Sadness. So much
sadness. The Whitmore college campus is awash in sadness—and polluted with
empty bags of blood. Mystic Falls is quiet, empty of supernatural threats, but
not without Jeremy Gilbert’s continually more and more impressive pectorals and
biceps the size of a small nation. Jeremy, too, is sad. Matt’s sad. Stefan gave
up. Caroline refuses to give up. Elena uses psychotropic therapy to hallucinate
Damon, and has become the shadowy terror terrorizing the border of Mystic
Falls. Alaric hates being a vampire and cannot talk to cute doctors played by a
late 90s goddess. Luke and Liv belong but don’t belong. Damon and Bonnie eat
cute pancakes every day in a cozy ‘nether world.’
The Vampire
Diaries also has a new show runner, Caroline Dries--long time writer and former
number two to Julie Plec. “I’ll Remember,” besides an episode of television, a
story that unfolds over a number of acts, also seems like a fresh sleight of
sorts. Elena narrates to the audience that she needs to pick a major during her
sophomore year of college because sophomore year begins the forming of one’s
life plan. Elena’s narration packs a lot of exposition within the teaser and
the first act. It’s as if Caroline Dries wants to re-root the show, to remind
fans that Travelers and an infinite number of doppelgangers doesn’t dominate
the show, but it’s not so simple as to put the characters back in Mystic Falls.
Magic’s gone. The supernatural friends will die in Mystic Falls. Another
Caroline, Ms. Caroline Forbes, feels determined to re-root her friends where
they belong. Caroline left college to solve the magic problem. Julie Plec, in a
way, left Caroline Dries to plot her way through the magic problem and to find
a way to bring Damon and Bonnie back from the dead.
Caroline’s the
lone character who hasn’t given up on bringing Damon and Bonnie back from the
dead. Every other character gave up. Giving up looks different with different
characters. Elena uses ancient psychedelics that transport her to a place where
she’s with Damon. Alaric listens to her, near the end of the episode, explain
that the best part of life as a vampire is the eternal love she had with Damon,
except now she has an eternal hole. Luke’s herbs help her avoid the grueling
grieving process. Hallucinated Damon resembles her own other—both benevolent
and malevolent. When she tries to say goodbye to him, she can’t. She can’t let
go. Damon reminds her that she’ll threaten Luke for the magic hallucinatory
juice. Elena uses her hands to cover her ears. When that fails, she destroys
her mug and throws the candles off the table.
She reaches out
to Stefan during her despairing time. Stefan lives in a remote area, speaks
regularly only to Alaric, and works for a weekly paycheck plus commission at a
car mechanic place. Alaric thinks he’s tracking leads that’ll help solve the
magic problem, but Stefan’s only living an ordinary life: work during the day,
the occasional love-making, and a night alone with a six-pack, staring
dead-eyed and depressed at his phone. “I gave up,” he tells her after she calls
him because she needs hope. Stefan basically breaks Elena’s soul because of
those three words. For Elena, Stefan represents stability, hope, light. Stefan
carries others through trials and ordeals. Stefan experienced more trials and
ordeals. He came back from the dead many times in very specific and particular
ways: from the Ripper, from the watery coffin, from Lexi’s death, from the ebbs
and flows of his courtship with Elena, from his turbulent fraternal
relationship. Stefan never gave up. The loss of his brother, though—it’s among
the most poignant Stefan arcs in the series. The loss of a significant other
hurts differently from the loss of a sibling. I always thought the true love
story of The Vampire Diaries didn’t involve Elena. It’s not all about the
girls; it’s all about the brothers.
There’s an
ironic touch to the episode title. “I’ll Remember” becomes “I don’t want to
remember” by the final act—the penultimate scene actually when Elena asks
Alaric to compel her to forget she loved Damon. The decision’s unnecessarily
melodramatic and will take too many episodes to reverse, but Elena can’t turn
off the switch because that would repeat season four after her vamping. “I’ll
Remember” also misleads the viewer. No character chooses to remember. The
Mystic Falls gang are burdened by their memories. Their past is nightmare which
they cannot awake from or escape. Instead, they find substances. Tyler works
out like an asshole. Jeremy drinks all day, sleeps around with random girls,
and plays video games. He wanders the Mystic Falls forest and gazes sadly at a
photo of those he loved who he cannot see because of the magic-less Mystic
Falls. Matt tries to rouse him. Matt rouses himself by training to do some
good, but good intentions lead to bad things for Matt. His boss already tries
to track the trail of a vampire threat on the town borders.
There’s also a
lot of lines referring to grief and moving on, and about how these characters
know how to grieve and have done it before and will do it again. But this time
they don’t want to, and they don’t want to feel. They want to be numb. And they
look numb. They act numb. They’re separate not by an invisible barrier but by
their emotional barriers. Remembering doesn’t carry anything besides sadness,
depression, and a constant reminder that they’re gone. That’s the thing. Damon
wonders what he is because he’s been dead for over 200 years. He thinks and
then gets it: he’s gone. Poof.
So is everyone
else.
Other Thoughts:
-Welcome to
another season of TVD reviews in The Foot. Other websites dropped TVD coverage,
but my goody blog has not. I will continue to write about this melodramatic
teen soap even though I near 30. Ugh.
-Liv and Luke
benefitted from a summer of off-screen rehabilitation. Liv and Luke were
abrasive for much of their scenes last season. Now, Liv’s doomed to be a
potential romantic partner of Tyler. Tyler can’t control his anger. It’s like
season 1. Luke works better cast as reluctant drug dealer, loyal and
sympathetic friend.
-About the final
scene? I don’t know where they are, and they don’t know where they are. I liked
the LOST-style ending, though. The penultimate scene had tense emotion and a
potentially heartbreaking choice by Elena. The ultimate scene had different
music. Damon made smiley face pancakes. I dug it. I want an entire episode of
Damon and Bonnie playing house in a cabin in the woods. Damon even wears
flannel.
-Steven R.
McQueen’s muscle mass continues to grow.
-Jodi Lyn
O’Keefe plays a doctor, a mentor to Elena, and a potential love interest of
Alaric. Ms. O’Keefe, of course, made boys swoon in the late 90s and early
2000s. She had a role in Halloween H2O. She played Matthew Lilliard’s reality
star character’s girlfriend in She’s All That. She played mostly mean, popular
girls. In Whatever It Takes, her character only likes a guy who’s mean to her.
She’s a great comedic actress, though. The best parts of Whatever It Takes
involve her, especially their date at her house. She shines throughout the late
stages of act II and throughout all of Act III. I hope she’s promoted to a
regular character, and that her and Matt Davis have all their scenes together.
That’s some early 2000s magic.
-Caroline Dries
wrote the episode. Jeffrey Hunt directed.
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