I wrote about Dawson's Creek and Buffy, the Vampire Slayer during ABC Family's Fan Favorite Week. Fans voted for the first part of the finale, but not enough voted for the second part. I wrote about part one June 25. I decided to write about the second part tonight. Perhaps this marks the end of me writing about Dawson's Creek, or perhaps I'll always find a way back to it.
-It’s amazing
how great a finale Dawson’s Creek is 12 years after it aired. Seasons five and
six were dreck. Williamson knew it and wrote accordingly, taking out every bad
thing and returning the series to the roots. The second half of the episode has
to hit a lot of beats. Williamson and Friedman didn’t rush any story, any plot
points, and they didn’t skimp on closure for any of the characters. They wrote
the hell out of it.
-Jen’s actual
death scene didn’t bring tears to my eyes when I originally watched it in
Autumn 2003. I read about the scene. Fans felt very affected by the quiet,
solemn solitude of her death. Grams walks over to Jen, kisses her forehead, and
quietly says, “I’ll see you soon.” The scenes that move my emotions happen
prior to the death scene. I already wrote about the near-blubbering mess I am
when Jen breaks the bad news to Jack in my June 25 post about “All Good
Things…” Two other scenes really get me: Jen’s video to her daughter, and the
final Jen/Jack scene (the final Jen/Jack scene gets to me more). First, though,
Michelle Williams, given material she hadn’t had in over two seasons, brings to
the scene a quiet, subdued, artful courage to Jen in the face of leaving the
earth, her daughter, her Grams, and her friends. The monologue contains nearly
all of Jen. The love she had inside her never fully reached people she wanted
to love---those same people who didn’t love her the same. It pours out in her
goodbye to Amy.
The monologue
doesn’t conclude after the scene fades and transitions to the hospital scene
wherein Pacey plays the outtakes from the season one credits; its conclusion
occurs in Jen’s final scene with Jack. Jen’s dialogue about how she never felt
she fit or belonged and about how she instigated more than she ever wanted is
wonderful character writing. So too is Jack’s dialogue. Jen opens up about it
because she doesn’t want her daughter to face the same difficulties and sense
of loneliness she felt as Capeside’s outsider. No other character understands
how it feels to stand apart from the town, from ordinary and ‘normal’ lived
experience, than Jack. My eyes well and my throat tightens when Jack says, “You
belong to me. Don’t you get it? You’re my soulmate.” The writers marginalized
Jen and Jack in the last two seasons. I’d like to think Williamson chose to
came back not for concluding the triangle, a triangle he may or may not have
made the axis of the drama if he stayed, but to honor two characters the
writers lost interest in writing. Their finale stories don’t exist without the
other. Like Jen and Jack, the stories
complete each other. Jack becomes the guardian of Amy. Doug then joins Jack on
another first for him in a life of firsts, the first gay parents in Capeside.
Jen and Jack always had each other, and she even has him after she dies.
Killing a character in the finale sometimes seems cheap, a false way to bring
heavy emotions to the finale, but Jen’s death matters. It’s not frivolous, it’s
not cheap, and it’s not false.
-The resolution
of the triangle takes up the last act of the finale. Joey made her choice in
the kitchen when Pacey let her off the hook. Pacey can’t hear a definitive
answer. Joey needed a final scene with Dawson. Fans had to wonder ‘til the
teary end. The major melodramatics of the triangle long passed by the sixth
season. Dawson’s on his own for most of season six. Joey and Pacey re-bond when
Oliver Hudson’s not around. Joey’s dialogue after Pacey lets her off the hook
sort of retcons her and Dawson, its confusing and rather unwieldy. The Capeside
gang never talked like teenagers, but they handled different teenage emotions
realistic to teenagers of any generation. (I already made the point a few
times). Williamson wanted to break conventions in season one by putting Dawson
and Joey together. Breaking genre conventions made Kevin Williamson a famous
screenwriter. Joey told Pacey she loves Dawson as a soulmate with a pure,
innocent love. I wonder what the series could’ve been if Joey and Dawson, being
fifteen and super confused about friendship, love, and romance confused
platonic love for romantic love. One’s soulmate isn’t necessarily whom you
marry; more oft than not one’s soulmate is a friend, a sibling, or a parent. I
think Joey’s words mean to convey that sentiment. Through the heartaches, the kisses,
the sex, and everything, they’ll always be together as something beyond the
loving romantic connection she has with Pacey. “He’s part of my childhood,” she
says in the key line. Williamson changed his mind about Joey’s choice during
the writing of the finale. Her scene with Dawson also lacks clarity, mostly
because the question has to dangle until the last scene, but Dawson’s
explanation of soulmates circles around an idea without hitting it. Dawson’s
less of a jackass in the last two seasons, but he still gives permission and
lets her go before the Joey/Pacey reveal in the last scene. Dawson’s other
arc—he’s trying to write an ending and struggling—seems to reflect the actual
writer. The conclusion of the triangle is wonderful. The writing in the preceding
two scenes lack confidence. The writing’s hesitant. Joey can’t reject the heart
of the series by choosing Pacey. She doesn’t, of course. The first part of the
finale captured the heart and essence of the series—the five friends and what
they meant to each other. Dawson got the lasting line: “It doesn’t matter who
ends up with who.” It didn’t.
-With that
written, I still think Dawson and Joey were terrible soulmates. Dawson was the
worst with her. I really like their last scene, though. I quoted Dawson’s line
about life and death in my AIM profile and to friends and classmates. James Van
Der Beek toned down his histrionics in the last two years. He played Dawson’s
memory of Jen exiting the cab really effectively, letting it show in the eyes.
-Pacey and Jen
share some good moments in the finale. Besides Jen/Jack, Jen/Pacey is my
favorite pairing. I already wrote about their short time together in season
three. Josh Jackson has chemistry with everyone.
-The “Goodnight,
Goodbye” montage gets me all these years later. It got me as a young lad, a
junior in high school, and it got me again as a bearded male nearing thirty. I
loved the show without irony when I was a teenager. Now, I see the show
differently. I laugh at the nonsense, Dawson’s villainy, Mitch Leery dying by
ice cream cone, and all that. Parts of it I still love non-ironically. It’s
connected to my coming-of-age years. I experienced heartbreak and rejection for
the first time along with the characters (episodes running in syndication!).
Dawson’s Creek, Buffy, ANGEL, and Everwood helped me through those strange
teenage years we all experienced. Dawson’s Creek as a whole is too scattered
and marred by changing writers whose storytelling became increasingly
nonsensical, wasteful, and filler. It’s not a great series, but it’s good. Two
great seasons followed by one good, one okay, and two abysmal. Networks, cable
channels, and premium channels won’t buy a series like Dawson’s Creek or
Everwood or Gilmore Girls anytime soon. The act structure has removed a lot of
the soul from TV writing. I’d love to watch the series with a lady who’s never
seen it. I’d show it to my teenage daughter, if ever I have a daughter. A time
existed when TV bought a lot of quaint, charming, melodramatic shows about
small towns, but no more. Priorities shifted. Goals changed. I miss it. I miss these
small town shows. I miss the four-act-and-a-teaser structure that made for
better storytelling and that didn’t demand a rush to the act-out.
No, Dawson’s
Creek isn’t great. I love it, though. I love serious literature and I love this
nonsensical teen soap. I’ll often combine the two in reviews. Never put me in a
box.
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