#317-“Fate
Accomplis”
In 2005, viewers
waited weeks and weeks for Ephram meeting Madison in the coffee shop. I dreaded
it. I don’t like Madison, and I really don’t like the baby storyline. The
coffee shop contrasts the two. Ephram’s a bubbling, rambling happy guy, while
Madison struggles to keep it together. Ephram goes a little Dawson on her after
she tells him she doesn’t want to discuss what was hard for in the last several
months. Ephram reminded her of her childish treatment of him in season two. Of
course, though, she tells him. Ephram blows his future up for reasons of
contrived drama. Andy confessed to Ephram his part in keeping the pregnancy
from him. Ephram cuts Madison out of his life, and he skips his audition to spite
his father. Ephram possessed a calculating vengeance. He’s deliberate,
methodical, and a villainous. Suddenly, the piano and New York becomes
sickening to him. His last refuge is Amy, but his trust in her will end next
episode.
Meanwhile, Amy
worried about fate versus free will. Instead of experiencing her life actively,
she experiences it passively until her mother reminded her of the importance of
choice in one’s life. One’s choice determines one’s path. An infinite number of
varieties exist in a second. Amy wants to feel security about her relationship
with Ephram. Ephram, though, returned to Everwood “messed up” and “not in a
good place.” The character’s a total drag in much of the final episodes of the
season. Also, Rose has a cold, which will become cancer so soon.
This is the
episode the late Chris Penn guest-starred in. His story highlights Hal’s
deteriorating relationship with Bright. Chris Penn’s character’s son dies after
he, Chris Penn’s character, accidentally shot him while pheasant hunting.
Harold gains perspective. Him and Bright share a tender moment in the kitchen
while they clean out the refrigerator. Bright also expresses his admiration for
his father, telling his Dad he sees him as a good doctor and a father. The
Bright-Harold scenes are great. Chris Pratt’s awesome.
#318-“Fallout”
Ephram lost
trust in Amy after Amy let him know that she knew about the baby prior to his
NYC trip. He froze her out. Ephram’s main story, though, is finding his son in
Marin county. He did, after child placement services broke the law to let him
know. Ah, bad writing. So, Amy and Ephram essentially break up after he learned
she didn’t tell him. The baby’s an annoying plot device. The story organically
progressed to Andy and Ephram getting along and being at peace with each other.
The story organically moved Amy and Ephram together. Television dramas need,
you know, drama. Thus, the writers needed to break it all up. I still don’t
think any of it worked. Emily Vancamp’s a treasure in these episodes, though.
Her scene with Tom Amandes in the car, after the break-up, is magnificent. Ephram
seeing where his son lived and deciding to leave without confrontation is
really good. (I’m a sucker for father-son stuff).
“Fallout” stands
out for Andy. Delia asks for a new bedroom. Andy can’t deliver what she wants
as she wants it, first because of Ephram, and second because he feels envious
of Jake’s relationship with Nina, which leads to their first major
fight—undercut by comedy when Andy breaks the only thing Delia liked about her
room after he finished it without her. Nina, ever Andy’s voice of reason,
reminded him his responsibilities as a father: he cannot let Ephram spiral out
of control, though Andy felt powerless to punish or scold him because of his
own terrible mistake in the ordeal, and he needs to be there for Delia. So,
there’s a wonderful scene between Andy and Delia in the fourth act. Andy lays
down the law as father of the house, but then he sits with Delia and listens to
her explain the many dramas happening in her class and with her friends, who
likes who, and so on, and he can feel secure that he’ll always have Delia. I
adore that scene.
#319-“Acceptance”
Every beloved TV
couple needs a good break-up episode for them. “Acceptance” is the break-up episode
for Amy and Ephram.
Why did they break up? TV executives think keeping characters apart has more interest and drama than keeping characters together. They broke up because they couldn’t stay together. There’s no drama if they stay together. For example, Pacey and Joey became a couple at the end of Dawson's Creek's third season. Nearly every episode in season four contrived a reason for Pacey and Joey to break up. When they finally break up in "Promicide", it is because Pacey couldn’t handle Joey’s promising future.
Ephram and Amy could’ve broken up because of college. They would've chosen different schools in different places; however, the baby nonsense happened, which scattered Ephram's brain and broke the trust he had with every person he trusted in his life. He can't imagine being in a relationship with anyone he knew. Ephram suggested that he and Amy spend time together after he froze her out, but he worries that she'll believe his overture means that they'll restart their relationship.
Instead of the writing addressing any of that with Amy, their breakup returns to the Princeton essay he wrote for her earlier in the season, and the infinity necklace he gave her. The Princeton essay represented his belief that they didn’t have a future. The infinity necklace represented he’d care for her all his life, or something. Essentially, they break up because it’s network TV drama and they can't stay together. Next season, the only reason they end up together is because The CW chose 7th Heaven over Everwood. If Everwood returned, it’d be Madison and Ephram. Emily Vancamp’s terrific in the break-up scene, though. The lasting line is, “You always thought about me, while I always thought about us.” Ephram was terribly written in the last six episodes of the season. I suppose one could argue that his character’s inconsistency stems from his suddenly turbulent life where nothing makes sense, but he was a frustrating drag.
Why did they break up? TV executives think keeping characters apart has more interest and drama than keeping characters together. They broke up because they couldn’t stay together. There’s no drama if they stay together. For example, Pacey and Joey became a couple at the end of Dawson's Creek's third season. Nearly every episode in season four contrived a reason for Pacey and Joey to break up. When they finally break up in "Promicide", it is because Pacey couldn’t handle Joey’s promising future.
Ephram and Amy could’ve broken up because of college. They would've chosen different schools in different places; however, the baby nonsense happened, which scattered Ephram's brain and broke the trust he had with every person he trusted in his life. He can't imagine being in a relationship with anyone he knew. Ephram suggested that he and Amy spend time together after he froze her out, but he worries that she'll believe his overture means that they'll restart their relationship.
Instead of the writing addressing any of that with Amy, their breakup returns to the Princeton essay he wrote for her earlier in the season, and the infinity necklace he gave her. The Princeton essay represented his belief that they didn’t have a future. The infinity necklace represented he’d care for her all his life, or something. Essentially, they break up because it’s network TV drama and they can't stay together. Next season, the only reason they end up together is because The CW chose 7th Heaven over Everwood. If Everwood returned, it’d be Madison and Ephram. Emily Vancamp’s terrific in the break-up scene, though. The lasting line is, “You always thought about me, while I always thought about us.” Ephram was terribly written in the last six episodes of the season. I suppose one could argue that his character’s inconsistency stems from his suddenly turbulent life where nothing makes sense, but he was a frustrating drag.
Rose learned she had cancer
in “Acceptance”, which sets up the super emotional final three. First, the audience had
to endure an absurd and nonsensical “Rose thinks she’s pregnant!” story. Her and Hal’s
mutual desire for a child continues into season four, complete with another
maddening instance of plot lunacy for the sake of drama. I think the writers tossed in Rose getting
cancer because they needed another medical crisis for May sweeps. Season one
had Colin. Season two had Andy’s mentor. Season three had Rose. It’s a great, great arc: sappy, sad, sentimental, melodramatic, and without it the writers wouldn’t
have written the magnificent “Good to Go” (formerly titled “Oh, The Places
You’ll Go!” because of a graduation gift Ephram’s mother bought before she
died, in case she died, for him. Inside, there’s a letter for him).
#320-“He Who
Hesitates”
First, Amy’s
still openly heart-broken about her break-up with Ephram. Memories of them together bring tears
to her eyes. After her mother and father reveal the bad news about her mother’s
cancer, the loss of Ephram stings less. It’s not overt, but it’s a crafty way
of depicting the perspective shift when a parent, or a grandparent, or any
precious loved one receives bad news. Hannah mistook Amy’s sadness as Ephram-based until Amy told her why she felt sad in an excellent scene and an excellent piece of acting by Emily Vancamp. One’s world explodes when one hears his or her
parent has cancer. For teenagers, especially, cancer forever alters their personal
world. The news shatters her. The scene prior to Hal and Rose telling
their children is moving. Harold apologized for hesitating to help her, but
Rose told him she’d forever see him and feel protected and safe. The dissolve
to the four Abbotts seated together in the room, sharing and absorbing at the
same time, is wonderfully edited, touching, poignant. Classic Everwood. More tears will fall in “Good to Go.”
“He Who
Hesitates” is a transition episode. Andy can’t seem to convey what Nina means
to him. Nina sensed something changed, but nothing advances between them.
Ephram sold his studio for Europe money. He ominously told Andy in "Fallout" that he would "leave soon." Andy found out what Ephram sold. His studio represents his future. Ephram reiterated his
hate for him. Andy was dismayed by Ephram’s resolve to leave Everwood,
potentially for good. Meanwhile, Bright searched for apartments while working through his
complicated feelings for Hannah. Hannah realized that she and Topher lack a spark as Bright realizes that importance of personality--that one’s interior
overwhelms the exterior.
Finally, Brenda Baxworth,
Everwood’s legendary ancillary character, returned as a real estate agent for
Bright. Brenda, one will recall, sold Andy the Everwood train station. She once
owned a restaurant. She tried to bar Andy from eating at her establishment
after Colin Hart died. Brenda taught Amy’s ballet class. She did not appear in
the series after this episode. She went the way of Wendell.
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