Season 7, Episode 12
Last week’s episode ended with a cliffhanger, one that
left me very skeptical of the show’s next step, convinced as I was that this
was a twist done out of desperation, and not organic storytelling. I conceded
that the perhaps the show could actually make said twist successful, but in the
light of “Symphony of Illumination”, I guess it doesn’t really matter. And that
pisses me off so much that it becomes hard to focus on the good of the episode.
Between the endings of “Disaster Averted”, “Tick Tick Tick” and “The Rebound Girl”, it seemed as if How I Met Your Mother’s seventh season was going to be really
delivering on the show’s dramatic elements, and given how strong those have
been in past seasons, and how well those three episodes did with the same, it
was a development that I was willing to go along with, even if it seems as if
the show was giving up some of its comedic elements to do it. But I think that
the show wrote itself into a something of a corner by going for dramatic
reveals four episodes in a row. In the previous three, the ending reveal was
meant to double up on the tension of the one before it, and that was a move
that worked for a time – until tonight.
In all honesty, I don’t get what the writers want out of Robin’s
current story. Having Robin get pregnant may have been a perfunctory means to
an end (that is, her marriage to Barney), but at least it was a twist that made
sense, and could have provided believable drama. But taking that twist away
from us – three times over even – not
only robs the character of a storyline that’s solid and proven (if a bit
trite), but it also feels like a cheat to the audience, and a return to the
show’s lesser days. Remember how season five was so frustrating because there
were practically no ongoing storylines, and how the best part of season six was
seeing Marshall’s gradual evolution as a person after his father’s death? Well,
Robin’s pregnancy reveal felt like a season six kind of storyline, but the fact
that she can’t have kids feel like a season five kind of move. Taking away her
ability to have kids may have been more shocking than the initial twist that
she was pregnant, but it’s not a shock that helps the development of the season-long
arc.
Now, I get that the key to tonight’s episode was supposed
to be about Robin’s views on having kids changed in light of the news of her
inability to have any. Cobie Smulders played the hell out of these scenes, and
it was well-written enough so that I can’t pretend that this isn’t a good
storyline in theory. However, when you couple this storyline with its context (i.e.
where it feels like little more than a cop-out, given the circumstances) and
what we know about Robin as a character, it’s a very bad move. Robin has always
been defined by her strong-willed nature and her taste for independence, and
her stance about not having children has always felt like a vital part of that.
(As someone who wants kids of his own someday, it’s not one I can fully
understand, but it is one I can respect in terms of making her something
greater than a gendered stereotype.) Even when the show made slight nudges in
the other direction, by having her admit that maybe she might want a brood in
the future, it mostly felt like the show softening her up a bit for mainstream
acceptance, and not as something the writers were seriously considering.
So selling Robin out in this manner not only sells out
the specificity of her character, but what I thought she represented. I’ve
always respected the show for what I perceived to be its strong female
characters, and in the world of multi-camera sitcoms, I always found its
feminist bent somewhat refreshing. But increasingly this season, the show has gone out of its way to have Lilly and Robin act out the most horrendous feminine tropes imaginable, and tonight unfortunately continued that trend. At
times it often felt like Robin was suddenly longing for a child not because she
suddenly lost the possibility to do so (even if I believe this was the
episode’s view), but because she was a woman. I’m not saying that characters
can’t change, or that learning that you can’t have kids wouldn’t make someone nostalgic
for them; but the episode didn’t do a good enough of a job of making this
change of heart come from Robin’s personality, not her gender.
What’s more, as I mentioned above, I’m not entirely sure
what her sudden longing for children has to do with anything with the season
long arc. How is Robin supposed to get from here to marrying Barney, and what’s
Barney going to think when he (inevitably, presumably) finds out? Looking at
Barney’s reaction tonight, I honestly believed in his desire to have a child
with Robin, as well as his horror at the sudden realization of the
complications they would bring to his freewheelin’ lifestyle. (And it
frustrates me even more that the show has taken the time to show why Barney is now okay with the idea of
kids, but with Robin her change of heart happened much more quickly, and thus
seems to be a result of her gender, and not her character.) And what are we
supposed to make of Barney’s role in this, really? Insane Dwayne seemed like he
was introduced to invite some parallels, but he mostly just ended up being a
one-note joke. I think this episode would have been stronger had Barney and
Robin had more parallel stories, or if they had been part of the same story
throughout the episode’s whole running time, but instead the focus was placed
mostly on her weaker character beats.
But I think what really pissed me off is that there was
some actual good stuff in this episode, and not only did those bits of quality storytelling
made the bad parts stick out even more, but the good bits eventually became consumed
by the bad. The episode opened with a nifty trick of having Robin talk to her
“kids”, and it was a role reversal that I welcomed. If this is a true ensemble
show (as I would argue that it’s become from the third season on), then why
should Ted always be the narrator? (Note how little screen time Josh Radnor
got, especially in the first half, before the truth was revealed.) Even when it
was revealed that Robin couldn’t have kids, I had yet to give up on the reality
of this structure, because you know, adoption. But when it was revealed that
the “kids” were just figments of her imagination, well I just lost it. While it
worked as a piece of pathos – it was a nice note to undercut all the tension, and
again it gave Smulders a chance to do some awesome work – it was also indicative
of the problem I had with the episode, in smaller form: they set up a story
going in one direction, only to knock that reality down without any reason why
for.
To close off this idea more fully, let’s take a brief
glimpse at Marshall’s B-story. To be honest, him attempting to build a
magnificent light display on his new house, and trying to take a neighborhood
kid under his wing (and getting duped in the process) isn’t exactly original,
nor the best use of Jason Segel’s talents, but it does have one thing over
Robin’s story: build. Slowly but surely, this season is clearly building up to
Marshall and Lilly moving into the house, and (even if there’s a number of logistical reason why they shouldn’t) doing so with small acts like this makes
that build believable. I just wish that the writers would apply this same
thought process to whatever it is that their doing with Robin. I sincerely
believe that this is a plot that some other show could have done and gotten great
results; but it is an ill fit on How I
Met Your Mother as it is now.
Quotes and Other
Thoughts:
The more that I think about it, the more it occurs to me
that Robin’s “kids” only existed in this episode as a device so that we could
hear Robin explain her thought process. This does not make it better, both because
it further devaluates their (admittedly imaginary) emotional weight, but also because
it gives the show an out from the “show, don’t tell” rule.
Oh, and apparently Robin’s going to become a bullfighter
at some point in the future. Stop fucking
with us, show.
So Ted using “Highway Hell” as the soundtrack to his own Christmas lightshow: exactly how tasteless was that?
And Marshall like Manheim Steamroller? He’s like some
dubious stuff in the past, but this is stretching it. (A better pair of
nicknames for his fists would have been “Trans-Siberian” and “Orchestra”.)
Reasons Robin doesn’t tell her friends upsetting news:
Ted goes into overdrive caretaker mode, Lilly implodes and blames herself,
Marshall asks a series of specific and personal questions, and Barney makes
failed attempts at humor.
“I am never late. It’s a point of pride with me.”
“I’ve spent years training my boys to swim the other
way.”
“One of your socks? Boom! You’re huge!”
“Mr. E? Sounds like some little scamp just earned the
right to put the Vikings helmet on baby Jesus.”
“YOU HAVE TO PUNCH ME IN THE FACE.”
“Actually, the duck could be polish, it doesn’t
matter….Yes it does….The duck isn’t polish.”
“Aww, dammit. That thing’s cute as crap. Screw you,
baby.”
“Insane Dwayne…” “It’s ‘Sane Dwayne’ now.” “You used to
be magnificent.”
“What about the one where you ski and shoot at the same
time? You seem like you’d be good at that.”
“I know it’s not Canada, but it starts with a ‘C’ and
it’s cold as balls.”
“You can fire me. I’m union, bitch.”
If anyone ever asks me to supply them with a genuinely entertaining episode of television that is also endlessly frustrating, this is my new go-to. Thanks, HIMYM.
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure Ted chose "Highway to Hell" because Robin suggested AC/DC when Marshall was talking about Manheim Steamroller.
And I was really bummed Marshall didn't get super-excited that "Mr. E" sounds like "mystery".
I got the AC/DC connection to the earlier conversation (and I enjoyed the show turning what seemed like a throwaway gag into a plot point) but I can't help but wonder why it had to be that song. I realize that AC/DC doesn't have a whole lot of compatible songs - especially not in the few songs that are widely-known - but I still wish the show had chosen something a little less incongruous.
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