Due to a high volume of active users and service overload, we had to decrease the quality of video streaming. Premium users remains with the highest video quality available. Sorry for the inconvinience it may cause. Donate to keep project running.
Do you have a video playback issues?
Please disable AdBlocker in your browser for our website.
In the Seventh season, there are a host of more action and realistic issues and events which including: Oliver surrendered to the police, which is the green arrow, and will therefore face many challenges and positions inside the prison. While Oliver tries to survive inside the prison, a new set of unknown commissions appear in Star City. Perhaps that will be Oliver's biggest challenge when he is forced to ally himself with an old enemy.
James Bamford, Wendey Stanzler, Laura Belsey, Gordon Verheul, Ben Hernandez Bray, Joel Novoa, Kristin Windell, Mairzee Almas, Mark Bunting, J.J. Makaro, Ken Shane, Andi Armaganian, Alexandra La Roche, Tara Miele
The hour does a good job of (finally) honoring Oliver Queen's sacrifices and accomplishments as the Green Arrow. I just wish it also honored the other aspects of the show that I've loved so much.
Might be my favorite episode of the season for one reason, and it's not because it was partially shot like a documentary about the Green Arrow: it featured all of the members of Team Arrow interacting with each other.
"Emerald Archer" is a nice little group hug between several parties. New and Original Team Arrow seem to have finally come together. It's lovely from a story perspective, but creative teams and fans both past and present were a part of it too.
While it had the potential to be more strange than entertaining, the 150th episode of Arrow managed to be one of the season's best. It did an excellent job of balancing nostalgia with major plotline developments.
"Emerald Archer" proved the series can venture off the beaten path when given the opportunity. This episode used the mockumentary format to good effect, even while balancing out those sequences with more traditional Arrow drama.
There's a comically disappointing villain, a ludicrous conclusion that promises nothing good for the future, one particularly aggravating subplot, the single most unnecessary Ricardo Diaz appearance yet (really saying something).
"Emerald Archer" was, in many ways, a love letter to everything that has made Arrow the success that it is today while remaining firmly grounded in the show's current storylines, and the result was near-perfection.