Mothers and
fathers. Ivan Turgenev wrote Fathers and
Sons and published it in 1862. The novel little resembles the theme of
mothers and fathers in The Vampire Diaries. “Best Served Cold” had several
father-centric scenes. Stefan imagined raising his child differently from how
Giuseppe raised him and Damon. Julian acts as a mirror of their biological
father. Lily loved and loves Julian how Damon and Stefan perceived she loved
Giuseppe; however, a child’ perspective, more often than not, is incomplete.
It’s impressionistic, complete with misreadings and inaccuracies.
Damon and Stefan
remembered a painful upbringing dominated by an abusive father and a mother who
chose to look the other way during the abusive moments. Lily explained that her
sons did not know her experiences of the same moments. The storytelling occurs
during a round of torturing her—the end goal being her agreement to help her
sons kill Julian. Stefan and Damon share painful memories of both her lovers.
Stefan revealed what Julian did to Valerie and his child while Damon reminded
Lily about Giuseppe forcing him to eat his pet turkey, Sammy, during
Thanksgiving dinner. Lily reacted to the stories with the expected icy, steely
expression she always has on every occasion.
“Mommie Dearest”
was a strong episode for Lily and Annie Wersching, particularly the latter half.
Playing a rigid one-note character is difficult for actors. There’s a reason
folks consider Don John an unplayable character. He’s taciturn and
one-dimensional, so unlike the massive Falstaff or the diabolical Richard III
or the existential despairer Hamlet. Lily’s a tough character for the fans
because of her focus on the family and Julian. For the writers, she seems to
inspire inconsistency. I think they want to write a complex character that
cannot fit in ‘good’ or ‘bad.’ She’s sort of morally grey, except when she’s
directly responsible for the sleeping beauty spell—but she doesn’t want her
family to murder people. She used Elena only for the sake of Oscar. Something
didn’t click for the character. I didn’t think it was the acting. It was the
characterization. The culminating scene of her story in this episode, which
brought together the scenes with her sons and the memories they trigged, when
she realized Julian was Giuseppe repeated clicked for me. Following a broken
family trying to repair and reconcile 150 years after is something better than
what preceded “Mommie Dearest.” Of course, Lily could be Miss Stabby three
years from now (and I’ll quietly regret writing this entire paragraph).
One significant
plot point occurred during the A story: Damon stabbing Julian in the heart with
a knife he thought mystical enough to kill him. Lily and Julian were linked to
protect him. If he died, she died. Damon didn’t care, because he thought Lily
didn’t care when his father abused him. Stefan learned that Lily cared but that
she kept quiet to stay near her boys after her husband threatened to take them
away to a faraway place and never return (punishment for her “duplicity”). Damon
didn’t care that his mother would’ve died if the mystical knife worked. It
lacked the phoenix stone, which the brothers were not aware was needed to power
up the weapon. Slowly, the vague happenings three years from now become less
vague.
Three years from
now, Damon told Alaric he’d avoid a trap or that he’d trap the one trying to
trap him. Well, Damon fell for the trap. He found an empty news stage. Someone
shot him with dart tranquilizers. The villain wants to draw Stefan out. Lily or
Valerie seem to be the likely culprits, but a massive twist could occur in
which we find out Matt’s pregnant via supernatural means with Nora’s child.
Matt, after last
week’s intrigue with the room full of compelled attractive CW extras, was the
lone one interested in it. Caroline helped, but her baby drama distracted her.
Valerie, now best friends with Caroline, followed her. Bonnie abandoned Matt to
spend time with Enzo as well as a drunk and despondent Alaric. So, Matt reached
out to Tyler and Jeremy for help. Both responded. Perhaps, the two will make an
appearance during the run-up to the midseason finale next month.
The entire “Lily
dies with Julian” came about because Enzo decided to duel with Julian. Bonnie
helped him find the sword/knife. The duel harkens to the 19th century.
Two masterful Russian artists, Pushkin and Lermontov, died fighting duels. In a
curious twist of fate, or instance of fate, if you prefer, Lermontov died
similarly to how his character died in A
Hero of Our Time. I digress. The duel worked for character reasons. It
emphasized Julian’s villainy, Enzo’s adoration of Lily, and, later, the
aforementioned disregard Damon has for his mother’s life. Bonnie wished Enzo
and Julian would both die, saying it’d be a win-win, unaware of the dramatic
irony, for in three years she evidently can’t live without him—unless a twist
is coming involving the stone and vampire souls inhabiting foreign bodies.
Stefan and Damon
really need reconciliation with their mother as well as affirmation that
someone loves them instead of each other and one or two girls. Stefan mourned
the loss of his child because he wanted to meet the child and because it
represented a chance to give someone what he lacked as a boy. Damon remains the
abused boy that lashes out because he struggles to deal and to cope. Could the
endgame of The Vampire Diaries be about these characters healing from their
terrible experiences? Alaric got his babies.
Other Thoughts:
-Kat Graham
looked gorgeous in this episode.
-Maybe Jeremy’s
adventures in Santa Fe will tie into the story with the compelled people. I don’t
know.
-It’s difficult
to maintain suspense about Caroline’s pregnancy when the audience knows Alaric
has twin girls in three years.
-Valerie told
Caroline the secret about what happened to her baby 150 years ago. She’ll be
the maid of honor when Caroline and Alaric marry. I hope that’s not an episode.
-Chad Fiveash
& Justin Stotreaux wrote the episode. Tony Solomons directed.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.