As I said earlier, the likelihood that the premium will recover even if the underlying rallies, is slim to none. You have to deal with time decay and an ever decreasing delta, which makes the option increasingly unresponsive to changes in the underlying.
Bid = $0.36, Ask = $0.47
Delta = 0.2506
Gamma = 0.0457
Theta = -0.0512
Due to this gamma, your delta will decrease rather quickly. For every $1.00 that the underlying increases, the premium will increase by $0.25. The spread is $0.11. Your entry price was $3.27. You have to sell at the bid, which means you need a $2.91 increase in the premium. (1/0.2506)*2.91 = $11.61. Since it takes a $1.00 increase to raise the premium by $0.25, it will require a $11.61 increase in the underlying to raise the premium by $2.91. Ceteris paribus.
The commissions for the buy side and the sell side will cost 0.8% of this trade. 0.8%/0.2506 = 3.19%.
FSLR closed at 57.09
11.61/57.09 = 20.3% increase needed in the underlying for the premium to reach your buy price.
1.203*1.0319 = 1.2417
You need a 24.17% increase in the underlying in order to break even. Ceteris paribus.
I would sell now while you can. You are likely to lose your $2,289 when the option expires.