Month: December 2012

One More Year Of Not Knowing Who The Mother Is!

Funny that I just wrote about How I Met Your Mother, and how the show might just be finally heading for the endgame given the proposal between Robin and Barney, but we’ve got one more season of not knowing who Ted’s future wife is (unless they allow them to meet at the end of this season, and then give us a one-season victory lap of seeing Ted and his wife fall in love), now that everyone has signed on for the ninth season.

Anyway, that is all.  Return to your regularly scheduled Holiday season excursions.

The Long Con: “How I Met Your Mother” and our Unreliable Narrator(s)

As a brief note, I should point out that if I were still in grad school, this would probably be an excerpt from a much, much longer paper chronicling the course of the entire series and the ways in which we, the audience, are lied to, and the benefits and drawbacks of such choices.

Never lie to your audience.

That’s one of those “rules” of film and television that are, in reality, broken all the time.  But in the case of the long-running How I Met Your Mother, this is, in fact, one of the rules that they break, and break quite often – and given the structure of the show, which functions as a product of the narrator’s memory, it’s a big structuring element of the show.

There is, however, a second unreliable narrator guiding the audience throughout the run of the show, and that is, of course, the creator/showrunner team of Carter Bays and Craig Thomas, who have long utilized the show’s flexible relationship with time to provide retroactive meaning to events that the audience has already experienced.

Because the show has often found the emotional punch in its third act by retroactively explaining how what-we-just-saw-wasn’t-what-we-just-saw (two examples of this would be Season 4’s “Three Days of Snow” (where the act three reveal is that the seemingly simultaneous storylines we’re seeing between Lily and Marshall are, in fact, not happening on the same day) and Season 7’s heartbreaking “Symphony of Illumination” (where we discover that the fictitious children Robin is narrating to throughout the episode are not, in fact, real), the audience should, generally, be prepped to handle this kind of behavior, and perhaps, to expect it.

Naturally, there’s a danger in relying on formula to elicit emotional response (see Shyamalan, M. Night), but in general Bays and Thomas have done a decent enough job changing up the pieces surrounding the act three reveal that they feel relatively fresh and new (even though the savvy audience member would be expecting it, particularly in an emotionally heightened moment).

Over the first half of Season 8, however, they have perhaps pulled off their greatest feat in using not just one but multiple episodes to pull their longest con, culminating in the great “The Final Page, Part 2”.

Having armed the audience over the past couple years with the knowledge that Robin and Barney are headed for their eventual wedding (as well as the possibility that this season will be the show’s last), the HIMYM writing staff had an extremely difficult task:  get Robin and Barney back together in a way that, at worst, was emotionally satisfying, and at best managed to surprise at least a reasonable segment of the show’s fans.

Once the show dispatched with Barney’s previous love interest, Quinn, and got him through the requisite amount of depression/loneliness/soul-searching, the show started to move Barney and Robin back toward one another – first with Barney confessing his love (very clearly in a pretending-he’s-pretending kind of way), then with him making a move/being rejected by Robin, followed by his declaration that he’s done chasing her and his subsequent (fake) relationship with Robin’s nemesis, Patrice – all steps that were either out of character for Barney, or signs that he was maturing (in some way), and all steps that, it turned out, were part of his final “play”, but instead of getting a woman into bed, the endgame was to get Robin to (hopefully) accept his proposal.

There is a danger in using this trick too many times, in that you risk alienating your audience with the constant half-truths and subjective, rather than objective, point of view (of course, one could argue that no media is truly objective in its point of view, but regardless) – in other words, they might get tired of the trick.  The greater danger in what HIMYM did this time around (and what makes this arc ultimately tougher to pull off) is that they left themselves open to attack in the week-to-week moments of the arc, when people could have (rightfully) pointed out that characters were acting in a way that wasn’t consistent with their worldview – leading people to believe that the writers had lost their way.

“Trust us, we know where we’re headed,” is something that Bays & Thomas have long said, and while I believe that on some level it’s true, TV audiences will no longer give their trust over so easily (not since, at least, Lost failed to acceptably explain every single thread that they ever put in).  But in this instance, those who remained patient with the storyline were ultimately rewarded with a successful, emotional payoff, and one that felt largely earned.

There was a second, perhaps greater danger undertaken in this story, in the fact that truthfully, the storyline wasn’t all that funny.  Because this go-round of the Robin/Barney arc focused on the romantic side of the romantic comedy world that HIMYM lives in, the last several episodes were required to pile the humor onto Lily, Marshall, and Ted, and lowering the overall joke counts throughout.

Despite these dangers, ultimately this was a risk worth taking, for a number of reasons:  one, the show had to get to Robin and Barney getting engaged somehow, and this was a way to get there in a still relatively short amount of time, and two, because the show is set to end with the Ted meeting the mother, the Robin/Barney relationship has become the most important romantic pairing on the show – Lily and Marshall were never going to break up, and we’ll never get to see the evolution of Ted’s relationship with his eventual wife, so it was important for this show to treat the reconciliation of (and proposal between) Barney and Robin with enough emotional weight that it rewards the viewers, who, at this point, are unlikely to receive the same type of emotional payoff from the first meeting between Ted and his future wife, no matter how great it is.

Fortunately for the show, the moment worked.  Besides the aforementioned use of retroactive logic, the show leaned on a number of significant running gags as emotional signifiers – the most significant of those being, of course, Barney’s burning of his playbook, which served to both prove to a hidden Robin that he was moving forward emotionally, as well as attempting to throw the audience off the fact that there was one final page that had not been burned.

The episode also broke from its technical norms, using a crane shot (or as much of one that you can have in a multi-camera setup) to move from Robin discovering the mistletoe to revealing Barney’s presence on the roof, and the close-up POV shot of the page in Robin’s hand to Barney, ring extended, as he kneels in front of Robin.  These are unusual techniques for even a hybrid multi-camera comedy such as HIMYM, and they helped to highlight the importance and singular nature of this moment – the point being, this is not an ordinary moment in the lives of our characters.

From there, the acceptance of the proposal led to a beautiful montage of our characters at the end of 2012; Robin and Barney, together again and happy; Marshall, Lily, and baby Marvin, happy; Ted, celebrated in his success, but staring out across the city, still alone.  With this final shot, HIMYM has given us the “where is everyone emotionally” montage that comes just before we reach the climax, a clear signal that we are nearing the end of our journey, and they have set the stage for Ted’s last stretch of solitude before he finally meets the woman who he will marry.

Although of course, with Bays & Thomas, you can never be completely sure.

Shows More People Should Be Watching, Part 1: Suburgatory

This is the first in what I hope will be a series of posts discussing shows that aren’t giant hits, but should be, based on quality.

Last season, ABC launched “Suburgatory”, a single-camera sitcom about a high school girl (Jane Levy) moved from Manhattan to the suburbs by her single dad (Jeremy Sisto) after he finds condoms in her room.  Once in suburbia, she comes across a variety of strange creatures (people), played up to cartoonish perfection by a great cast, including Cheryl Hines, Alan Tudyk, Ana Gasteyer, and Chris Parnell.

“Sounds cute,” I recall thinking, before turning my attention to some of the other freshmen comedies, like “New Girl” or (briefly) “Up All Night”.

(As a general note, the three other new comedies that I enjoyed from the 2011-2012 season – “Bent”, “Best Friends Forever”, and “Don’t Trust The B”, were all mid-season shows, which is why they were not directly keeping me from watching “Suburgatory”.)

But as the season went on, and “Community” went on a now-quaint-seeming three month hiatus, I began searching for a new show to sample.  And I had heard good things about “Suburgatory”.

“Seems cute,” I recall thinking, as I watched the pilot episode.  It was a well-crafted, funny show, but I wasn’t sure from the pilot whether or not I would enjoy it or whether I would find it a little too hyper-real for my tastes.

But it was good enough that I kept watching.  And as the show expanded its world, it got better.  More entertaining.  The characters became both more cartoonish and more emotionally grounded.  Like a good improv scene, they took reality and heightened it to a relatable fiction.

By about four episodes, I was pretty well hooked.  By the end of the first season, it joined my “must watch that night” rotation (which is currently populated only by “Suburgatory”, “Homeland”, “How I Met Your Mother”, “Parks & Recreation”, and “Community” and “Game of Thrones” when they return).

And then this season they made what I would consider to be the emotional leap that every sitcom has to make to have a shot at greatness.

Sitcom plots, by their very nature, are slightly insane.  They are built on premises that make sense within the world of the sitcom, but often would never occur (certainly not in the form presented) in the real world.  This is doubly true today, when most sitcoms now open with a big hook of an idea (for example, “Happy Endings” at its best is a hyper, ADD-infused, UCB-inspired version of “Friends”, but they had to deal with that whole “she left him at the altar” thing to make it seem different at first) rather than being insanely funny (“Cheers” is a great example of this – go back and watch the pilot.  It’s streaming on Netflix.  Do it now.  The article will still be here.  Back?  Good.) without giant narrative premise.

Because of this, for a sitcom to make the leap, they have to get you to care about the characters.  Then, they have to exploit that emotional bond you’ve made.

Although “Suburgatory” had a number of touching, emotional moments, they finally hit it out of the park with this season’s “The Wishbone”, which served as their Thanksgiving episode.  Naturally, Thanksgiving brings with it issues of family/visiting family/dealing with your crazy family, so it slides naturally into the wheelhouse of the show.

The episode, however, managed to orchestrate a magnificent, chaotic, brilliant episode, taking a minor, cute story and taking it to an incredibly real and heart-wrenching breakup (and final moment of sweetness between brother and sister Ryan and Lisa Shea), and utilizing the first moment of real contact between estranged mother and daughter, culminating in a beautifully-shot moment between Tessa (Jane Levy) and her mother, Alex (Malin Ackerman), lying on the floor together, at perpendicular angles, the two of them at once incredibly similar and yet headed in such different directions.

This isn’t to say that it’s not a comedy – it’s important to remember that first and foremost, “Suburgatory” is still a comedy, and it certainly delivers on that level.  But after taking the emotional leap, “Suburgatory” is no longer just cute.  It’s no longer just funny.  It’s moving forward, and has the potential to be a great sitcom.

Which is why more people really should be watching it.