Everwood returned from long hiatus (November-March) with
“Ghosts” and “Lost And Found”. TheWB aired the rest of the season’s episodes
uninterrupted, culminating in the two-part finale “Foreverwood”. The little
cliffhangers from “Getting to Know You” lingered through the hiatus. Would
Ephram and Amy get back together? What would happen to Jake? Would Andy and
Nina get together? Of course, nothing happens except for delays. Sweet, sweet
delays followed by emotional fallouts followed by non-resolutions.
Amy told Ephram what Joey Potter told Dawson Leery in season
two after they broke up. Both characters, Amy and Joey, wanted to discover who
they were because they defined
themselves for so long by their love for their respective boys. Amy told Ephram
that “he’s her person,” which will circle back in the finale, but she needs her
“Europe.” Ephram will move on and date other girls. He won’t pine for Amy like
Silvius for Phoebe in the forest of Arden. The scene in which a classmate of
Amy’s asks about dating Ephram implies that if she turns him down he may not be
there when she’s finished her “Europe”. It’s all nonsense, though, because it’s
Amy and Ephram forever. What you have here is a tried and true trope.
Out of nowhere in “Ghosts” comes Andy’s unresolved anger
with Julia for cheating on him. “The Unveiling” in season 1 revealed that Julia
had an affair. Andy seemed forgiving of it because of what he failed to provide
her as her husband, but Ephram needed to hear that from his father. Ephram was
in the midst of an emotional breakdown. Andy hadn’t forgiven her, a truth he
needed Irv’s book to unearth. Irv, finally, published his novel based on Andy’s
tragedy. In Irv’s book, Andy died alone. Andy lashed out at Irv for portraying
him as a distraught doctor who dies alone. Irv justified his interpretation of
Andy the person in his character based on Andy by arguing that Andy is still
has sadness behind the eyes. I dislike this subplot. Irv looks especially bad.
His judgment is imbued with benevolence, but it’s judgment, and even kinder
judgments can be cruel. Irv was cruel.
The Kyle subplot rolled on with Ephram as a learned mentor.
“Ghosts” had scene in slow motion of Ephram walking the County High halls
again. The dude didn’t bother sticking around for graduation. Also, Ephram told
Kyle that he’ll get past his rough teenage years as if he, Ephram, is not 18.
The arc works for Ephram. He’s infinitely better as a reflective teacher type
despite him acting like a forty year old.
Jake and Nina had a Dawson/Audrey moment. There’s an episode
in Dawson’s Creek’s sixth season when Dawson visited Audrey at a rehab facility
in California after she destroyed the side of his house. Dawson ends up using trying to advance his
film career by stalking a big name producer who’s in rehab. Nina decided to
help Jake by giving him another chance. Without her he would’ve left for a new
town in a new state. He wouldn’t change. Hannah helped Nina understand she had
the power to help Jake.
“Ghosts” is about change. Ephram changed. He showed Kyle how
he changed by pointing out that he dated the most popular girl in school and
became best friends with the most popular guy. Andy admired his son’s change
when he saw him help Kyle with his Julliard essay. Andy realized all the ways
he changed and the part of him that hadn’t changed.
It’s not a great episode for a re-watch. It has the annoying
aspects of “A Kiss to Build A Dream On”.
David Hudgins wrote the episode. Ellen S. Pressman wrote the
episode.
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