Ruslan Denisov

"Ruslan Denisov"
The Blacklist episode
Episode no. Season 2
Episode 11
Directed by Andrew McCarthy
Written by Jonathan Shapiro
Lukas Reiter
Production code 211
Original air date February 12, 2015
Episode chronology

"Ruslan Denisov" is the eleventh episode of the second season of the American crime drama The Blacklist. The episode premiered in the United States on NBC on February 12, 2015.

Plot

Reddington, Liz and Ressler travel to Uzbekistan to investigate criminal Ruslan Denisov (Faran Tahir), who is holding multiple American hostages captive. Denisov, an old associate of Red's, is targeting members of a company that is refusing to replace a pipeline, whose leaking oil is polluting water and poisoning civilians. After unsuccessful attempts to negotiate with Denisov, Reddington works with him to capture a former Russian business associate (Olek Krupa) and use the company's history to blackmail them into repairing the pipeline. The CIA, however, have one of their agents in Denisov's custody and attempt to employ an Uzbek general (Shaun Toub) to eliminate Denisov. Cooper confronts the CIA handler and the mission is called off. Reddington captures the general and assures Denisov that he has helped his country, and despite potential consequences he will emerge a hero. Meanwhile, a Metro PD detective Wilcox begins investigating the murder of the harbormaster Tom killed in "The Decembrist". He finds the Samoan (the bodyguard hired by Liz to hold Tom captive) and begins investigating him. The Samoan leads him to the body and talks about Liz. Elsewhere, Liz asks Aram to determine the nature of the strange item she found in the stuffed rabbit. Aram later says he can only identify it as some kind of recording device.

Reception

Ratings

"Ruslan Denisov" premiered on NBC on February 12, 2015 in the 9–10 p.m. time slot.[1] The episode garnered a 1.7/5 Nielsen rating with 8.19 million viewers, making it the third highest-rated show in its time slot behind ABC's Scandal and CBS's Two and a Half Men.[2] It was also the twenty-sixth highest-rated television show of the week.[3]

Reviews

Jason Evans of The Wall Street Journal gave a mixed review of the episode, stating: "This was a decent episode, though certainly a step back from the past couple in terms of info about the Fulcrum and the show’s larger mythology. That’s fine. We can’t get juicy info every time. I like the introduction of the harbormaster murder case as I hope it provides a way to somehow bring Tom back into the show."[4]

Jodi Walker of Entertainment Weekly also gave a mixed review of the episode, stating: "And while it wasn’t the most riveting hour—though I’d certainly put it in the running for the most gross-out moments—it’s nothing if not a reminder that good stories take time to tell… negotiations are a series of push and pull: Nothing given that is not earned."[5]

References

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