Season 3, Episode 3
A study of
internal dynamics
“What is happening at this school?
I’ve had so many conversations that don’t make sense.”
-Prof. Kane
“Your love is weird. And toxic.
And it destroys everything it touches.”
-Todd, He of the Big Head
Of the premiere a few weeks back, some critic – I really
can’t remember who, but I wish I did – made an offhand comment about how they liked
neither John Goodman nor Michael K. Williams’ characters, saying that they didn’t
fit the rest of the energy of the show. It was a comment that didn’t make sense
to me, because the critic didn’t really back up the assertion, because no one
else really echoed the sentiment, and because I’m not sure that any character couldn’t “fit in” with the
show. Community has become so known
for shifting tones from week to week that it makes sense, to me at least, that
there would a variety of characters with a variety of personalities to reflect
that.
But even if Prof. Kane doesn’t fit the show’s vibe – and I
at least consent that he’s a striking contrast to the study group, both as a
whole and to each individual person therein – I think that’s the point, and “Competitive
Ecology” proved that point perfectly. If this third season is going to be
focused on the highlighting each person’s individual neuroses, as well as their
group dynamics, then there is going to need to be some impetus within the show
for these explorations to happened. While these impetuses could come from
within the group, having outside character engender these explorations is not
only easier, it makes for a larger variety of stories that can be told.
And oh, indeed, Kane is the impetus for tonight’s storyline
when he assigns the group to lab partners that they don’t know. The group balks,
and then begs Kane to let them work together. But even though the group gets
what they want, they soon find that working together isn’t the best thing, because
they can’t stand each other. Britta is annoyed by Shirley’s fawning over her
baby, Troy and Abed realize that they spend too much time together, and Annie
is repelled by Jeff’s general disinterest.
Which brings us to Todd. Like everyone who isn’t Jeff,
Britta, Annie, Troy, Abed, Shirley, or Peirce, Todd is met with antagonisms by
the rest of the study group. But unlike say Leonard or Gareth, who only
encounter the group in passing, and thus get the least of their antagonism,
Todd is forced on the group – or rather Pierce, but the group by extension –
due to their odd number, and when the group decides that they need to switch partners,
it soon devolves into a very nasty argument about who will be paired with Todd (and
his recently acquired turtle).
What’s important about Todd, however, isn’t that he’s an
outsider, but that’s he relatively normal and extremely nice. Unlike weirdoes like
say Starburns or reprehensible people like Chang, there is nothing off-putting about
Todd other than the fact that he is not one of the group. Now, in the back end
of season two, it seemed as if Dan Harmon was intent on exploring the group’s
easily fractured relationships, but it was sometimes difficult if doing so wasn’t
itself just a dark joke. With Todd there, as a completely benevolent entity who
somehow manages to bring down the group’s full wrath just by being there, we
now understand that the group’s awfulness is no joke. The group in horrible
just to each other and those around them, and Dan Harmon seems intent on
figuring out why.
But that’s not the only thing that places a glaring light
on just how nasty and unhealthy the group’s relationships really are. The center
of tonight’s episode, which saw the group once again at each other’s throats,
was another episode in the vein of “Cooperative Calligraphy” and “Paradigmsof Human Memory”, at least in an emotional sense. But unlike those episodes, “Ecology”
doesn’t have the buffering layer that comes from deconstructing the bottle
episode or clip show formulas. No, what we have here is a story of a group of relentlessly
co-dependent malcontents, unfiltered by high-minded tricks. Your brain has
nothing else to focus on other than the groups antics, and that makes their
horrible actions all the more morally troublesome, as the characters we love become
far worse in our eyes.
Tonight’s B-plot, meanwhile may have been less weighty
than the A, but also manages to answer another criticism lobbed against the
show, this one far more widely occurring. Last week, I discussed at some length
the general critical worry that Community
was leaving behind the reference episodes, those mainstays that made the second
season such a thrilling ride. Yet despite all the show’s rumored move away from
such episodes, Chang’s storyline was an obvious homage of the film noir, albeit
one that sent up the idea of a loner who spend most of the time narrating his
own life.
And that answers a much longer running criticism. We all
know that Chang is crazy, but it’s made him something of a polarizing figure,
as a good portion of the show’s audience find him too cartoony to exist in the
show’s universe. Tonight’s episode may not lessen Chang’s cartoonishness, but
it does help to place his behavior in a better context in the rest of show. By
the show just outright acknowledging that Change is crazy, instead of having it
implied by his actions, would seem to indicate that the show is more confident about
his place in its universe going forward, and that Chang won’t be shoehorned
into the gang’s storylines. And that’s probably a good thing; Chang’s
cartoonishness was never more apparent last season than when he was forced to
interact with the group. Also, by placing Chang and Dean Pelton on the same
level of crazy (as evidenced by the penultimate scene), the show cements Chang
as an ephemeral characters once again, and it’s on the ephemera that craziness
can reside more comfortable.
“Competitive Ecology”, which manages to both deliver the
laughs and tell us something about the characters, all while avoiding (too
much) reference humor and remain generally entertaining, feels like the kind of
episode that Harmon wanted for season three, and the kind of episode the last
two were building towards. While perhaps not as wild – and satisfying – as the
homage episodes of last season, it was still quite enjoyable, and if these are
the kind of episodes the show is going to deliver on a weekly basis, then I’m more
than okay with that.
Quotes and Other
Thoughts:
In a weird bit of me reading something into the show that
clearly wasn’t there, every time Todd’s name was mentioned, I couldn’t help but
think of Todd VanDerWerff, perhaps the preeminent voice when it comes to weekly
reviews of the show, which given how much praise he generally has for the show,
makes it weird how much hate the character received tonight. (Fittingly, VanDerWerff
had a similar thought.)
I like that Kane is so incompatible with the show’s vibe
that he even puts down the universally beloved Magnitude. While John Goodman’s Vice
Dean of Air Conditioner Repair is an antagonistic force from within the campus,
Kane is a external force, and that should keep the external antagonism that the
group experiences, from their perspective, will be varied.
“I’m married to the job…and to a mannequin leg I found in
the boiler room.” “Homewrecker.”
“You guys have weird
reactions to stuff.”
“I had sex with Eartha Kitt in an airplane bathroom, and these
are the only guys I ever told.”
“Second paintball.”
“I need to catch up on Breaking Bad, so….”
“I have a developmental disorder. Star Wars, Star Wars,
cool cool cool, hm. You understand.”
“Don’t tell me what I’m thinking or feeling. It sounds
petty.”
“She was a dame. Legs that went up to the bottom of her
torso. The kind of arms that had elbows.”
“Matchbook. Something about it seemed clue-y.”
“While he was spying, I found a turtle!”
“So it’s agreed. Let’s go to the study room and deal with
this Todd problem once and for all.” “Umm, did you want me to come?” “It’s
called ‘The Todd Problem’.”
“Well, the hair color concept intrigues me because it’s
how I distinguish you anyway.”
“And before you all go putting Todd down last, just
remember he comes with a turtle. You’re halfway done.”
“I had to get some answers. I needed answers like a fish
needs a bicycle.”
“What would happen in Nicholson was a gynecologist?”
“Don’t get your Number 4 stink on this, Todd!”
“If loving worms is stupid, I don’t want to be smart.” “It
is, and you can’t be!”
“Pierce, wake up, Jeff is gonna heal us!”
“Oh no, she’s got her marijuana lighter!”
“I’m going home. I am going to hold my wife and my child, and I am finally going to take my insulin shot! Offense taken!”
“You know they’re laughing with you, right? I mean, that’s
my theory.”
“You’re pathological.” “It’s too late for flattery.”
“How did this happen? And did I miss the firemen?”
“Racism?”
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