The second
episode of a TV season, like the second episode of a series, always gives the
viewer a better idea of what’s to come. Premiere episodes act as epilogues and
prologues. Episode two acts an opening chapter. For The Vampire Diaries,
episode three acts as the ‘statement’ episode. Their second episodes are mostly
forgettable, aside from Caroline’s awesome post-vamp romp in season two. “Never
Let Me Go” had a lot of plot going on.
It had the illusion of important stakes, even though The Heretics
wouldn’t throw Elena’s body in the water, Alaric wouldn’t destroy the Phoenix
Stone, Damon wouldn’t leave town because his mother threatened to hurt Elena if
he didn’t, and the flash forward revealed Caroline eventually escaped The
Heretics’ torture.
Without Elena
the heart of the series shifted to the Salvatore brothers. Instead of a love
triangle there is a family triangle. The clusterbleep of nonsense sparked by
Malcolm’s death hit a temporary plateau when Stefan and Damon agreed to playact
as enemies while conspiring as loving brothers. Lily told the key story of the
episode. Damon broke his grandmother’s vase once, denied it after beatings, and
only confessed after Lily took his toy soldiers. He confessed then. So, now, in
the present, Lily decided to take away the people her sons care most for: Elena
and Caroline.
I find it
dramatically uninteresting. The Heretics continue as a worse version of the
originals. Lily’s coldly muted. The cold mutability of her character reflects
her old worldview, perspective, and the difference between her ripper self and
her ‘domestic’ self. If Stefan and Damon turned against each other, it would
repeat past seasons. The writers expressed excitement about a return to the
first season of the show in season seven, but they needn’t have returned to
Damon and Stefan at odds. Fortunately, they didn’t. Damon will work better
outside of Mystic Falls as he hunts for the sixth Heretic. I wonder, though,
whether Stefan’s fondness for his mother will slightly change his perspective
about his brother. Lily brought him back from his soulless phase with Caroline,
but Stefan’s connect with his mother will help him manipulate her; however, she
seems immune to manipulations. Lily’s not immune from a vampire lightly caressing
her hair, though.
The
post-premiere interviews last week included reminders about the finality of
death in The Vampire Diaries. Matt died again. Bonnie brought him back. Death’s
as final as the needs of the plot. Matt’s a mere plot device. Bonnie’s concern
about his brain will mean nothing. Matt, after expressing anger about Bonnie’s
role in bringing The Heretics back, decided to help Bonnie, Damon, and Stefan
stop them. Children belong in parks, Matt said. Families belong in their homes,
he said. Bonnie didn’t revive him after the phoenix stone flashes flashed
through her. The quick cuts showed blood, knife cuts, and the same scar shared
by Stefan and The Heretic gentleman.
Alaric, of
course, did not destroy the stone despite Bonnie plainly telling him it’s pure
evil. Yes. Alaric told her he destroyed it. Alaric as the mad obsessive trying
to break the finality of death is a cool turn for the character. Bryan Young
gave Alaric the line of the episode after the nifty speech about the
unbelievable fantasies people dream up about death. Death as it is the most
unbelievable—that life ceases. It is crazy,
mind-boggling, insane. Our entire existence is insane, an unsolvable riddle, a
puzzle with infinite pieces scattered through the universe and beyond the universe
into the space we don’t now exists. I digress. This will end terribly for Alaric.
Caroline’s
torture acts as a way to add definition to The Heretic ladies. Valerie once had
a romance with Stefan. Nora and Mary Louise were unwanted by their families.
Mary Louise’s family hung her like slaughtered swine in the barn. Nora only
mentioned Malcolm saved her from her family. Caroline developed a bond with
Nora. Valerie’s the sweetly passive-aggressive type, and the other one stares
menacingly. He and Valerie share a strong bond. I didn’t like the kidnapped
storyline. Several lazy, clichéd plot developments resulted from the story: the
aforementioned Stefan/Valerie connection; Enzo’s confession of affection
towards Lily; the playacting to trick Lily (which no way will trick her).
Caroline’s flash
forward revealed a fiancé, a career as a local news producer, and a break from
Stefan. Also, someone shot her with a wooden stake. The mysterious attacker
from the premiere seemingly has help. Caroline works out of Dallas in,
presumably, the year 2016. The flash forwards could supersede the present day
drama very soon. I didn’t like “Never Let Me Go” at all. Of course, the season’s
two episodes old.
Other Thoughts:
-The red shirts
in the teaser referred to the Blair Witch project. No, no, no, writers, college
students today would reference Paranormal Activity. I don’t know why The
Heretics spared Matt. Do they respect law enforcement? Does Valerie like
looking at a man in uniform? Lily wanted to take away her sons’ favorite
people. Neither brother cares about Matt. I guess that’s it.
-I’d keep the
phoenix stone, too, for Jodi Lyn O’Keefe.
-Bryan Young
wrote the episode. I missed the name of the director, for which I apologize.
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