Season 3, Episode 14
“Some
conflicts are so pointless, you just have to let themselves play out.”
After last week’s cliffhanger left so many things unsure
– which is notably different from “unanswered” – I was perhaps a bit skeptical
of how tonight’s resolution to the two-parter would play out, and not with out
precedent. Yet while my concerns proved to be unfounded on a narrative level, I
still couldn’t shake the feeling that there was something missing from “Pillows
and Blankets”, a je ne sais quoi that
would have pushed this entire storyline into overall greatness, and have made
up for all of the doubts I felt last week.
Perhaps my biggest concern going into this episode was
that we would see a repeat of the thematic cognitive dissonance that plagued the
second part of the season two finale, where the show shifted the narrative
style it was aping for no real reason. While that fear was mostly unfounded at
first, it took on new life on Wednesday when I learned that this episode was
going to function as a Ken Burns-style documentary, a style shift that would be
particularly pronounced considering that “Digital Exploration of Interior
Design” didn’t even ape any sort of genre/style in the first place. And as the
show soon reminded me, the documentary style was something that had already
been done earlier this season, placing the show in danger of diminishing
returns yet again.
Yet despite all of these complaints, this episode worked
really well, and for reasons that I can’t fully explain – though I’m certainly
going to try. For starters, I found the thematic shift to be far less jarring
this time around since there was no such thematic styling going on in last
week’s episode. (It turns out that thematic shifts work better on this show
when it goes from a non-themed episode to a themed episode, as opposed to going
from one themed episode to another.) The reuse of the documentary conceit,
meanwhile, worked well this time, and with a renewed sense of vigor, because
unlike “Documentary Filmmaking: Redux”, the narrative use of the documentary
crew differed. Even if to the character the presence of these “cameras” was the
same all three times they were in use, for this last time the “footage” that
was shot was repurposed in a different way, as the narrative use goes from
recording a breaking of a world record as it happens to being part of a
documentary on the Pillow & Blanket War.
But what really makes this work was that unlike so many
of the others theme/homage episodes that the show has done, the use of the Civil
War metaphor as a way to express the break in Troy and Abed’s friendship. Yes,
the Civil War metaphor is one that’s perhaps been overplayed in popular
culture, a go-to for hack writers looking to symbolize a broken relationship,
but here the metaphor felt apt and earned. Much like with last week’s episode,
and the one before that, the show really played up the darkness of this broken
friendship, especially with the emotionally vicious potshots that the two took
at each other in addition to the physical, tactical-based war they were
fighting. True, these were all things that the audience, and likely the
characters themselves, knew long before they were spoken aloud, but that simply
uttering simply proves how far the friendship is broken that such automatic
niceties have been thrown out the window.
Similarly, the episode continues the thematic, if not
narrative, thread of Jeff (re?)discovering his humanity, thanks in large part
to Annie. While their early exchange of text messages seemed to point to a continuation
of their simmering romance, it quickly shifted into another morality lesson for
Jeff, as he switched from making inflammatory speeches in order to keep the
battle going and thus delaying classes, to making an earnest speech in an
attempt to reunite Tory and Abed. Obviously, there exists a connection between
the Jeff and Annie romance and Jeff’s steps towards being a better person, but
the ending scene where Jeff runs all the way back to the dean’s office and goes
through all the motions of picking up the imaginary friendship hats proves that
it’s more than that. Jeff’s connections reach deeper than he cares to admit,
and while this is a well that the show has gone to in the past, the extent to
which feels a connection to the group, that he’s willing to go through with an
idea he originally tossed off ironically, even when he didn’t have to, speaks a
lot to his growth.
As with any good spoof, detail was key, and a lot of the
laughs in this episode came from how the show was able to adopt Civil War-style
actions and language to the modern, pillow-and-blanket using age. As such, I’m
a bit lighter on quotes this week, but that doesn’t mean that I didn’t laugh
heartily. It was also this attention to detail that allowed the episode to use
the other characters, as Pierce and Shirley were simply pawns in the larger
war, and Britta served as a (not very good) photographer, reminding us once
again why she is just the worst. (It also allowed Change briefly in through the
use of his child army, which I’m assuming is part of the slow build-up until
this storyline explodes later.) I’ll admit I’m a little disappointed that there
wasn’t any follow-up to the Subway storyline of last week, but not all episodes
of the show can use all of the players to the same extent, and I’m willing to
forgive the show since it downgraded some characters so that the larger focus
could be placed on Troy and Abed.
That is, up until the end. The episode had done a really
good job with showing just how mean and vicious Troy and Abed were to one
another during the war, and it was a perfect reflection of the darker tone that
the show has been achieving with fantastic outcomes this season. So it was a
little disappointing how the show managed to wrap it all up fairly neatly at
the end of the hour. I get that the show was trying to demonstrate the power of
Troy and Abed’s friendship that they would realize how stupid and petty their
fight was and reach the realization that they would rather being together
through hate than apart by any means, but it all feels too pat and clean. When
you compare it too what the show did in the second season with Pierce, you know
that it’s capable of carrying out these larger, darker character arc for a
greater period of time without disrupting the show’s format/flow. Obviously the
Troy and Abed dynamic is not synonymous with that of Pierce and the group, but I
would have like to see the show give it the weight that it seems to deserve
based on the build-up that we saw.
But that again might be part of the problem with the
documentary format, or at least as one as academic as what Ken Burns does. While
the true documentary format also for some fairly direct emotion, the “academic
documentary” often tells of historic events that are removed by time, and thus
takes a more aloof approach to the subject matter. That the show would ape that
aspect is positive in terms of the quality of the homage being done, but it
doesn’t make the character analysis as strong as it could have been. That’s
also true in regards to the Jeff/Annie storyline, which was perhaps stronger on
the intellectual level in regards to how it furthered Jeff’s current arc, but didn’t
hit on the pathos as strong as past episodes have.
Quotes and Other Thoughts:
That was Keith David doing the narration of the episode.
He also narrated the Burns documentary Jazz,
and yes, he did star in The Cape.
I can’t tell if that PBS-style tag was terrible or
brilliant. I mean, I enjoy when the show keeps whatever theme it has going on
up through the last moments, but something about Troy and Abed making that joke
over something that they went through and would most likely want to forget
seems a bit to meta to be believable. Or maybe I just saw it as adding on to
the pat ending of the episode proper.
“A loving wife and mother, who would prove to be as
skilled at kicking asses as she was at wiping them.”
“Friends so close they once graced the cover of Friends
Weekly, a pretend magazine of their own design.”
“I’m giving you an all tomato. Meaning you given me the
whole tomato, or else.”
“Blanketsburg will draw first blood. Pillowfort will draw
First Blood: Part II.”
“Unfortunately for Britta, and thousands of photographers
across the country just like her, just because something’s in black and white,
doesn’t mean it’s good.”
“They were later called Changlorious Bastards. Like Inglorious Bastards, but with ‘Chang’
instead of ‘In’…Yeah, I don’t really get it either.”
“Leonard likes this post.”
“If I write stuff down in a Hello Kitty book, will you
like me again?”
“He’s been fired in what he calls ‘The World’s Biggest
Mistake.’ Somehow I doubt that will make the next edition.”
“Hey, were you in The
Cape?” “…No.”
“I was on the edge of my seat, and I was in it."
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