Friday, April 6, 2012

Happy Endings - “Four Weddings and a Funeral (Minus Three Weddings and One Funeral)”


Season 2, Episode 21

Here we are at the end of Happy Endings’ second season, one that has proven the show’s comedic worth as well as the fact that is deserves renewal, at least where fans are concerned. With that in mind, it’s hard to not feel a little bittersweet about the show, which has been bandied around by the network, which burned off the season while the rest of ABC’s Wednesday comedy block was in repeats, and is still on the bubble in terms of renewal (though the cast and crew seem pretty optimistic, and it’s worth noting that ABC studios co-producers the show). Thus, there was a lot of pressure on Wednesday’s finale to perform, to prove to ABC and the audience that it’s worth bringing back. In order to do that, the finale played things a little straighter than usual, eschewing some of the show’s weirder tendencies, while still managing to produce a pretty great episode.


One of the show’s main tendencies this season, especially in the back half when not everybody might have been watching, has been to take old jokes and put it’s own (varying) twist on them. It’s a move that hasn’t always worked, but when the show makes it work, it really works, to the extent that it becomes easy to forgive the show these transactions, and other times straight up forget that that’s what they’re doing. Having a finale that takes place at a wedding is a fairly ubiquitous cliché, and one that the show would seem to be above – especially considering that the show did the same thing in last season’s technical finale (see “Other Thoughts” below). However, while doing so in the season one finale felt like the show was just plugging in old ideas in order to fill the episode order, this time around, having a wedding serve as the plotline to the second season finale felt like something of a meta-joke, a commentary on how often will go to that well in order to close out a season. (Cast and crew interviews have indicated that this might be the case, and that we might face more finale wedding episodes in the future.)

It also helps that the wedding this time around served as a much funnier backdrop than it did in “The Shershow Redemption”. The ridiculousness with how quickly recurring character Derrick got engaged to his heretofore unseen boyfriend, coupled with the failed resplendence of the wedding itself gave the whole thing a sense of fleeting impermanence that actually helps sell the comedic atmosphere. We don’t really care what happens to Derrick and Eric, and that’s sort of the point. The relative pointlessness of their wedding helps to bring the struggles of the group to forefront, as it should be.

The most prominent storyline in the finale also doubled as a reminder of the other major theme of the show’s development during it’s second season, as it came to shift back around from the rom-com inspired silliness that had so sunk the pilot and early episodes. Of course, much like the wedding finale idea, the love triangle that seems to have developed between Alex, Dave, and Penny (which shifts into a love quadrangle when you include newly-introduced Chris) is an example of the show’s ability to pull off the same idea much more strongly in the second season than in the first.

While I still hold the same reservations that I did when the Penny-Dave romance was introduced, and the pair of episodes that dealt with Alex and Dave hooking up, I have to give the show props for the relative ease with which it’s been able to pull all of this off. The drunken conversation between Penny and Dave was perhaps the best illustration of these two character’s slow realization of the romantic feelings that exist between them, as was the snippet of a conversation between Alex and Dave, and their subtle hand-holding that closed out the episode. The power of this subtlety is only proven further by the one misstep in this plotline where Penny goes to talk Alex about the possibility of dating Dave, and Dave just conveniently happens to be compromisingly half-dressed, which just pushed Penny towards Chris. (For clarification, I had no problem with Penny going to talk to Alex, but what it led to was ridiculous.) It’s move that reeks of soapy drama that the show hasn’t really proven itself capable of yet, and would most likely be reversed within the first few episodes of the (still) hypothetical third season.

Luckily, that small bit of outrageousness was balanced with a few more subdued (dramatically, not comically) stories. Jane and Brad had a nice pair of intersecting stories, with Jane’s serving as a perfect compliment to her general self-centered nature and panache for deception. I’m more interested in Brad’s, however. His admission to Jane functioned as a fairly standard marriage subplot, albeit one with a sweet and deserved ending, but their was also a nice undercurrent of Brad’s examination of his own masculinity. The show has made no bones about the fact that Brad exhibits a post-feminist form of masculinity (and both the character and the show supportive of this fact), so to seem him have a gender-based freak-out was certainly interesting, and I hope the show would keep this going as part of an unemployment arc for Brad if it makes it to a third season.  

Max’s reunion with his cross-dressing cover band was fairly slight, even by the standards of this show, but much like the love triangle and Brad’s questioning of his masculinity, it saw the character taking a good look at himself. Max has always been very confident person, so for the show to have him display insecurity about his body was a nice subtle touch. But really, the cover band mostly seemed to exist to give us that awesome closing imagine of everybody dancing to a fairly well done cover of “Like a Prayer”. It was a fun and large-scale, and it served on a good button to the episode, a way to send out the season on a high note without the risk of trying to go out with a big laugh. And if we don’t get a third season, at least we’ll have the memory of the show going out with a bang, and maybe that will make the pain of cancellation hurt a little bit less.

Quotes and Other Thoughts:

There’s actually still one more episode for the show to air sometime in the next month or two. (ABC did the same in season one thanks to its odd-numbered 13 episodes.) It appears to be a holdover from earlier in the season and thus has nothing to do with any of these on going plots. So yes, continue treating this episode like the season finale it was always meant to be.

In keeping with the show’s tradition, Max’s website, http://www.thingsthataregay.biz, actually exists, though it’s nowhere near as exciting as one would think it would be.

From the media round-up for the finale: Interviews with creator David Caspe, and stars Zachary Knighton, and Eliza Coupe and Casey Wilson.

“I have not seen anything that unnecessarily complicated since the third season of Lost.”

“And no, I will not save the drama for Michelle Obama, Derrick.”

“I will always love Sean Penn, no matter how creepy and thin his mustache gets. He’s like a roided-out, hulked-up John Waters.”

“MAKE IT STAAAAAAAANKKKK!”

“I’m so glad that I don’t get invested in your boyfriends of the week that I only hear about through dialogue.”

“Why do I always go to slop yobs?”

“Eating three meals a day as opposed to one super day-long meal.”

“You guys talk so fast that I can barely understand what you’re saying half the time anyways.”

“The Mandonna guys still looking amazing, and I still look like me – or Tom Arnold.”

“You look like a hooker I slept with in Korea.”

“Does this look like brie?” “Yeah, it looks like brie.” “Good, because it’s a napkin.” “That’s weird, babe.”

“Except for you Pitchy Pete. Pitchy as always, bud.”

“So you’re sending a black guy to an Irish wedding to steal booze?”

“What the f-“ “-unky cold medina!”

“Was it that the concierge looked like an Indian Martin Lawrence?”

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