What about the
classroom full of compelled attractive folk, show? What about that? Wait until
next week, I suppose.
So, “Best Served
Cold” serves up attempted vengeance, as well as more death, another gosh darn
party, and a plot twist so bad I’m contemplating not watching the show anymore.
First: Julian, Stefan, and Damon. Damon and Stefan want to kill Julian, but at
different times. Damon wants to strike when Lily’s happy. Stefan wants to
strike as soon as possible. Julian struck me as Klaus-lite. The brothers
compared him to their father. Something about the actor reminded me of Joseph
Morgan. Julian’s defined by others’ perceptions of him. For Lily, he’s her
perfect man; for Mary Louise, he’s an enabler; for Beaux, he’s a sparring
partner; for the Salvatores, he’s a villain; ditto for Valerie and Enzo. For
Julian, he’s deranged, brutal, and psychopathic because of the spell, though
all of his qualities in present Mystic Falls were consistent with his qualities
in 1863. He asked Lily for help in eluding the follow-up attacks by her sons,
help that would require cooperation from the entire family.
Season 7 of The
Vampire Diaries has depended on the tritest tropes to sustain conflict and
drama amongst the characters. Characters don’t communicate. Lack of
communication leads to wrong impressions. Wrong impressions leads to
relationship erosions. Stefan didn’t tell anyone about his lost child—he wanted
to honor Valerie’s wish. Valerie revealed to Caroline she made Stefan promise
to create drama between him and Caroline. I mean, she’s not that overt, but
that’s the gist of it. Stefan refused to tell Damon why he wanted to go for
Julian at the welcome party. Once Damon heard why Stefan had bloodlust all
evening, he promised to help kill Julian whenever Stefan’s ready to try again. Secrecy’s
not great for drama when the drama becomes tiresome, rote, a crutch,, etc. Now,
Stefan and Caroline share baby drama. Stefan not telling Caroline about why
Valerie stayed the night produces the most shallow of drama whereas Stefan
communicating with her, while devoid of hack story choices, might produce
meaningful development and understanding between not only them but also
Valerie.
Caroline, via
magic, learned she’s carrying the babies of Alaric and Jo. Not Jo died. Vampire
souls in human bodies don’t go well together. Not Jo, named Florence, gave
Alaric what he needed: a chance to say goodbye and the close that comes with
the goodbye. It was a great scene. Matt Davis and Jodi Lyn O’Keefe touchingly
played it. Unfortunately, more followed it. Valerie watched the wedding video
and deduced the coven cast a spell to save the twins. Candice King is
expecting, so Caroline became the surrogate for Alaric and Jo. It’s a horrible
plot twist. I learned not to trust Julie Plec when she promises an awesome plot
twist. I thought whatever nonsense would happen in the classroom would be a
great twist that’d expand the series beyond the immediate narrative somnolence
of Julian, the Heretics, Enzo’s feelings, the new terrible triangle, or
something that’d move it forward to 2016. No; Caroline’s Cordelia. Whether it
means she’s the future Mrs. Saltzman in three years, I do not know, but it
probably means that. The flash forward showed that whoever hunted Stefan used
Caroline as bait. Will the flash forward cohere? I’m doubtful. Will it be worth
the vague dialogue, the 55 second teases at the start of each episode?
The setting for
“Best Served Cold” was the remodeled Salvatore house for a celebration--specifically,
the return of Julian. For reasons that one can explain through the device of
metafiction only, those that don’t like the heretics show as guests with gifts.
Lily’s the reason. Her 19th century upbringing won’t leave her.
Also, the writers stopped trying long ago to think of any other way to bring
characters together. The default’s the party.
Various subplots
advanced at the party. Bonnie and Enzo continued to their destined path to
loverdom in three years. Nora and Mary Louise experienced more relationship
instability. Their subplot reused the beats from an episode or two (or three
ago). Mary Louise needed blood—again—to ignite her passion for Nora, or her
confidence, or to overcome her insecurities. I breezed past Julian examining
his pectorals the way 1990s Lex Luger did. The scar disappeared during his
resurrection. Julian felt ‘off’ because of the loss of the scar. The scar’s a
vague something. I look forward to less passive-aggressive/ultra-aggressive
Mary louise and more ‘how Stefan gets the scar.’
The lone thing
that piqued my interest fell away at the end: the classroom. I want to know why
30 very attractive CW extras were compelled to sit in a classroom with an IV
set up next to them. If the school exploded, will it move the narrative forward
in time by three years? Is it The Incident the Dharma…ah wrong show.
The title “Best
Served Cold” unfortunately reflects the episode. The story’s cold—not the
Chekhov style of writing coldly. It’s cold as in cold. I’m not into season
seven right now. Perhaps I’ll warm to it. Perhaps not.
Other Thoughts:
-Enzo and Bonnie
shared a moment of sexual tension in an effort to make Lily jealous. They don’t
even know, you guys.
-I don’t “ship”
characters. If I did, I’d ship Matt and Nora. Nora’s underutilized. TVD
recycles the same stuff every episode: parties, dances, formals, road trips,
plans that go awry, etc. I want a Matt and Nora road trip episode.
-When Damon gave
away Stefan’s plan to murder Julian to Julian during a game of billiards, I
found myself frustrated that I didn’t think of that idea for a short story. Oh,
well. There goes another thing someone else thought of before I did.
-Caroline Dries
wrote the episode. I missed the name of the director.
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