Not even 20
seconds into tonight’s episode I thought negatively about the episode. Marshall
began a five-mile walk that was portrayed as longer than five miles, complete
with a musical number and a cameo by Bigfoot. Marshall’s subsequent ride to the
Farhampton Inn with Ted’s future wife furthered my irritation with the episode.
One assumes Marshall began his trek and traveled, at the very least, a
half-mile, which means he’d have four-and-a-half miles to go before he reached
the Inn. Ted’s future wife picks him up and they immediately bond over their
separate challenges in their personal lives. An involved personal conversation
ensues, and the breezy four-and-a-half mile car ride to the Inn stretches into
eternity. Time elapses more than ten minutes in “Bass Player Wanted.” Ted has
time to break-and-enter into a liquor store and steal the expensive bottle of
scotch in the basement. Barney has time to stew over Ted’s secret move to
Chicago. Robin and Lily have an involved fight followed by reconciliation and
an impromptu boxing session with Marshall pillow. Obviously, the car ride never
existed. Future Ted imagined it as he told his children the story of how he and
their mom met, or I should get Nabokov out of my head and roll with the
improbable drive to the Farhampton Inn.
“Bass Player
Wanted” is the second or third best episode of the season. It was without fluff
and filler and flashbacks. The writers weren’t leaving long marks in the ground
from dragging their feet. My mind didn’t wander during the episode. I didn’t
feel the precious time ticking away with each second. The writers weren’t
wasteful this week. Three important plot points were addressed. It took a
tertiary plot device to move the stories ahead, lazily tied into Ted’s future
wife to make it more earned and organic, but it wasn’t. Close friends shouldn’t
decide to be honest whenever a stranger throws a tree branch into embers.
Barney, for the first time ever, had a right to act petulant and childish.
Marshall should’ve worried about meeting Lily after other plot device let the
judgeship secret slip. The Lily-Robin conflict happened.
The tertiary
plot device, aka the singer for Future Wife’s band, charmed Lily, Robin, Ted
and Barney before tossing the aforementioned tree branch into the embers. Lily
and Robin squabbled over Robin’s opinion about Italy and the judgeship. Robin
sided with Marshall selfishly because she doesn’t want to lose Lily, but she
understands why Lily feels hurt and betrayed. Robin helps Lily work through her
motions through a physical release, which is preferable to the alcoholic
treatment she’d contented herself with since her arrival at the Farhampton Inn
(initially because of Marshall’s absence and then because of the judgeship
revelation). Her arc in “Bass Player Wanted” is scattered but she reaches a
necessary emotional point by the time Marshall arrives: she’s raw, without that
annoying comical desire for revenge. Alyson Hanigan and Jason Segel express
very much without speaking when Lily and Marshall look at each other. The space
between them is uninspired direction (considering Boy Meets World made fun of
that staging trope 13 or 14 years ago in the sixth season Valentine’s Day
episode), but regardless it’s the best acting this season. Hanigan’s very good
when she’s asked to induce sadness in the viewers.
Ted’s secret
move to Chicago baffled, saddened, and angered Barney, but no one else finds
out about the move. Ted needs to move because he can’t bear to stay around
married Robin to his vey good buddy Barney, which Barney eventually realizes
after he pulls his head out of his own ass. The writing tries to get Ted and
Barney to a vulnerable place when Ted embraces Barney with an “I love you”
following Barney’s earnest “I’ll miss you.” Ted’s gesture was executed better.
Radnor and Harris were good in the “I love you” scene but it was neat a minute
after Ted created a mess (or three-four minutes). Barney searched for reasons
to convince Ted to stay, unaware his reason was within a mile of the Inn and,
later, a room apart from him.
Ted and his
future wife were the closest they’ve been in the present day narrative, which
led to their first connection through a mutual dislike for Darren. Darren
caused Ted to break the third glass of expensive scotch. Darren forced the
nameless one from her own band. The scenes between Marshall and The Mother
showed more of her than in previous episodes. The Mother’s previous portrayals,
as the perfect woman who’s not even human but more of a metaphysical goddess, was
poked fun at when she described Marshall’s situation to Marshall. Their scenes
showed off her personality. Milioi is good fun with the right material. The
story devolves into contrived, sappy, sentimental, and gooey stuff from
romantic comedies. I liked, though, that she was separate from her fate with
Ted, i.e., that her portrayal wasn’t dependent on where she’ll end and on
defining her as Ted’s perfect mate. Initially, at least, it was not that, but
the third act brought their destined union to the forefront over the bit of
karmic justice done unto Darren, ending with Ted receiving his first drink from
her, though without seeing her or even knowing who bought him the expensive
scotch.
“Bass Player
Wanted” was not the best episode, but it wasn’t wasteful. Nearly every episode
has shown why the season-long wedding was not a good idea. After thirteen
episodes, the gang’s finally together, and the mother is definitely at
Farhampton. How I Met Your Mother can easily screw the rest of the season up,
but it’s nearing the New Year, so I’ll hope for good things in 2014 for HIMYM.
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