#416-“Mind
Games”
Joey didn’t tell
Dawson the truth about sleeping with Pacey. Pacey told Gretchen. Dawson told
Gretchen he knew Joey didn’t sleep with pacey because she told him so. Gretchen
told Pacey the truth. Pacey didn’t lash out at Joey. Gretchen stayed with
Dawson despite his inability to move on from Joey and the idea he and her would
lose their virginity together. Pacey continues to put up with Joey’s nonsense,
and I wanted to close my eyes to wish the writers thought of anything else but
this terrible plot line. It dominated “Mind Games.” Joey argued, “I can’t hurt
Dawson more than I already have.”
Terrible. If anyone knew someone so hung up on someone else, it wouldn’t
last. Dawson and Joey are the worst.
I blocked the
episode out of my head. Well, not blacked. I forgot about it. I remember
certain moments from the next trio of atrocious episodes, but I remembered
nothing from “Mind Games.” I may not have remembered because it’s all suck. 42
minutes of suck. Some time ago I wrote that season five marked the decline of
this show. Oh no. I was wrong. This stretch of episodes compares to the worst
of the last two seasons.
#417-“Admissions”
The episode in
which Dawson gives Joey $15,000 to attend Worthington College, a
no-strings-attached gift of his for her, which he gives after he declares he’s
not sure he’ll ever be okay with Joey sleeping with her boyfriend; however,
he’s sure giving her the money’s the right thing. Dawson Leery is a villain. “Admissions”
hangs on Joey’s emotional confession to Dawson about lying to him. Joey
explained that their friendship felt right after their night walking around
Capeside together, and she didn’t want to ruin it. What did the writers discuss
in the room? These characters didn’t realize dating different people meant
having sex with those different people?
“Admissions”
focuses on the Joey/Dawson dynamic again, and the college admissions
anxiety—two of the weakest spots in this now miserable season. Dawson’s dream
school accepted him, but he’ll leave it next season to be with—gasp—Joey and to
take vengeance on ice cream for murdering his father. Joey never experienced
financial difficulties again, though the $15k only covered the first year. The
writers needed to show how much more Dawson can offer than Pacey.
I noted in my
last post that Joey’s devotion to Pacey seemed unwaveringly clear. There’s
another scene in this episode when she affirms her love for Pacey, but Pacey’s
sort of defeatist response to Joey’s admission about lying to Dawson
foreshadows the epic break-up in “Promicide.” I remembered Joey and Pacey
together as more stable, with less bullshit, than Joey and Dawson together. The
writers were obsessed with Joey/Dawson, though. Early in the scene, Dawson was
what caused a fight. He’s still everywhere.
“Admissions”
also hits on the promising places Joey and Dawson will go and where Pacey won’t
go. Of course, he’ll go where his friends are next season, because not being
accepted to college doesn’t mean one needs to stay in one’s home town until
death, making the hours of melodrama ahead superfluous.
#418-“Eastern
Standard Time”
Why didn’t Jen
take Jack with her to New York? Why Joey? I don’t like this episode. It was
Senior Ditch Day. Jen traveled to New York to face her father. Dawson and
Gretchen traveled to nowhere in Maine. Dawson then wanted to have sex only
because Joey had sex. Gretchen called him out on it, and Dawson was left
without sex and a plan for the flat tire. Pacey began to unravel thanks to John
Barleycorn, also known as Drue Valentine, the ultimate plot device in season
four. Drue was never a character, friend. Later, Pacey shouts at Doug about how
being drunk and in the back of a police car is his life. No college means a
life of alcoholism and incarceration.
This gosh darn
show had a clear way out of the Joey/Pacey relationship. Joey can’t move on
from Dawson. Pacey’s forever the second priority. Pacey politely breaks things
off with Joey. Joey and Dawson still get their moment together in “Coda.”
Instead they vilify Pacey. Their breakup becomes more about his aimless future
than her fixation on her “soul mate.”
“Eastern
Standard Time” revealed why Jen’s parents sent her to Capeside. The writers
didn’t bother with Jen’s parents for the rest of the series. I liked that. I
also liked Jen calling off therapy. The therapist arc had a plus: the deeper
exploration of Jen. Jen actually becomes a college/student therapist next
season. The highlight of that is the worst “scary story” depicted in the
history of television.
#419-“Late”
I must’ve
invented Dawson nonsense in my head for “Late.” I thought I remembered Dawson
asking Joey about her period cycle. Joey kept her pregnancy scare a secret,
though. Dawson split his concern between a crumbling relationship and the birth
of his sister. No, “Late” is not a top five nonsense Dawson Leery episode.
Alas.
Joey experienced
a pregnancy scare with Pacey away. He lied to her about where he went and why.
Gretchen told her the truth about his drunken delinquency with John Barleycorn.
Pacey, of course, lied to her when he could’ve come clean. The crumbling
Pacey/Joey relationship is terribly written and hard to believe. It’s forced
rather than organic. The writers probably decided in June or July 2000 that the
season would end with the reverse of season three. It doesn’t work. “Promicide”
is a gosh darn treasure, though.
Likewise, for
the same reasons as Pacey and Joey, the Gretchen/Dawson relationship is
crumbling. Pacey and Gretchen parallel each other. She’s afraid of what Pacey
fears. Instead of lashing out at bar owners, Gretchen applies for jobs.
Dawson’s leaving, and she doesn’t want to stay stuck in Capeside. Mitch
compared Dawson and Gretchen to him and Gale. Dawson and Gretchen, despite
Dawson’s insistence that it’s not an epic relationship, only happened because
of the letter he wrote her before her freshmen year of high school. Mitch’s
“You never what can happen” applies to Joey and Dawson. Any line about destiny
and fate in relationships should return one to the Dawson and Joey of it all.
I'll conclude the notes to Dawson's Creek's 4th season within the next few days.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.