Season 5, Episode 4
It was a dark and stormy night on last night’s Mad Men, if only in the metaphorical
sense, a cacophony of failed attempts to sleep and long, dark reflections into
the self. If this sounds like a bit of cheesiness on Mad Men’s part, yeah, that’s true. But it’s also a cheesiness that
mostly works, as it was a break of sort for the show, one that stopped worrying
about any sort of ongoing plots (admittedly something that’s not a primary
focus of the show on any given week) and instead took one final look at the
characters before the late 1960s sends them teetering over the edge of bad decisions.
The show has played with the idea of the impending doom
that the decade would bring for the denizens of the Madison Avenue lifestyle
for the totality of it’s run, but for the first four seasons this was mostly an
undercurrent to some of the larger concerns of the characters. As was the case
in the season premiere, the status quo has changed, at from this point onward
the show has become much more interested in depicting the 1960s at it’s most
familiar, a time of revolution, violence, and in the case of tonight’s episode,
terror.
“Mystery Date” makes no bones about the horror angle that
the show would take, as the second scene of the episode reminds us of Richard Speck’s slaying of eight student nurses (which also means that this season has
already jumped forward a month and a half across two weeks of airtime). It’s an
understandably disturbing crime, at least to new hire Michael Ginsburg, if not
for the SCDP vets. (More of that cynicism/optimism that was introduced in the
premiere.) On one other occasion the show started an hour with a tragic event
(“The Grown-Ups” with the Kennedy assassination), and much like with that
episode, these murders that hang over the proceedings of the episode, in both direct and indirect manners. The Spreck murders didn’t have
nearly the large impact that JFK’s death did, for obvious reasons, and thus the
show turns Spreck into more of a symbol than an actual event.
The most direct Spreck effect occurs within the Francis
household, where Sally, against the instructions of her Grandma Pauline, sneaks
the paper in order to learn about the murders, an event which is perhaps too
shocking for her young mind to deal with. In fact, a lot of Sally’s time in
this episode seems to be trying in many ways to buck the childhood into which
he is constantly being forced. She hates the control that Pauline asserts over
her, trying to use Henry and Betty’s absence to gain a bit more control, if only
for a few days, and only summer days at that. She also wears a piece of
nighttime wear that seems to ape those that Betty used to wear when she was in
better shape. Yet her bratty response to having to eat a tuna salad sandwich
with relish in it, as well as her inability to cope with fear, belie that she
is still a child at her core. It’s ironic then that her first true taste of
adulthood comes from Grandma Pauline herself, who gives Sally half of a seconal,
an adult sleeping aide. Odds that that will be the last bit of drugs that Sally
tries are slim, and this grown-up thing comes because Pauline was trying to
comfort her childlike fear.
In what is perhaps a possible explanation for his
actions, even though it’s not explicitly stated, I have to imagine that Don was
also exposed to the story of the nurse slaying in one way or another, given
it’s popularity in both the news media and the SCDP office. Much like Sally,
Don similarly seems to be attempting to move on to a new stage in his life, one
that leaves behind his more childish ways behind in regards to his
philandering. Unfortunately, it’s a memory that it brought up again my the
reemergence of an old one-night (?) stand of Don’s, who even though he only
sees her once, sticks in his head for many hours after. Yes, Don’s “murdering”
of Andrea is quite silly, even if you figured out that she wasn’t really in his
apartment before the “murder” happened (as I did), but it does serve as an
interesting look at Don’s current state of mind.
Either Don killed Andrea as a way to exorcise his
philandering demons in an attempt to continue to stay true to Megan, or
(perhaps the more exciting theory) his murdering of her represented a release
of the anger that he feels over being trapped by monogamy, and it’s only the
start of the fallout between he and Megan. Either option provides a path for
the character for the season, and both hint at some darker impulses within Don.
Granted, Don’s always had to hide a lot of his true self thanks to stealing
someone else identity, but the intensity with which his anger manifested
itself, even if just his dreams, was frightening. What’s even more interesting
is that Don had to be in the throws of a fever dream to realize, his own
assistance to the next stage of his life, much like Sally and the seconal.
The rough nights continue else where in the story, and
though they are predicated on nasty things besides Speck, there is still a certain darkness to them hinted at by the Spreck killings, as they also center on
characters finding their way thanks to their own potent influences. In Peggy’s
case, it’s a good deal of alcohol, and a smidgen of racism. Emboldened after
conning Roger out of his money (and creating one of the greatest gifs ever), Peggy
shows some benevolence on new secretary Dawn after catching her sleeping Don’s
office. But it perhaps isn’t born out of benevolence but rather a selfish
desire to find an available ear. While getting drunk, Peggy unloads her worries
over becoming too manly in order to compete as a creative voice within the
advertising world, and then to perhaps lessen her sense of gender betrayal,
offers to help Dawn become a copywriter as well. (Obviously Megan doesn’t count
in Peggy’s mind, since she’s sleeping with Don.)
All pretense of benevolence goes out the window however
when Peggy show’s her true hand by pausing over leaving her purse out in the
open, and thus within Dawn’s reach. Dawn doesn’t take anything, of course, but
it does seem to belie Peggy’s own racism. Of course, the show makes us question
even that, considering that there is also significant dialogue given to mentioning
the race riots that are happening all over the country. Is Peggy truly
distrustful of African-Americans, or are her sense merely heightened thanks to
the riots? Do we see Peggy as progressive for offering Dawn a place to sleep,
or as upholding the social norm by thinking, however briefly, than Dawn might
become a thief. Obviously Peggy feels guilt for the reflex, but guilt doesn’t make
up for the action, be it intentional or not, and it will be interesting if this
causes larger instances of self-reflection in Peggy in the future, or if she
will continue to revel in the cynicism and conning that thrives at SCDP.
Joan, however, who perhaps has the positive outcome of
the four rough nights depicted, doesn’t need any sort of drug or mind-altering
outside of some blistering, blinding rage. Of course, brining Greg will to that
to people, and not just people in the show, but the audience as well. Greg has
rightly been maligned within Mad Men
fandom, and it seems a bit odd for the show to bring him back and create a bit
of drama out of his return. As perhaps the most hated character the show has
ever made (apart from those times when everybody hates Betty more), his return
seems like the least organic thing that the show could do in order to manufacture
drama.
In fact, I’m sure most people are disappointed that Greg
just didn’t die in Vietnam, but it’s not like that matters much now, given the
way Joan takes charge of things. On the one hand, Joan has ever right to be
angry with Greg for going back to Vietnam without consulting her, and her
throwing him out was an act of self-empowerment for Joan, which no doubt
justifies her bull-headed actions. Yet as Joan lies on the bed with her mother
and baby Kevin at episode’s end, a looking of dawning realization moves over
her face; she now knows that while it may have made her feel good at the time,
throwing Greg out is also going to make life a lot harder on her as a single
mother. The clarity that anger seems to have brought to Joan only reaches so
far. Much like the riots or Richard Speck, Vietnam hangs like a cloud over Joan’s
home, clouding her judgment and causing her to react reflexively, and out of
fear.
Other Thoughts:
The first thing I think of when I hear about the Richard
Speck murders is that line from the Simon and Garfunkel medley “7 O’Clock
News/Silent Night.” That makes me wonder if the show is going to touch on any
of the other events that are mentioned in that track.
Super-alternate of Don’s fever dream: Don really did kill
Andrea, and Megan just hid the body for him. Now how interesting would that be?
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