Billy D. Williams is a bit stiff in this role as an ex-con dreaming of a last big score, but he still exudes charisma and is a treat to watch.
Finally, we get a break from Neal pining over Kate. Instead, we see him struggle to decide who he wants to be -- a grifter and a con man making the "big score," or a "suit" working for the man. He still dreams of the last big score but maybe there is no such thing -- there is just the *next* big score. Neal can't break free of his longing to make it big and then disappear, and we see this at the end of the episode when we learn he kept the $100 counterfeiting plates that June had hidden in a secret compartment of a table.
Plot holes? Don't get me started! Still, this is trashy spy entertainment, and fun to watch.
Finally, we get a break from Neal pining over Kate. Instead, we see him struggle to decide who he wants to be -- a grifter and a con man making the "big score," or a "suit" working for the man. He still dreams of the last big score but maybe there is no such thing -- there is just the *next* big score. Neal can't break free of his longing to make it big and then disappear, and we see this at the end of the episode when we learn he kept the $100 counterfeiting plates that June had hidden in a secret compartment of a table.
Plot holes? Don't get me started! Still, this is trashy spy entertainment, and fun to watch.