Kai arrives in
the Mystic Falls/Whitmore part of Virginia with murder in his heart. Ah, ‘tis
always the season. The Vampire Diaries’ writers still move their necessary
exposition and plodding plot quickly. Jo deduces that Damon compelled Alaric to
steal the Ascendant. Elena quickly learns Damon compelled Alaric, which leads
to her storming out of the Salvatore mansion before forgetting the matter and
instead deciding to apologize for wiping her memories of him-‘they’re only
half-mine.’ How un-solipsistic. Solipsism and loneliness, or alone-ness, have a
direct relationship. The unendurable “I.” Aloneness is a thing in “I Alone.” Of
course-it’s in the title. People are alone at the end, or about to be alone, or
afraid to be alone. Kai’s driven because he was cursed to exist as “I.” His
father kept nothing around him except reminders of his murders.
Bonnie’s the
lone character alone by episode’s end. Damon and Elena used the Ascendant to
travel to hell 1994 with the purpose of rescuing her. Damon and Elena fail
because of Kai. Liv and Tyler bring the duo back after Kai’s attempted murder
of Liv. Elena freaks. Damon wants to murder Kai. Neither does much in
retaliation. Kai sets Elena on fire, which isn’t even a thing. Kai then sets
about murdering some Mystic Falls people after Damon throws him across the
border. The most Kai does afterwards is enlist Tyler in his services, which is
a thing villains do with Tyler. Klaus made Tyler his evil lap dog; Klaus 2.0,
of course, will follow suit. Earlier, Tyler swore to protect Liv.
Speaking of
characters eating their words, Alaric swears to Jo that Damon wouldn’t compel
him to betray her. Alaric believes in his friendship with Damon. Damon, though
a monster, psycho-and-sociopathic, and selfish, wouldn’t dare mess with his
friend’s mind and his new, exciting relationship. Alaric’s only scenes involve
disbelief and then angry outburst about the stupidity of his disbelief. Yes,
Alaric realizes, it makes sense Damon would betray his trust and their
friendship because of his motivations. Damon’s right to tell him he didn’t let
Kai out. Kai had already escaped and murdered a taxi driver near Whitmore’s
campus. Alaric could’ve said, “That’s not the point.” Instead, he punched Damon
several times.
“I Alone” didn’t
have a specific focus. The story’s scattered among the characters. Damon and
Elena want Bonnie home. Alaric and Jo think the worst about Damon. Tyler swears
to protect Liv. Jeremy correctly disbelieves the news about Bonnie’s impending
return to Mystic Falls. Matt and Enzo hang out while Stefan learns the new
Salvatore girl isn’t a Salvatore girl. Caroline doesn’t appear. The strongest
of the four stories is Stefan’s. The Monique reveal didn’t need over two months
worth of build. I expected a catch after Stefan compelled her. Maybe she was a
secret Bennett witch; however, she dies. Enzo kills her. Stefan compels her to
forget the Salvatore name. Monique wanted a family, but Stefan wants no one to
know of his remaining family member. Enzo wants to know, though. Enzo’s a difficult
character. He’s essentially a less funny season four Spike, predictably
unpredictable, and without the funny chip in his head. Enzo’s the wild card.
Wild cards do anything. Writers may use wild cards for any pointlessly plotty
purpose. Enzo wants to kill the other living Salvatore family member? Sure.
He’s a specific threat to Stefan because Stefan wanted to kill him for killing
Ivy, his tertiary girlfriend. There’s belabored action in the
Stefan/Monique/Enzo/Matt story. Stefan orders milkshakes. The noise of the
milkshake machine prevents Enzo from hearing Stefan’s plan to take her from the
diner because he knows she’s lying. Matt and Enzo catch up to the two after
Monique finishes her most disappointing story about why she lied. Enzo snaps
her neck after Stefan won’t tell him the truth.
The
neck-snapping incident snaps off a piece of tolerance in Matt. Matt, whose life
has been ruined by vampires and other supernatural folk, stops forgiving the
undead for their brazenly brutal murders of people. Tripp, his deceased mentor
for a couple episodes, killed by Enzo, had crazy ideas, but Matt zeroes in on
one he likes: vampires think human lives matter less. Matt doesn’t agree. He
sees Stefan as a different shade of Enzo. They share a nature, an essence, and
a loose code. Stefan’s more upstanding, thoughtful, but he let Monique die.
Matt perceives a threat: Enzo. He asks Jeremy to help him kill him. Jeremy
wanted to drink more after he learned Bonnie would not return from hell 1994.
The beginning of the episode showed Jeremy, two weeks free from drink, beating
his sister in an early day run. Jeremy seems down for the Enzo plans. People
need purpose.
So, there are
several things happening, a major threat, and a minor threat, along with the
potential for romance and love between characters. “I Alone” sets up the final
episodes of 2014.
Other Thoughts:
-Damon made more
pancakes topped with blueberries; Elena added the whipped cream. Elena heard
Damon tell of his daily stops at the Gilbert front porch, swinging in the swing
with Bonnie, because he thought it as close to a picture of Elena he’d have.
The Gin Blossoms played while they eat pancakes. Ian and Nina do work well
together.
-Ian’s reaction
to Kai’s magic in the forest was funny. There’s only so many ways to react to
magic head pains. The reaction reminded me of my own poor acting.
-If only our
lives were accompanied by contemporary emotional pop music. Bonnie races to the
front porch for rescue. She doesn’t find them. She sits, sad, on the front
step, as contemporary pop rock croons a lonely song about feeling lonely.
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