“We need to
talk” may be the worst line uttered in any television show. “We need to talk”
guarantees several scenes revolving around the talk. Caroline needed to talk to
Stefan about her mystical pregnancy, but they didn’t talk about it until later,
which meant “We need to talk” only acted as dramatic intrigue. “We need to
talk” is a crutch for writers scrambling for suspense. It delays progression.
It acts as a placeholder. Valerie told Nora and Mary Louise that they needed to
talk. Their ‘we need to talk’ ultimately led to the temporary death of Lily.
“We need to talk” works better when the audience doesn’t know why one character
needs to talk to other characters. In this episode the audience knows why
Caroline and Valerie need to talk to other characters. Caroline shared her
anxiety with Matt about talking to Stefan. Valerie knew her talk would change
the hearts of her family and align them all against Julian.
Usually, “we
need to talk” signifies, to the audience, that the actual talking will happen
off-screen. The audience knows the what. The reaction of the other characters
to the talk matters more for the narrative and for the character that told the
catalytic story. Caroline’s scene with Stefan breezes past the detailed
explanation of the coven, and Stefan reacted by fleeing to help murder his
mom’s abusive spouse. The writing in Valerie’s scene repeats the beats of her
story with the baby and Julian, but Valerie needed to convince her family with
the details and the support of Lily. Valerie succeeded in re-bonding the
family, though one of the heretics needed to act as the plot device. It’s not a
bad or a wasteful scene, but I’d prefer (and no one cares that I prefer this or that) getting to it any other way
besides “we need to talk.” Valerie and Caroline could’ve said “we need a
transition” and TVD emerges as network TV’s bold meta-fictional show. Caroline
Forbes becomes Caroline Dries. I don’t know. Ignore me.
The title is
either “Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me” or “Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me.”
My TV guide displayed the latter while Wikipedia displayed the former. The
brothers Salvatore tried to kill Julian for a second time. They hatched a plan
with Lily and Valerie to break the linkage between Lily and Julian. The plan
goes so well that Stefan stops to have a heart-to-heart with his mother and a
heart-to-heart with Caroline. Meanwhile, Mary Louise went rogue, freed Julian,
and then Julian decided to make Lily choose between Damon and Valerie. Damon
and Lily seemed to make progress in “Mommie Dearest”—at least a quiet
understanding of each other occurred. Damon, though, returned to telling his
mother the cruelest things. The flash forward showed her approaching him in the
news studio. He said, “It’s been a long time” or something to that effect. The
narrative then returned to the present day.
By the end,
Lily’s essentially redeemed for the terrible choices she made. She gave Kai the
idea for Elena’s sleeping beauty spell that broke Damon’s heart. The first act
of season seven portrayed both sides of Lily: the emotionally distant and cold
woman that abandoned her children and the regretful mother trying to make
amends. “Mommie Dearest” was the lone episode where her characterization
worked. The moment of redemption happened when Julian forced her to choose.
Damon always felt she chose someone else over him. This time, Lily sacrificed
herself; however, Mary Louise broke the spell linkage. Julian survived. Lily
did not. I think Hollywood types refer to that as a twist.
Damon, when with
his mother during her last moments, quietly rubs her fate in: “You made your
bed; enjoy your nap.” His last words to his mother haunted him. Perhaps Damon
becomes TVD’s Stephen Dedalus. He befriends a Buck Scruffington in the first
episode of 2016. Buck will constantly remind him that he didn’t even forgive
his mother before she turned to stone. Damon then meets a father figure. No,
no, no, TVD won’t become the Ulysses of network TV. Damon carries a lot of pain
and regret. The two most important women in his life are gone. Exploring what
that means for him in the time before the narrative jumps to Damon’s imminent
death in a Dallas news station could be good. Damon deflects, though, and he
drinks. So, instead of reflective Damon thinking about what it means to barely forgive
despite existing for close to two centuries, he’ll drink and celebrate Santa
with Stefan.
Lily’s temporary
death means something different for the next bunch of episodes. Next episode
will mark the end of the first act of the season, I think. Lily’s death set up
dramatic nonsense. Nora and Mary Louise broke up. Matt’s gang of badasses
kidnapped Enzo. Julian’s even more psychotic after Lily staked herself.
Stefan’s split between caring for his mystically pregnant girlfriend and
mourning the death of Lily. For reasons that no one may ever know, Nora’s
goodbye to Lily very briefly filled me up.
A lot of “Hold
Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me” repeated stuff from earlier season seven
episodes. The repetition demanded a change in the formula. The brothers want to
kill Julian? Yes, they already tried. Damon can’t forgive Lily? Yep. Enzo and
Matt verbally spar? That goes back to last season’s ill-thought lost Salvatore
storyline. Season 7’s largely been a sludge. It has come together in this
episode and the last. It’s an aging series, though. Stories are difficult to
sustain for years. It wasn’t a great episode, but it wasn’t static and stuck
like other episodes this season. So, that’s a plus.
Other Thoughts:
-Enzo got his
kiss, but he didn’t get the girl. Now she’s gone, and he doesn’t know. Matt’s
men took Enzo. Matt’s choice of Enzo as first abductee seems personally
motivated. The heretics represent the real danger for mass violence in town. I
thought Tyler and Jeremy would appear with Matt. I was wrong.
-The CW
announced the show will move to Fridays at 8PM, beginning January 29, 2016. I
think the show will do fine in the Friday timeslot. Supernatural moved to
Fridays 5-6 years ago. The Originals will compete with Grimm. I think Grimm
will beat The Originals. TVD will compete with Sleepy Hollow and two mediocre
ABC comedies.
-No Bonnie or
Alaric. The writers didn’t bother explaining why they missed the Julian
assassination party. Couldn’t Bonnie have helped with the magic part? Ah, it’s
best not think about it.
-Brett Matthews
wrote the episode. Leslie Libman directed.
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