Love is the
elixir that fixes people. Barney Stinson’s magic fixer elixir was made out of
love for his friends, in their moments of greatest need. The series will enter
its final month next Monday. “Rally” kicks off the final run of episodes for
the series with a declaration of the series’ purpose, its mission statement:
that love heals and transforms. Carter Bays and Carter Thomas take the roundest
of roundabout roads to arrive that particular poignant point, but that’s old
hat. The roundest of roundabout roads includes detours into the future where
the friends remain coupled, successful, and betraying their vows not to
horribly imbibe while in the Elysium of their lives. The friends rallied
together in the hours before the fateful wedding that changed lives and brought
Ted the other half of his soul.
Don’t we all
need to rally as How I Met Your Mother airs its final episodes? Nine seasons of
a story that could’ve been told in four; a final four seasons that have been
atrocious; and a horribly executed gimmick in the final season. The end nears,
though—perhaps that’s why I smiled several times tonight. TV writers don’t end
a long-running series with one ending. There are several endings throughout the
final episodes of a series. Those endings spark beginnings that one can imagine
and then write fan-fiction about for years after. “Rally” throws in some of
those endings. Barney’s arc from Bro to Relatable Human basically completes.
Barney’s wild stories, tricks, sleights-of-hand, and all else he’s ever done,
were his ways of helping his friends, connecting with them, and loving them.
The gang
collected items for Barney’s hangover elixir. Throughout the search for the
items, Future Ted flashes back further, and flashes forward, to explain what
happened when each one broke their ‘no drinking til near-death’ vow, and to
show where each one was when Barney gave to them what looked like the
concoction developed by the memorable-but-fictitious Dr. Jekyll. Barney never
told them the secret ingredient of the elixir. Barney’s omission of what made
the drink work led to the gang devising various ways to rouse him from
unconsciousness so that he could name what they missed. Barney’s been cursed by
his upbringing to repress what he feels and to cartoonishly live his life.
Okay, that’s a bit too much to lay onto a shallow and mostly superfluous
secondary character. Barney’s that guy you know who can’t be serious unless
cosmically influenced. Barney’s depiction sort of reflects the modern person’s
inability to not turn whatever he or she consumes into farce, satire, jokes--to
deplete something meaningful with irony. The only way Barney could tell his
friends that he loves them is when he won’t remember telling them, or else
he’ll explode.
Barney helped
his friends after a hard night of drinking, all at the most momentous moments
of their lives. The elixir helped Ted after Stella left him at the altar.
Barney promised Ted that he’d move past identifying himself as the guy left at
the altar. The elixir helped Robin when she doubted herself before returning to
the airwaves. Marshall thought he blew an interview. Lily worried about a
kindergarten field trip (which briefly thawed my icy HIMYM heart). Present-day
gang vow not to experience a hangover like Barney’s, but Ted reveals that every
one horribly drank one night in the future. For Marshall, he imbibed when
convinced he lost an election; for Lily, she drank after moving Marvin to
college; for Ted, he drank in celebration of his wife’s published book; and Mrs.
Ted Mosby drank in celebration of the New Year. The connective theme was love.
Each hungover episode was connected by a momentous event: a marriage, a book,
an election, etc. Love put a button on the scenes from the future. The last
scene of the episode belonged to Ted and The Mother. The Mother nursed a mean
hangover, and Ted brought to her the elixir of love, which brought out her own
feelings of love for her husband, followed by the offspring of their love:
their own lovely son and daughter. The bedroom scene descended into loving
chaos. Yes, love.
The gang repays
Barney’s loving kindness with A Weekend at Barney’s photo shoot for the
wedding, which briefly earns him the respect of Robin’s father. The Weekend at
Barney’s was my least favorite part of the episode and a reminder of what I won’t
miss about the series.
Other Thoughts:
-Any one else
notice how similar Alyson Hanigan and Cristin Milioti look? I mistook Hanigan
for Milioti in the opening limo scene. Perhaps I’m the only one who noticed it.
2 comments:
I've always thought they look a like
I've always thought that.
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