"Leverage" The Nigerian Job (TV Episode 2008) Poster

(TV Series)

(2008)

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9/10
Strong right out of the gate
academic-drifter3 March 2021
Pilots for television shows are part proof-of-concept, part half-refined idea. Often developed as a testing ground for a proposed series, they reflect the ideas and characters at their rawest, before the actors perfect their chemistry with one another and the writers develop for the audience the backstories and personal details that make the characters into the familiar faces that they become over the course of its run.

One of the things that makes the "Leverage" so notable is how so many of the elements that would characterize the show were already well developed from the start. As the pilot, the premise is unique to the show: Nathan Ford, a former insurance investigator, is hired by an airline executive to supervise a team of criminals he brought together to steal back a set of plans from one of his rivals. Each of the specialists the executive hired - a computer hacker, a thief, and a hitter - is known for two things: being the best at what they do and their reputation for working alone; Ford's job is to manage them as a team and keep them honest. The job that plays out both serves as the audience's introduction to the characters, both in terms of their roles and their distinctive personalities. Then, with the job completed, they part ways, never to meet again.

All of that takes place in the first quarter of the episode. The rest of it involves the discovery of hidden motives, a double-cross, and the team working to get revenge. It's over the remaining two-thirds of the show that we see the team not just working together, but coming together as a team, as they learn how to trust one another for the long term. It's here where we see the elements that would come to characterize a "Leverage" episode: the set-up of the con, the adaptation to complications, and the pay-off. Watching it unfold makes for great viewing, and it especially helps to have an actor of Saul Rubinek's caliber playing the foil, as his combination of intelligence and duplicitousness makes him for both a formidable challenger and an especially enjoyable downfall.

By the end of the pilot all of the elements that would characterize the show - the sharp writing, the character relationships, the late-episode twists and the final payoff - have been demonstrated in a way that would be repeated numerous times in the episodes to come. It's a particularly effective formula that would be refined and played with with over the five seasons that followed, proving adaptable enough to work through a number of variations. It's a testament to all of the work that went into its development that not only does it work as a great introduction to the show, but it also stands as one of its best episodes. That's not something that can always be said for even the greatest shows in television history, and it shows how they got it all right from the start.
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8/10
Nathan Ford and his merry band of con artists
Paularoc25 November 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Nathan Ford was a star investigator for a large insurance company - a company that refused to pay for the "experimental" medical procedure that would have saved his son's life. He has become a bitter man who drinks too much. When an airplane factory owner (played by the marvelous Saul Rubinek) tells Nathan of a sure proof way to get back at the insurance company and at the same time correct an injustice, Nathan agrees to help by stealing back airplane design plans. To do this he recruits a team of con artists he had previously met when an insurance investigator. The team includes a mercenary, a brilliant computer geek, a scam artist who wants to be an actress but can't act worth beans unless she's pulling a con, and a psychotic thief who is oddly likable and even vulnerable. Each of these law breakers are used to working alone and a good part of this first episode involves Nathan convincing them that it's better - and more fun - to work as a team. We also get a brief look at the characters' background. This episode, as do future episodes relies on a "big twist." Quite frankly, I was fooled by the clever twist in this one. High tech shenanigans and clever surprises abound in this episode. But what makes all the criminal doings of this gang of misfits suitable for rooting for is that they exemplify the Robin Hood myth. This is a great pilot for an always entertaining series.
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7/10
Could've been
abdirahmanmahdi25 April 2021
The plot was top tier, too bad it was fast-paced and the acting, cinematography was lacking. Sadly, it didn't live up to it's full potential.
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10/10
How It All Began - Re-re-re-re-watching Leverage
jo-0857317 October 2021
This must be my tenth (or fifteenth?) time going through all 77 episodes of the original #Leverage series. The Nigerian Job is the perfect introduction to our band of #RobinHoodlums. I love watching each of them grow through the years - some needing more growth than others. I love the major U-turns in this episode and the clever introduction of humor that prevents the show from becoming too dark and makes re-re-re-re-watching so much more enjoyable.
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