Dawson’s Creek’s
100th episode is half MTV Spring Break commercial and half soul mate
tragedy. TV writers are prone to sentimentality and commemoration for the 100th
episode and the series finale. Series finales sometimes represent the show at
its worth—ditto for 100th episodes. One may call it pandering to the
fans. The Boy Meets World finale, for example, is an atrocity of clips held
together by a collection of scenes depicting the gang’s momentous move to New
York City. Another example is The Vampire Diaries’ 100th episode
that committed hard to the past. The best possible 100th episode
(and series finale) is one that fits into the present narrative. Community
celebrated 100 episodes without firing off firecrackers in celebration, which
is remarkable because Community’s the most meta-aware show.
“100 Light Years
From Home” is the 19th episode of Dawson’s Creek’s aimless and unfortunate
fifth season. During season five, Dawson loses his father because his father
loved his ice cream cone too gosh darn much; his father’s death leads Dawson to
push Joey away after he blames her for the ice cream cone death, and Dawson
also tells her it hurts to be around her because she’s inextricably linked to
his past, to Capeside, to his past, and to frozen dairy. Dawson and Joey
together was always a thing at the beginning and end of a season. The writers
forced them together, broke apart wonderful couplings for soul mate drama, but
Dawson notably apologized to Joey in the teaser of the 100th
episode. Indeed, he apologized to Joey for what he said after Mitch died. Joey,
who never bears a grudge against Dawson because the writers liked to punish the
character, told him she didn’t bear him a grudge. Season 5 has but few episodes
left, so Joey waxes poetic about the year. Specifically, she’s amazed that the
year worked out for the best regarding Dawson. There’s a strange line about the
sweetness of dreams unrealized, which seems to refer to Mitch’s death; i.e.,
it’s more sweet for Dawson to land the agent meeting because he can’t share it
with Mitch. On these fertile romantic grounds the writers set to bring Dawson
and Joey together in the 100th episode, starring MTV VJs and the
Norwegian group, M2M.
Dawson and
Oliver ride towards their agent meeting. Dawson, that old vagabond, loses
himself in memories of him and Joey. Oliver, uncomfortable with silence, asks
Dawson to tell him the soul mate story, which he does and which is rendered via
montage. The majority of the scenes in the montage come from their worst
moments together: Dawson crying after Joey leaves for summer at sea with Pacey;
Dawson and Joey yelling at each other; Dawson rejecting Joey in “Like A
Virgin”; Dawson blaming Joey for Mitch’s death; Dawson dancing with Joey while
trying to make a play on Jen in “Dance”; Dawson standing sadly after turning
Joey’s father in for drug trafficking; and so on. Romantic stuff, I know.
Oliver cried. Allow me a slight digression: Oliver’s the greatest tertiary
character in Dawson’s Creek. Oliver convinces Dawson to turn car around and drive
to Joey in Florida. Dawson does and soon arrives where he learns Joey spent the
night with Chad Michael Murray’s Charlie, a character notable only for the
hair.
Season 5
subsists on filler everything: filler relationships, filler episodes, filler,
filler, and filler. (Season 6, too, but that’s neither here nor there.) Filler
is a problem in any fictional medium. David Foster Wallace said in an interview
once that his biggest weakness as a writer was writing something for the sake
of being liked, without any intrinsic artistic merit. He suspected his
mega-dose of TV watching made him susceptible to writing for the sake of being
liked because TV’s primary goal is being liked. Any TV shows suffers after five
or six seasons. Writers write because a network and a studio paid them. Pacey
is involved in a subplot with Audrey about their relationship status—it’s soon
made complicated by Audrey’s Dawson from her past. Neither wants to commit out
of shyness, I guess. Pacey, the other male character besides Dawson that always
chased and charmed women, behaves as a whimpering puppy would when insecure
about getting a treat. One possible story suggested by the writing is an issue
of true love; however, Audrey’s true love appears after their bedroom scene in
which she passive-aggressively beats around that she’s annoyed Pacey did not
introduce her to his parents. Pacey experienced the best, most fulfilling
relationship of his life during season four; now, he wants to date the love of
his life’s best friend. Perhaps Pacey feels shy about committing to a
relationship with Audrey for that reason, but no. Pacey told Charlie where Joey
lived, and he enthusiastically encouraged Joey to have no-strings attached fun
with him. There’s nothing in either storyline, no meaning, no stakes, though
Charlie causes minor drama between Jen and Joey, and Charlie’s the reason why
Dawson forlornly stares at the ocean.
The writers
wanted the 100th episode to mean something. Why else would they have
Dawson choose Joey over his dream? In the end, Dawson gets his dream and not
Joey. Kevin Willamson said the heart of the show was the soul mate story, but
he left the series after the second season to work on Wasteland. Over the weekend at ATX, Kevin said, “These aren’t my
characters,” after watching the third season premiere. I think the loyalty the
writers had towards Williamson kept the Joey/Dawson story going, or it was a
convenient crutch, or both. Dawson and Joey get together briefly in the season
finale of season 5. “100 Light Years From Home” is a half-assed nostalgia trip
and of course a longer-than-usual commercial for MTV Spring Break and an
unintentional backdoor pilot for One Tree
Hill.
Other Notes:
-Future Academy
Award winner Michelle Williams gets to play Jen-with-a-cold throughout the
episode. The happiest conclusion to the episode would’ve been Jen announcing
that it cleared up.
-Jack tries to
commit suicide in the episode’s C-story. Don’t worry, imaginary reader: he
passes his classes, quits the frat, and Kerr Smith has even less to work with
in the final season. That is until Kevin William returns to write the finale.
-Rina Mimoun,
future head writer and show runner of Everwood,
wrote the episode. Joey has an excellent line about Joey and Dawson living
together as cats in their third life. Future True Bood director David Petrarca had the ignominy of directing the
episode.
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