Season 2, Episode
1
A strong premiere
that could still stand to shed a few things
I can’t stop being surprised at how much Happy Endings grew in its twelve-episode
first season. Okay, actually, there were thirteen episodes made, and that last
one (which was actually production code 106) was burned off in last August. But that only helps to serve my point. With those twelve episodes
airing over seven weeks, and completely out of production order (seriously, the
continuity was awful) this was not a show that exuded the greatest confidence.
It also didn’t help that the basic premise – a Runaway Bride type setup lead into a show that often feels like a
retread of Friends – wasn’t exactly original,
nor were the show’s repeated attempts to keep bringing up the broken almost-nuptials
all that interesting.
But around this, the rest of the show became much
stronger, turning into what I like to refer to as a “hangout sitcom”. The original premise slipped away, and the
show came to be about a group of friends hanging out in the city. Now
admittedly that’s a premise that also isn’t all that original, but hangouts sitcoms
don’t really have to be. The show rightly keeps the action mostly in the core
group, and any outsiders don’t intrude on the action as much as they did on
say, Friends. The stories are kept
low-key (I doubt we’ll ever have a real romance plot), and they usually wrap up
by the end of the episode. It’s the kind of show that people watch for the
characters, not the stories, and I think it’s stronger for that.
So perhaps I was a bit reviled by the opening scene,
which saw the group celebrating the one-year anniversary of that failed wedding
day. I can understand the general need of a show to retell it’s premise,
especially when it’s renewal was based on a not-that-spectacular-in-the-ratings
seven week run, but this is a premise that is in no way necessary to
understanding the show in its current form. (Also, I like the dark aspect to
this humor, but good humor doesn’t excuse poor storytelling.)
Or maybe it is. I understand that that the wedding is key
to understanding Alex and Dave’s antagonistic relationship, and that to just
ignore that going forward would be a disservice to the characters/story, which
is frankly one of my pet peeves when it comes to television. But the show tends
to waffle on whether or not Alex and Dave are friends anyways, and in my view,
a year seems like enough time to get over most if not all of the anger
associated with that nasty incident. The show seems like it’s in the position
that it can decide these two are actually friends now and nobody would even
notice.
Their actual plot tonight didn’t make a case for keeping the
premise either. The idea of having them two of them finally being honest with each
other seems like something that should have happened earlier in their
relationship, and a lot of the lies that they told to each other weren’t all
that original or funny. There was also a lot of unevenness to the story, as it
felt like Dave getting to live out his frolfing, sock-shoe wearing, terrible
song performing dreams was just inherently funnier than Alex making lots of jambalaya
and watching Richard Gere movies. (It also doesn’t help that Elisha Cuthbert
really isn’t that funny.) Luckily the plot was saved by Eliza Coupe, whose
probably best known for being the saving grace in most instance of terrible
television. (*cough*Scrubs, season
nine*cough*)
Unsurprisingly, everything around this plot was much
better, and the second half of the episode, which dealt less with Dave and Alex
and more with Penny, Max and Brad, was much better for it. Penny’s cursed
apartment had the usual surreal-ish quality that most Penny plots do, and between
all the mysterious cats and the omnipresent half-eaten pints of ice cream, it
was a real winner. Even stronger was the Max/Brad story, and not just because Maz
is my favorite character. The show has had a lot of fun with Max being a
non-traditional gay guy, and I was glad that they brought that keen eye to his
biracial friendship with Brad.
In short, “Blax, Snake, Home” may have made a strong case
for why people should leave their TVs on after Modern Family (while tonight’s MF episode made a case of people should turn their TVs on just for Happy Endings), but the show still has a
ways to go before it can enter the current pantheon of comedic greats.
Quotes, Etc:
“Should we order a movie?….Lincoln Lawyer, I love these opening credits.”
“What? Oh now a brother can’t twirl?”
“What a delicious fax machine!”
“Welcome, you’re my first gentleman caller. That made me
sound like a prostitute, I’m not a prostitute.”
“Should I get an AOL email address? What’s wrong with me?”
“Nice socks, you look like a gay ninja.”
“Really, women are going crazy for trying on clothes and
eating spicy seafood soup?”
“You’re a lawyer and a dentist?” “I like cleaning teeth,
sue me.”
“Crap dammit, I am white Daryl.”
“Why is the DVR filled with The Good Wife and The View?
I didn’t record these. These are for lonely women who talk to themselves.”
“You don’t polish china.”
“Let’s go talk about gay stuff.”
“On a scale of fur to scales, I prefer scales.”
“Gays inside, go.”
“The song is so sad. The root of love is love.”
The physical comedy on this show is pulled off pitch-perfectly. Even Elisha Cuthbert made me chuckle with her hula-hoop dance.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad Wayans chose to stay on this show (or perhaps it was contractual obligation). So far, it's impressing me more than New Girl.
So, does this mean The Good Wife is a show I shouldn't be watching? I've heard nothing but good stuff, and then it goes and gets nominated for some Emmys (Emmies?). But if it's really just for lonely women...
AH who am I kidding? I still watch Grey's Anatomy.
"I need to buy a bulb and take this lamp thing to the next level! YearofPenny SUCKIT!"
Happy Endings' first seasons was all filmed last fall, and then more or less burned off in the spring. Wayans did the New Girl pilot in the meantime in case Endings didn't get a second season, but it was under the condition that New Girl was contractually second. I forget the exact phrase for this, but actors do it all the time when they're on shows whose future is uncertain. The actor who plays Max, for example, also did a pilot back in the spring, though I'm blanking on which one.
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