This episode felt like an eternity of misery. Holy moly.
TVD flashback episodes always rank among the worst in the
series, and this flashback episode was no different. Sybil droned on about her
origin story and slowly—so slowly—revealed more of the mythos of the season.
She has a sister (Seline, the nanny). Cade’s the devil feasting on the souls of
the damned. Stefan will need to kill the devil to save Damon. I needed three
sentences to sum up those plot points. Williamson, Plec, and the writers needed
41 minutes. It’s clear that the show doesn’t have enough story (not even stories) for sixteen episodes. TVD
always avoided ‘stand alone’ episodes. Buffy and ANGEL benefitted from the
‘stand alone’ episodes, but TVD never steps away from their serialized storytelling,
no matter how grating and boring and frustrating it is to watch. Their
resistance to any ‘stand alone’ storytelling has really affected the show in
its later seasons.
“An Eternity of Misery” tried to throw in a double-twist,
but Seline as the second siren was clear from her first scene in the episode. The
last image of the episode shows Georgie being sucked into the abyss like
Katherine was when she went to hell in season five, and it’s treated as a
momentous reveal, but if Nina doesn’t return for the series, who really cares? There’s
an opportunity for Stefan to journey into TVD’s interpretation of Hades wherein
he passes old, dead characters from the past, including Katherine, but I doubt
such an episode is made.
The whole episode’s about Sybil’s story and the little
reveals about Seline and the existence of a physical hell world. Caroline is
barely in the episode. Enzo is off-screen verbally abusing an off-screen
Bonnie. Matt Donovan returned. The audience met his father, Peter Maxwell, and
together they found the dead body of Tyler in the trunk of a car. Matt repeated
Tyler’s words that Damon’s murder of Tyler would make him irredeemable. Again,
Tyler’s not that important. Damon’s totally redeemable and will be redeemed
either by his brother or by a Spike-like sacrifice in the series finale. As for
Matt and Peter, Damon took an important heirloom from Peter’s shop for the
Sirens’ nefarious plans.
Season 8’s been incredibly dull through four episodes. For
instance, the parallels between the sisters and the brothers was laboriously
spelled out and connected for the audience despite the plain truth that the
viewer would get it without an expository monologue serving as the soundtrack
to the flashback scenes. Watching TVD now is like slogging through thick
Siberian mud outside Tomsk circa 1890. The good thing is that the last
flashback TVD will ever make is over, but the stalling for the endgame has only
begun.
Other Thoughts:
-I think Paul Wesley won this week’s “Which cast member(s)
has clearly checked out?” I wonder what the man thought as he continued
clanging the tuning fork against the wall. There’s a metaphor somewhere in
that.
-->
-Neil Reynolds & Brett Matthews wrote “An Eternity of
Misery”. I forget who directed!
No comments:
Post a Comment