The Vampire
Diaries’ writers have a few cheap tricks they use to move plot forward. The
cheapest trick is magic; the second cheapest trick is the vampires’ ability to
transport memories from one head to another head in the ‘make the switch turn
on’ expedited manner. The writers had fun with switch-off Caroline, the dead
bodies, the sexy times with Stefan, the bad, bad, things she did, and Damon had
the best dark humor of the series as he dropped the various criminal reports of
Caroline’s body dump in Whitmore, but it needed to stop, and so it stopped.
Stefan played
the villain for awhile, but Caroline sniffed his humanity out after he declined
taking advantage of her humanity-free sexual advances. The plan, which he
relayed to his friends, and which the writers relayed to the viewers in
flashbacks, involved draining Caroline of blood, starving her, pushing memories
onto her, and hoping she’d switch her humanity on. The key was a letter written
by her mother and mailed to Caroline after her death. Caroline asked Stefan to
burn it. Stefan, playing the part, burned it. Later, Caroline begged Stefan to
let her see the letter in the memory he gave her, not knowing that it was gone,
like her mother. She can’t see the letter, and she can’t see her mother. That’s
why she needed to turn her humanity on-to deal and to recover.
The
Stefan/Caroline story was the best of “Because.” Paul Wesley’s excellent
whenever he plays compassionate, empathetic, understanding, honed in Stefan,
and I thought he and Candice Accola gave the best performance of the season in
the memory scene. Caroline reacted like an addict to the intervention scene,
but vampire stuff has an addict undertheme. She attacked, mauled, and nearly
killed Stefan. The best shot of “Because” was when Caroline’s humanity clicked
back. She removed the dagger from Stefan’s heart as Stefan’s skin began to
harden. Caroline then freaked. The next melodramatic part of the story unfolded
after Caroline experienced rock-bottom and she decided she couldn’t see Stefan
anymore after what they did. Stefan nodded. She didn’t say it, but she walked
away from him. Stefan told Jo and Alaric that she wouldn’t want to see him.
Elena and Damon
imagined a future which Elena realized Damon did not dream of sharing with her,
because any future involved her as human, growing old, and Damon, cure in a
box, knew could not involve him. Elena congratulated Alaric on his happiness.
She relieved Jo and Alaric of their Caroline duty and referred to herself as
Jo’s replacement. For Elena Jo represents a future with a husband, kids, a
practice, a normal life. The cure, which Lily uses as leverage against Damon
because she wants the ascendant, finds Elena in a ring box. Lily, knowing her
son would like to live forever with Elena, doesn’t destroy the cure (but she
destroys the box before she destroys the body of a driver). Caroline puked in
her mouth-figuratively so-when she heard Damon and Elena imagine their future. It
is, dramatically, a little stale.
Damon/Elena
drama, Lily’s desire for her psychotic family in the 1903 hell, Enzo’s random
deep connection with Lily, and Bonnie’s…okay, so not Bonnie’s anything, but the
previous three seem like streaks of mud running down a white board. No one
knows what the hell to do with Enzo. He stalked Sarah for awhile, he tortured
Matt Donovan for awhile, and now he’s devoted to Lily, an insane vampire who
fears feeling and reacts to feeling by removing heads from bodies. Bonnie hid
the ascendant from her. Okay, well, she stole the ascendant. Damon wanted it,
and Bonnie used truth to remind him why he didn’t want the ascendant.
The final moving
piece of the Damon and Elena drama, which spun like a top from last episode
through this episode, was Damon’s vow to Elena to take the cure with her. It
dramatically ended the episode. The episode had a lot of convenient starts or
convenient starts-whatever you, my dear reader, prefer. Starts of conflict,
that is-Caroline’s unwinding for her humanity-free violence, her separation
from Stefan, and her acceptance of her mother’s death; Elena and Damon shall
drone on about the cure, should they really split it; and those damn
witch-vampires will make an appearance from 1903 along with a pissed-off-and-no-longer-teddy-bear-like-Kai.
Apt title the
writers chose for the episode. “Because.” Things happen because it’s episode 19
of a 23 episode monster season.
Other Thoughts:
-Matt continues
to recover from the stab wound. The look he gives to the mirror is one of weary
resignation tinged with irritation. I look forward to his next scene with
contrite Caroline.
-Stefan snapped
at Alaric about being familiar with the process of returning from switch-off
mode. Oh, how I hope no other vampire turns off the switch in season seven.
-Candice Accola
was so good in “Because.” Her anguish in the dream scene when she couldn’t
enter the door to her home and visit with her mother and learn what she wrote
in the letter was intense. I know that dream wherein you can’t get close enough
to a dead parent.
-Geoffrey
Wing-Shotz directed it. Ah, I missed the credited writer.
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