). The re-emergence of Wujing in this episode is a full circle to season 1 episode 3 when we first met Wujing…and Agent Aram Mojtabai joined the Task Force in that same episode! Wujing will prove to be a difficult enemy for Red, especially without Aram around to decipher the cyber knots which will surely need untangled in season 10. We also learn some new things in this finale. Dembe’s story about spending time with Raymond and Liz when she was very young and his reminiscing about the day in the park before Liz’s death led him to reveal that Raymond, Liz, and Agnes all share the same boisterous, wild laugh. In fact, Dembe says, it is so similar that if one isn’t looking at who’s laughing, all three could easily be mistaken, one for the other, in the laugh department. Perhaps this is not life imitating one’s environment because Liz and Agnes likely never spent enough day-in-day-out time with Red to develop this similarity through exposure. This laugh they share may be born from shared genetic traits. #Redarina fans are rejoicing tonight! We also learned that Raymond Reddington’s criminal empire is bigger and more complex than we ever imagined. Marvin said that what we have seen is 1% of all that exists and thrives under Red’s purview. Not only should we be shocked at the scale, we also hear Red and Marvin talk about how what they built together over decades is, and has always been, about influencing the criminal realm and keeping the worst of human actions in check. The goal did not suddenly become criminal control when Red turned himself in and became the Task Force’s informant. This goal existed from the beginning. Thirty years’ worth of Marvin and Red trying to function as demi-angels in an otherwise obvious Hell. Red’s connection with the FBI must’ve made this goal easier to achieve over the past nine years, but we know now that this altruism has always been in Red’s veins. For exactly this reason, when Red finds himself off the Task Force and back on the FBI’s most-wanted list, he is able to quip: “It’s good to be wanted.” Red is powerful. But we should be careful not to read power and might alone into the suicide of Marvin. Like Mr, Kaplan before him, both were loved by Red, both betrayed him in ways that Red deemed unforgivable, and both committed suicide. It’s not that Red is so powerful that people are willing to off themselves rather than cause him the trouble or discomfort of doing it himself. And maybe as we watched the season closer tonight, we might have preferred to see Red shoot Marvin between the eyes at close range. In Red’s world of power, death and dignity, falling on one’s own sword is a matter of respect granted to enemies strong enough not to be simply “taken down like a dog.”