A review of tonight’s “Chuck” coming up just as soon as I hear the sound of liberty… “My best friend is a spy? This is unbelievable. This is the best news I’ve ever heard!” -Morgan I’m absolutely on-board with the darker direction “Chuck” has taken this season. If the characters don’t grow and the stakes don’t get raised, then we might as well be watching repeats from season two. But for one week, “Chuck” was back to being 100% fun - even in the midst of an episode with a huge status quo change and a chilling cliffhanger - and it was a pleasure to watch. Because Morgan is Chuck’s best friend, he seemed like an obvious choice to be the first civilian to find out about Chuck’s secret identity. Instead, the show zig-zagged and let Captain Awesome in on the truth, and got some very good comic and dramatic mileage out of Devon struggling to reclaim his awesomeness in the face of entering this dangerous new world. And once Awesome found out, it seemed like we had missed our window for the little bearded one to also join in. Instead, Morgan Guillermo Grimes became an unofficial member of Operation Bartowski in the most raucous way possible, helping Chuck foil the siege of Castle and giving his best friend back his mojo by providing him a sympathetic ear to listen to. Awesome’s no good because he’s too busy freaking out, Casey’s not exactly empathetic, and Sarah and Shaw are useless because they’re causing so much of Chuck’s emotional turmoil. So bringing Morgan into the circle of trust, and that in turn leading the Intersect 2.0 to come back on-line (and finally help Chuck use the bo staff that caused him so many difficulties back in “Chuck vs. the Three Words” ) felt perfect, as did Morgan’s ecstatic reaction to greeting Sarah and company outside the Orange-Orange freezer. I had a smile roughly the size of Morgan’s for the entire second half of “Beard,” going back to when Morgan first followed the bad guys into the Castle tunnels. And I loved how, even within the revelation, the show again zigged where I expected a zag. We were being set up for Morgan to feel hurt and betrayed at the news that Chuck kept this enormous secret from him, but instead was both relieved to get a good explanation for all of Chuck’s shadiness, and happy for his friend that Chuck is doing something, well, awesome. It’s hard to remember now, but at the start of the series, Morgan was easily the least-popular regular character, always getting in the way of Chuck’s missions and generally being mopey and weird. When the show came back for season 2, Schwartz, Fedak and company figured out that the character worked much better when he was supporting Chuck (even when he didn’t realize he was). Letting him in on Chuck’s secret, and making him excited about it - accepting that, while he’s never destined for greatness, he can assist in Chuck’s greatness - was a wonderful continuation of that trend, and an outstanding showcase for Josh Gomez. I particularly liked that period in between when Morgan discovered Castle and when he learned about Charles Carmichael. It would have been really easy to play it as Morgan acting smug and superior to what he thought was his cowardly pal Chuck, but Gomez low-keyed it. You can’t say he reacted the way a real person would in that situation, because “Chuck” is frankly so ridiculous - and the Buy More corner of “Chuck” even more ridiculous - that reality doesn’t really figure into it, but within the show’s universe, I believed that this is how Morgan would react, and that he’d try to help Chuck get through this ordeal while he played hero. “Beard” was the last “Chuck” episode written by Scott Rosenbaum (who’s now hopefully salvaging “V”), and very much in the vein of the Rosenbaum-scripted “Chuck vs. the Santa Claus” from season two, with bad guys again infiltrating the Buy More because it’s so obvious there’s a spy base of some kind hidden there(*). (*) Which brings us to our “Chuck” Plot Hole of the Week, if not of the series: now that two different evil spy organizations have twigged to the place’s existence, what exactly is the point of Chuck still working there as a cover identity? Other than, of course, nobody on the show rightly wanting to say goodbye to Morgan, Big Mike and Jeffster? It was also the first episode of anything directed by Zachary Levi. That’s a big risk to hand such a crucial, mythology-altering episode to a rookie, but I thought Levi acquitted himself really well, even if there were some inevitable growing pains from a first-timer. The scene where Casey throws the flash-bang grenade into the Ring agent’s hotel room was shot in an impressionistic, Hey, look at how much I’m directing! style, and the montage of Buy More employees cocking their toy guns in the midst of their revolt also called attention to itself. But I thought Levi nailed most of the humor (loved the way the camera initially drifted past Jeff shoving the apple into his mouth, as if this lunacy is so typical of the Buy More that it’s not worth dwelling on) as well as the more human

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Chuck, "Chuck vs. the Beard": Do you hear the people sing?