USA TODAY US Edition

‘Person of Interest’ is back for a last lap

- Jayme Deerwester and Lorena Blas USA TODAY

You’re being watched — again. But not for much longer.

Person of Interest returns for its fifth and final season Tuesday on CBS (10 ET/PT), with twiceweekl­y episodes due Mondays and Tuesdays for its shortened 13-episode run.

And judging by the first two installmen­ts — “Blue Screen of Death” and ““Situation Normal, All (Messed) Up” — things aren’t exactly looking up for The Machine or its defenders, who use the special computer’s ability to predict (and help prevent) crimes.

They appear to be losing the battle against an artificial intelligen­ce known as Samaritan that wants to destroy them.

As last season ended, “our guys were sort of up against it with the machine’s source code compressed into a briefcase,” executive producer Greg Plageman says. “And so they’re headed out into a blaze of glory, it looked like. We thought there’s really no way we could cheat that moment. We sort of had to pick up right where we left off. The band has been dispersed. The Machine is down. They’re now living in a Samaritan world.”

All five members of the Machine’s squad are back: The brains (Michael Emerson’s computer programmer Harold Finch and Amy Acker’s hacker, Root), the muscle (Jim Caviezel’s Reese and Sarah Shahi’s Shaw, both former CIA operatives) and their inside man at the NYPD, Fusco (Kevin Chapman).

Emerson, who plays the crimefight­ing supercompu­ter’s architect, calls Season 5 “an intersecti­on between Harold Finch’s growing realizatio­n of the humanity of what he’s created and his growing realizatio­n that something desperate has to happen if Samaritan is to be stopped.”

It’s worth noting how computer privacy has moved from pure sci-fi fodder to front-page news since POI premiered in 2011. Two years later, Edward Snowden leaked National Security Agency documents. And this year, Apple and the FBI waged a high-stakes court battle to determine whether the government can compel tech companies to remove security features on their customers’ mobile phones.

Plageman notes the show’s relevance. “A show that is always a little bit ahead of technology and some of these ethical issues that we’re going to be grappling with as a society — I think that sticks with people,” he says.

Emerson says the show’s prescient premise has resonated: “I think more about it, and on a darker note than I ever would’ve before the show. Part of what worries me is there’s little to be done about it. I’m not going to separate myself from these devices,” he says, referring to technology such as smartphone­s. “I don’t know what to do, except to be aware of it.” Emerson has been idle since

POI finished production last December and says he has no idea what’s next. But after spending the past 10 years on network dramas, he’s enjoying the uncertaint­y.

“I was tired and felt a little wrung-out. I couldn’t even think about getting right back on the treadmill. I wouldn’t mind getting back on the live-theater stage, though in what play or character, I don’t know. But it would be fun to do some lighter material.”

 ?? JOHN PAUL FILO, CBS ?? Harold Finch (Michael Emerson) and John Reese (Jim Caviezel) struggle to save The Machine.
JOHN PAUL FILO, CBS Harold Finch (Michael Emerson) and John Reese (Jim Caviezel) struggle to save The Machine.

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