“Truth…” would’ve marked the end of Everwood’s midseason run, if
not for the long ratings-based hiatus between December and March. Like “A Kiss
to Build a Dream On” and “So Long, Farewell”, this episode did not age well.
Much of the episode’s tension, except for Irv’s side story, comes from secrets
some characters held from other characters. The fallout from these revealed
secrets would wait until the four or six week hiatus ended and the narrative,
again, re-shifted for the final six episodes of the season. The long winter
hiatus eliminated a brief hiatus between #416 and #417. The audiences waited a
week to the fallout from the inept and stupid choices of our beloved
characters, but I’ll get there in my next post.
TV schedules can and do make an episode work as the writers and
producers want. This episode’s designed to keep viewers on the hook for weeks,
wondering what would happen to Bright and Hannah, and sad Reid. Ever notice in
your binge watches that you don’t see an episode full of dramatic reveals and
frustrating cliffhangers until the season finale? Creators for streaming sites
don’t need to worry about keeping viewers on the hook during a hiatus, but they
do need to keep them hooked at the end of each episode so that they click the
sweet and golden ‘Next episode’ button. The tactic works best during the first
viewing, but never as well on rewatch. If a person rewatches a show, it’s not
because they crave the re-experience of the twist or that gnarly/heartbreaking
cliffhanger; the twist/cliffhanger is now superfluous, an archaic cheap trick
to make sure the viewer doesn’t forget your show. A person rewatches because of
they love unique reality of the story.
This episode hinges on will Bright tell Hannah about his cheating
and will Harold tell Rose about the cancer lie. The overall episode’s theme is
the truth hurts but not as much as not telling it. Both Abbott boys didn’t want
to, but it came out someway. Hannah went into a kind of catatonic hysteria
while Rose and Harold confronted the scary truth that they won’t be free of
cancer for another five years. I still don’t like either story; however, the
cancer storyline reinforced the solidity of the Abbott marriage, and Bright,
who one may thought hadn’t changed, had changed but he realized it after his
bad mistake.
Of course, in #316, a secret caused a seismic event in the lives
of the Brown and in the relationship between Ephram and Amy. Amy used her
choice not to tell Ephram about Madison and the baby as a reason why Bright
should tell Hannah the truth. Everwood, no matter how hackney and convoluted
the melodrama, always used the past to inform its characters for the future.
One needn’t ever rewatch “Truth…” because the recap before “All
The Lonely People” includes the highlights, but if one does rewatch it, it’s
worth more for the Harold/Rose scene in Act V, for the Ephram/Amy scene but
only for Ephram’s line about the impossibility of totally connecting, on all
levels, with another human being (not for the nonsense melodrama parts), and
Irv’s decision to makeup for the time he lost with his daughter. The rest of it
is only a reminder of TV’s bad habits.
Nancy Won wrote the episode. Matt
Shakman directed it.
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