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“Big Love” Wife Watch!: Season Four, Ep. 9

March 9th, 2010 · 3 Comments

Welcome to Wife Watch!, the only blog post that ranks the most powerful wives on this week’s episode of Big Love.

As we cast our minds across “End of Days,” the final episode of Big Love‘s fourth season, let’s remember the third season of Six Feet Under and the third season of Lost.

Those were both middling years for otherwise excellent series. Those were the years that Nate suddenly had a wife and a bad haircut, and Jack had an unfortunate run-in with Bai Ling’s magical tattoos. Yet both shows rebounded. Six Feet Under produced the greatest final episode in the history of American television (yeah, I said it), and Lost is going out with a bang.

With that in mind, let’s assume that Big Love is going to emerge from the wreckage of this terrible season with a new sense of purpose.

But as we’re being hopeful, let’s also be frank: Girl, this show gone crazy. Can we get security?

We know the biggest problem, of course: Overkill. Too much stuff happening in too little time led to unconvincing writing, unsatisfying plots, and unrecognizable characters. It also forced the show to focus on conflict-conflict-conflict. Every week, that were so many events that the series had little time for tender, quiet, or funny moments that didn’t directly forward the plot.

As it turns out, those moments make the show. Without them, we get nothing but people screaming at each other, and who wants to watch that? If there’s no love in Big Love, if there’s no tenderness or joy, then there’s really nothing to hang on to.

God! Listen to me! It’s like I’m talking to a divorce lawyer. “Well, we were fighting all the time, and then one morning I realized that fighting was all we had. I know that we used to love each other, but I can’t remember how that used to feel.”

So… yeah. Here’s hoping the show pulls it together next year and lets people care about each other again.

That could happen, I think. After all, this episode puts a stop to an awful lot of nonsense. Adaleen is a strong contender for first wife, simply because she kills off the useless J.J. and his Bewigged Bride.

Except… really? That’s how she kills them? After spending several days strapped to a gurney and being pumped with medication, she’s strong enough to tie up two adults and set them on fire? Don’t be surprised if she starts next season by building a Buick with her bare hands.

And what about her motive for killing them? Apparently, J.J. has been harvesting eggs from his sister (Wanda) and daughter (Cara Lynn), mixing them with his own sperm, and then implanting the incest-by-proxy embryos into the wombs of other women. Adaleen is carrying a Wanda-J.J baby, and before Adaleen stops them, J.J. and his crony Dr. Rocket are about to implant a J.J.-Cara Lynn embryo into Nicki. If they had succeeded, then Nicki would’ve been carrying a baby belonging to her own daughter and ex-husband.

So… sure. I can understand Adaleen’s desire for revenge. But why didn’t she just call Wolverine to come kill J.J.? Why didn’t she steal the ring from Frodo and use it to turn her tormentors into dust? I mean, this entire story is so ludicrous that the show might as well introduce super heroes and magic.

Ugh. Enough. Let’s move on to the casino subplot because… zzzzz.

What? Oh! Sorry. It made me fall asleep. Because you see, Tommy’s niece is the girl that Barb hit with her car, and the kid is dealing meth at the casino, and Tommy and his father have been overlooking it, and now Bill got them ejected from the casino’s board and… zzzzz.

I know this hullabaloo is important to the characters, but it just feels so tangential. It’s telling, I think, that every time Barb and Bill discuss the casino, Barb says something like, “You’re leaving me alone up there. Don’t you care about our buisness?” In other words: The casino is not fully integrated into the show.

However, by practically living on the rez, Barb has found an independent streak, and her show-closing announcement that she doesn’t need Bill anymore is one of the best-acted moments of the season. We’ve seen her betrayal—she reported Bill’s baby with Ana to the local news—coming for weeks, but it’s nice that she finally steps up and does something. She’s positioned to be very powerful next year, and I hope the writers push this story. It’s actually about the family, and that’s what I want to see.

I’m not sure I want to see more of Marge’s new family, though. But maybe I do. I’m divided. On one hand, I don’t have the emotional room for an Ana-Goran-Marge triangle. On the other, it’s interesting that Ana, who has judged the Henricksons,  is now in her own quasi-polygamous relationship. This could keep my attention, but since Ana has always felt like an interloper, I’m dubious.

I am convinced by Nicki‘s new hairstyle, however. She ends the season with a new look, a new attitude, and a new understanding of why she can’t go back to the Juniper Creek lifestyle ever again.  Will these changes take? Will she ever be comfortable as a “modern woman?” Will Bill’s public announcement of his polygamy help or hinder her?

Nicki has put herself in a position to ask those questions from a place of strength. Barb and Marge also take bold steps in this episode, but they take them away from the core Henrickson family. Nicki takes a bold step toward it. With that, she gains a unique type of power, and she is the season’s final First Wife.

I’ll see you next season for more hijinks. Even in these trying times, your thoughtful and engaging comments have made it a pleasure to think and write a bout this show week after week. And if you can’t wait for the return of Wife Watch!, then look my for second round of True Blood recaps to start this summer.

Tags: Television

3 responses so far ↓

  • 1 benvolio // Mar 9, 2010 at 2:30 pm

    I got really frustrated with the casino plot this ep. Bill manages to get Tommy & Jerry tossed? Without a tribal fuss? All off-screen and in, like, a half an hour? On election day? Bah. I hope this isn’t a slapdash resolution; I’m kinda ‘shipping a Barb-Tommy affair.

    Although I agree with Mark that splitting focus from the Henricksons to the Ana-Goran-Margie family is unwise, I wouldn’t mind a momentary digression to a hot three-way. If they’re gonna go polyandry-everywhere on us, they could at least hotten things up some. It is HBO, after all.

    Also annoying: putting the incest subplot into a mad-scientist framework. There’s enough real-life incest amongst these groups to explore without going all sci-fi. Next thing you know, one of the embryos will emerge as Mansquito!

    Errant query: Where are Lois & Joey?

    Minor detail: Closed captioning repeatedly rendered the doctor’s name as “Roquet”, which is funny when pronounced Rocket. Because, you know, it’s really *not* Rocket Science.

  • 2 Michael // Mar 9, 2010 at 2:40 pm

    Accepting all the dissatisfaction over the out-of-control story energy this season, I actually thought there was some pretty deft work in this final episode in putting an end to this season’s excrescences and refocusing the suspense where it should be.

    Was I thrilled that Adaleen was setting fire to JJ at the end–or simply that the JJ mad-scientist-incest story was going up in flames? Doubtlessly the latter: good riddance!

    So Bill gave Tommy the push? Good–maybe the casino story has been given the push, too.

    And the writing helped–finally–to position some of these elements in relation to each other: the nightmarish power-struggles and patriarchal and eugenic delusions of polygamous cults are an aspect of the phenomenon of modern polygamy, but having Bill clearly state that these are the corruptions of the Principle he wishes to destroy so that his way of life can be presented in its (humanly flawed) innocence was, I thought, a powerful (if last-minute) framing of issues that had recently seemed out of writerly control.

    And if there are still untied threads (the mad prophet scarring his wife’s cheek and scattering papers) and logical gaps, still–the final scene put the focus right back on the central family, and whether they are publicly presenting themselves as polygamous at the very moment when they are internally at their weakest as a unit. So the whole political plot and the family plot got honestly tied together, and the final image presented the family vulnerably exposed.

    For me, this helped redeem Bill from his sins against whatsisname who took the fall for him; his public confession of polygamy took the wind out of Cissy Spacek’s antagonistic sails; with the side-stories more or less appeased, the focus is back on target and the suspense is back on the strength or weakness of this unconventional family.

    Here’s hoping that there are some lessons learned by the writer/producers and an approaching season that will remember why we cared in the first place.

  • 3 InfoMofo // Mar 9, 2010 at 3:55 pm

    Yeah, I think after the clown car episode I had kind of given up on this season, so actually the fact that this episode wrapped up a lot of the random side plots was nice for me.

    I still think they’ve just abandoned any hope of making Bill likeable, but they’ve dangled enough intrigue for next season with Barb talking of living Bill for me to turn into next season.

    And btw- what’s with this 9 episode season? I didn’t even realize this was the finale until I realized everything was done.

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