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Teen Wolf Review: “Silverfinger” (Season 3, Episode 17)

Teen Wolf offered up an intense night of supernatural drama in Silverfinger, but the storyline took a disappointing turn when the curtains closed and Stiles (Dylan O'Brien) was left standing awkwardly in the spotlight. This show has been without a real antagonist since we entered into the second half of the season, leaving Duecalion (Gideon Emery) and Ms. Blake (Haley Webb) behind. Now, however, we finally have one. Unfortunately though, it's someone we actually like.

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Teen Wolf offered up an intense night of supernatural drama in Silverfinger, but the storyline took a disappointing turn when the curtains closed and Stiles (Dylan O’Brien) was left standing awkwardly in the spotlight. This show has been without a real antagonist since we entered into the second half of the season, leaving Duecalion (Gideon Emery) and Ms. Blake (Haley Webb) behind. Now, however, we finally have one. Unfortunately though, it’s someone we actually like.

All eyes were on Scott (Tyler Posey) and Kira (Arden Cho) going into this episode of Teen Wolf, and not without cause. When we left off last week, these two characters were the obvious choice for the spirit ninjas and their marked mission. They’d already made their way through most of the pack, not exactly the warm welcome home Derek (Tyler Hoechlin) may have been expecting, and if the sun hadn’t risen in a timely fashion the lovebirds wouldn’t have had to wait an entire day to get through this painful process. On the plus side, although the involuntary tattoo behind the ear appears to be permanent, there don’t seem to be any harmful side effects. In fact, it turned out to mean something good.

Story-wise, what does it mean for the show if Stiles is subconsciously working both sides? Well, the lack of mark might clue everyone in to the fact that he doesn’t have a clean bill of supernatural health. Argent (JR Bourne) was pretty specific when he noted that the targets were anyone supernatural or supernatural-related. Stiles is clearly included under that umbrella given his awareness and proximity to this lesser known subculture, but after the pack barely survived that ordeal and the distraction of Scott’s father being collateral damage of what looks to be a misunderstanding of sorts, how long before anyone actually notices? Essentially, it means we’re in for another drawn out version of hiding the bad guy in plain sight. A game that Teen Wolf always wins.

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