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After facing adversaries from Reese’s undercover past and Finch’s contract work for the government, the team’s anonymous crime-fighting is constantly under threat. Meanwhile, NYPD Detectives Carter and Fusco must wrestle with the corrupt tentacles of the police conspiracy known as “HR.” At the same time, new threats against Team Machine come to light, including Vigilance, a watchdog group committed to exposing overreaching government surveillance methods, and Decima Technologies, who tried and failed to take control of the Machine in the previous season and are now going to extreme measures to bring another surveillance system called Samaritan online.
One of the nice things about Person of Interest is that, for all its techno-patina and its master-criminal overlay, the cases themselves are often nicely person-sized.
The fun and entertaining element hasn't been deleted, the characters are continuing to grow, Shaw and Root add interesting new aspects to the core story and the teases of the Machine have me intrigued to know what's coming.
A smart show that keeps getting smarter, Person Of Interest evolved from a procedural with a twist into something entirely itself: a well-paced, tightly constructed sci-fi thriller that continually questions its assumptions.
Person of Interest... has doubled down on its intrigue to hastily evolve from a bland procedural with a nifty visual aesthetic... into a solid action-thriller that intersperses twist-filled standalone episodes into its season-long arcs.
It truly is a masterpiece of modern action TV that is smart and flows at a satisfying pace that will keep you on the edge of your seat for most episodes.