Season 3, Episodes 16-17
Given how varied episodes of Community can be from one another, it’s rare that any two
back-to-back episodes will share a whole lot in common. (There is of course an
exception for two-parters.) And given the ensemble nature of the cast, and the
show’s fairly democratic use of them, it’s only slightly less rare that two
straight episodes will have focus on the same characters. Yet looking over “Virtual
Systems Analysis” and “Basic Lupine Urology,” it’s clear that such similarities
do exist in both of these areas, at least to some extent.
Sure, there’s the simple fact that “Urology” and
“Analysis” are both high-concept episodes, something that the show has tried to
avoid doing too frequently ever since they front-loaded on them in early season
two. In that respect, it’s perhaps a bit hard to take all of this seriously,
given that so much of this season, especially the back half of it, has been so
filled with the higher-concept episodes. But what makes this string of high
concept episodes work better than the former batch is that the show is more
consistent in keeping the focus on the characters. This is no doubt due to the
overall focus of the season, that of showing the darkness that corrodes the
group, but it should be appreciated not matter what the reason.
For “Analysis”, it was an episode that placed Annie and
Abed at odds, in order to further explores Abed’s Asperger’s nature, and how
that affects the rest of the group. Though the show will often sideline certain
characters from the ensemble to keep an episode from seeing to busy – or in
other cases, to make up for their alternative work schedules – this was the
first time where that relegation seemed to make perfect narrative sense. By allowing
the cast to appear mostly in the form of figments of Abed’s mind, we got to see
just how Abed views the other members of the group, what he believes to be
their most defining traits. It’s a move that required stealing the nuance away
from everybody buy Abed and Annie, but it was the price to pay in order to get
a substantial peek into Abad’s brain. (It was also a great showcase for the
actors, as they got to play their characters as seen through Abed’s eyes, which
sometimes including some of Abed’s own subtle mannerisms. Layers upon layers here,
people.)
But the episode wasn’t just about Abed, as the show’s
democratic nature made sure that Annie got equal character service within the
half-hour. Given that Abed is the closest thing the show has to a breakout
character (not sure that term’s correct, given the show’s low ratings), it
would have been easy for the writers to just let this episode be the Abed Show
and forget about everybody else, even his scene partner. However, towards the
end of the episode, the focus shifted onto Annie, as we learned a few new
things about her. Her pathological need for control isn’t perhaps the most
surprising reveal, but the extent to which she engineers and believe that she
can fix thing to her liking is certainly a darker aspect of her personality
that I would like to see explore further. The more powerful reveal was the
show’s explanation for why she still lusts after Jeff, in that she’s in love
with the idea of being in love, and if she can nab Jeff, then she can nab
anybody. The first part of that reveal is of course trite, but the second part,
the reason why she focuses on Jeff specifically, in one of those beautifully
sad character beats that the show does so well.
There was also, in the closest thing the episode came to
B-plot, which saw Troy and Britta’s own relationship flowering just a little
bit more. Apart from Troy’s immature fixation on his best friend, there’s not
much to this, but it’s interesting to note that the show has set this up to go
either way. Troy and Britta get together because they have chemistry, or they
don’t because Troy can’t separate himself from his friend. (Personally, I hope
it’s the former, because I’m a human being and I am capable of empathy, and just
awwww, you guys.)
The character work wasn’t nearly as strong in “Urology”,
which is fine given that episode’s aims, but it’s interesting that there was
still a large Annie focus two weeks in a row. Granted, the character work was
far more equitable this time around, but it was another Allison Brie spotlight
this week, and another to focus on Annie’s darker tendencies. Much like with
“Analysis”, the episode didn’t tell us anything we didn’t already know – in
this case, concerning Annie’s perfectionist streak – but took that information
to dark places. Seeing Annie berating Todd (who is practically the study
group’s punching bag at this point) for the same tendencies she’s guilty of, I
couldn’t decide whether it was an act of self-hate or hypocrisy, but it was
frightening nonetheless. It was a ferocious display of faked moral superiority,
one which undoubtedly alters how we view the character.
It also must be acknowledged that both of these episodes
came to air under a large amount of anticipation and/or dread. For “Analysis”
it was Dan Harmon’s pronouncement that it was the craziest episode that the
show had ever attempted, and that even he wasn’t sure it was going to work. For
“Urology”, it was fact that it was the episode in which a character was going
to die, and then later that it was going to be a straight up Law & Order spoof. (For the longest
time, these two facts were kept separate of own another, so it was sort of a
pleasant surprise to see how the episode merged these together, even if I
didn’t really buy the result.)
As far as “Analysis” is concerned, I’m not sure if I’m
the best to pass judgment on the accessibility/mind-fuckery of the episode. As
a fan of shows and movies that deal with high concepts and ask that the
audience to pull their own mental weight in order to follow along, there’s
rarely a piece of media that I find too confusing to follow. This isn’t meant
as a brag – I’ve seen so many of these things that I’m sort of used to thinking
about narratives in this way, and am thus desensitized to the alienating nature
of such things. That being said, I found little about the episode to be
confusing, and I was even drinking during the episode. The only part of the
episode that could be knocked was during the height of Annie and Abed personality
swapping, which nicely illustrated the chaos-inducing power of imagination, but
became a bit too hard to follow in terms of who was impersonating who. (Though
even that information could probably be teased out with a second or third
rewatch.)
“Urology” by contrast was a much simpler episode, at
least in terms of asking the audience to understand what was going on. Spoofs
are among the easier things that the show has done, though nobody on the crew
takes the task lightly. Spoofs tend to succeed or fail in part due to how
faithful they are to the source material, and this episode managed to capture
just about everything right. It wasn’t just the credits sequence, or the
subtitle text used, or the use of the iconic “bong bong” sound, all of which
other spoofs of L&O have
faithfully recreated, that made this one so successful. No, it was also the way
that the episode was shot, the way it broke for commercials, and most
importantly, the way it was structured, making sure to give half over to the
cops, and half over to the lawyers, that managed to make all of it work so
well. (Even the title of this one worked as a brilliant play on words.) Sure,
there was plenty of snide and ironic dialogue from the characters that managed
to send-up many cop show clichés and point out that hey, this isn’t a cop drama
that we’re watching. But I don’t for second believe that the “Thanks to Dick
Wolf” was anything but sincere. This was an episode made with a lot of love for
the subject matter, and it shows.
Given how divisive the Glee-spoofing Christmas episode of the show was, I sort of expected
a similar reaction to this episode as well, given how both managed to usurp a
lot of the traditional character interactions for the sake of the joke, but I
think what made this one more successful to some may have been what I’ve
already discussed above in regards to the characters and the spoofing. However,
I do have wonder if it’s also because we haven’t really seen the show pick on
cop show before (though they did pick on buddy cop movies in “The Science of
Illusion”), so maybe the material feels fresher. Or maybe it’s because it feels
less mean. Me personally, I prefer “Regional Holiday Music” by a hair, but I
also recognize that may be due in part to the circumstances surrounding it.
Anyways, while “Analysis” seemed to live up and survive
its status as the weirdest episode to date, I’m not sure that “Urology” was
worth all of the promotion of the character death. When it appeared at first
that it was the yam’s “death” that the promotions were referring to, and thus it
was all part of some “screwing with the audience” joke that worked at the
beginning, before growing old and stale with each iteration. However, when it
turned out that it was Starburns who died, that was a joke that didn’t work at
all. That is if it was a joke, even a really dark kind, like I suspect the
episode meant it to be. (I mean, it’s not like we see or know enough about
Starburns to care what happens to him.) Granted, it was a death that was setup
earlier in the episode, but I’m not sure if there was enough setup to make it
work. But I guess we’ll find out next Thursday how well the joke works next
week when we see Starburns funeral. Until then, I’ll just ride the high of
these two episodes.
Quotes and Other Thoughts:
“I use a mnemonic device: Kevin, Please Come Over
For Gay Sex.”
“The manager and I are enemies. He said Die Hard was bad.”
“Come on Craig, get your life together.”
“You think it this just a room where Troy and I
play Dinosaurs vs. River Boats Gamblers.”
“I can imitate all members of the group and a
half-accurate Chang in over 6,000 situations.”
“And another thing I hate about Die Hard: Two FBI agents named Johnson?”
“Abed, you know how you wanted me to tell you when
you were being scary-weird as opposed to cute-weird?”
“Damn the rules, damn the system, damn our
two-foot height disparity.”
“I left my wife for you when she was pregnant!”
“Who do you think inseminated her?”
“I didn’t get Inception…There were so many
layers!”
“And there’s more where that didn’t come from.”
“Or maybe Leonard was watching from the bushes and
told Abed all about it.” “I don’t have cable.”
“Meta meta.”
“Troy invents Dance
Pants in 2019. Don’t tell him, he needs to stumble on it on his own.”
“Take that, Blorgon scum. You’ll blogon me for
this for me later.”
“Sounds like a game changing day for all of us.
Almost sat on my balls. But in the last second, I made an adjustment.”
“It hurt like hell. I saw eagles.”
“While you two were out playing Blazer Tag –“
“That’s lazer tag with sport coats.”
*************
“Move along, nothing to see here.” “First time
those words have been true.”
“Now if you’ll excuse me, I was watching Mama’s Family.”
“It’s not a short straw, it’s a hot potato.”
“I fell asleep in a sunbeam.” “Likely story.”
“Actually it is. It used to live with him. It’s kind of adorable.”
“What happened Todd? Cut yourself on an extra-sharp
Oscar Wilde play?”
“I transferred, or downloaded, Todd’s picture to
the computer.”
“That yam. Big deal, order some ketchup.” “That
doesn’t make sense! You don’t order ketchup, it’s a condiment!”
“I’d say our hands are tied, but we don’t have any
hands.”
“Okay, I swiped some supplies from the biology lab
to build a meth lab in my trunk, but that’s all.”
“Well, well, well, look at this Abed. He weaves
baskets and lies.”
“I’m inclined to agree with the man in uniform.”
“Shocker.”
“It’s not a favor Mr. Winger. A man’s gotta have a
code.” “…Awesome.”
“Stop disappointing me. Diffuse the IED of
dishonesty.”
“'A man has to have a code.’ I can only assume
there’s a female equivalent to that. A codette, or something.”
“I threw off the grading curve so she didn’t have
to go to summer school and we could finally have sex in my parent’s cabin. God
forgive me, I did it for love!”
“Troy and Abed, off to Dreamland, catching the
train to Sleepytown.”
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